Counterpoint: Workers Are Not Better Off
For an alternate viewpoint, see “Point: Workers Are Far Better Off Than Four Years Ago.”
The perennial question in presidential elections is, “Are you better off than you were four years ago?” For American workers, the answer is, lately, not so much. Too many workers are not better off. Inflation has wiped out average wage gains, unemployment is higher than before, and people face looming Biden policies hostile to freelance work.
Four years ago, the nation was still in the throes of the COVID pandemic, so direct comparisons aren’t easy. People were obligated to stay at home and, in many sectors, like the service industry, not work at all. Many businesses couldn’t cope and closed for good.
When lockdowns were lifted, the economy began to recover quickly. Yet, it still hasn’t bounced back to pre-COVID levels. Policies presented as necessary to cope with the pandemic damaged the economy.
Before the pandemic, inflation was practically nonexistent, having fallen to 0.1 percent in May 2020. Once in office, the Biden administration fed staggering amounts of government financial stimulus into the economy: $1.9 trillion in COVID-related spending in 2021; $1 trillion later that year as part of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act; and the $780 billion Inflation Reduction Act in 2022. All that government spending and money printing sparked inflation, which peaked at 9.1 percent in June 2022.
It was a classic vicious cycle: COVID spending sparked inflation, prompting more spending to mitigate the inflation. The rate has since lowered to 2.9 percent, thanks to the Federal Reserve’s tough interest rate policy — not anything the administration or Congress did. That’s still more than twice the 1.4 percent level in 2021 when Biden took office.
Inflation has been 19 percent since the pandemic began. Real — inflation-adjusted — wages were $367 a week in the first quarter of 2020 and are currently $368, according to the St. Louis Federal Reserve. According to the Wall Street Journal, grocery prices alone are up 27 percent since the pandemic began.
A few years ago, it was, by countless measures, the best time in history for a U.S. worker to be looking for a job. The job market was as tight as ever, and wages and benefits rose on their own.
The Labor Department’s official unemployment rate was just 3.5 percent in February 2020, the last full month before the lockdown went into effect. That’s tied for the lowest rate on record. Once under the lockdown, the national rate peaked at 14.8 percent that April. By this point four years ago, it was 6.4 percent, and it dropped back down to 3.5 percent in December 2022 as the nation returned to normalcy. However, the rate has since risen to 4.3 percent, indicating that employers are pulling back.
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