The Morning Jolt

Economy & Business

Biden’s Unrealistic Optimism

President Joe Biden speaks after signing an executive order at the White House in Washington, D.C., July 8, 2022. (Kevin Lamarque/Reuters)

On the menu today: “We’re not gonna be in a recession in my view,” President Biden told reporters yesterday. The only person who should be making guarantees of victory is Joe Namath. We will know if the U.S. has endured two consecutive quarters of a shrinking GDP on Thursday morning. But this is likely to be just the latest chapter in a long story of Joe Biden assuring Americans that everything is going to be okay, only to watch everything fall apart a short time later.

The Curse of Biden’s Optimism

President Joe Biden, still in isolation but reportedly recovering well from Covid-19, offered a bold prediction on Monday that could look quite foolish by the end of the week:

We’re not gonna be in a recession in my view. The employment rate is still one of the lowest we’ve had in history to the 3.6 [percent] area. We still find ourselves with people investing. My hope is we go from this rapid growth to steady growth and uh, so see, we’ll see some coming down. But I don’t think we’re going to, uh ,God willing, I don’t think we’re going to see a recession.

As discussed yesterday, on Thursday morning, the U.S. will learn if we’ve experienced two consecutive quarters of the GDP shrinking — the traditional definition of a recession. (The RNC recalled Biden’s economic adviser Jared Bernstein defining a recession as GDP “crossing zero” back in 2019; by that standard, we’re already in recession, with last quarter’s 1.6 percent decline.)

Note that Biden thinks, “We’ll see some coming down” from a quarter of 1.6 percent decline, but also insists that won’t be a recession.

This weekend, Treasury secretary Janet Yellen and other Biden administration officials offered the unconvincing spin that, even though two consecutive quarters of GDP decline is the traditional definition of a recession, it doesn’t count as an official recession unless the National Bureau of Economic Research confirms it — a process that could take up to a year.

The American people aren’t waiting for a panel of economists to draw conclusions about the state of the economy. Investor’s Business Daily regularly asks whether the U.S. is in a recession, and found this month that, “A clear majority of Americans — 58 percent — think the U.S. economy is in a recession, up from 53 percent a month ago and 48 percent in May, the July IBD/TIPP Poll finds. As inflation cancels out wage gains, the near-term outlook for personal finances just hit a record low for the survey back to February 2001.”

Over at Hot Air, Allahpundit argues that Biden doesn’t have much choice but to offer economic happy talk; the president publicly acknowledging the likelihood of a recession could worsen Americans’ economic pessimism. (Then again, judging by the stats from that Investor’s Business Daily poll, economic pessimism is pretty darn high and can’t get much worse. At some point, doesn’t unrealistic happy talk from officials exacerbate economic pessimism? A leader who won’t acknowledge the problem doesn’t have much chance of solving the problem.)

The real problem for Biden is that this is just the latest chapter in a long, long story of him insisting that everything is going to be fine and then being proven wrong — often quickly. When Biden and his team are confronted with a problem, their reflexive instinct is to insist it isn’t really a problem:

No one makes Joe Biden say these things. He deliberately chooses to make predictions that everything is going to turn out great in the face of giant mountains of counterevidence. On those rare occasions when someone presses Biden about his wildly erroneous predictions, like when Lester Holt of NBC News asked Biden about his prediction that inflation would be temporary, Biden got snippy and called him “a wise guy.” When Biden’s predictions turn out to be wrong, he explains he would have had to be a “mind reader” to get it right. (What he really means is clairvoyant, or having the ability to see the future, not to read minds.) In Biden’s mind, when things don’t go the way he planned, it’s just bad luck.

After a while, it’s not bad luck; it’s bad judgment.

Reportedly, Biden whines to aides that, “Everything landed on his desk but locusts.” What did he think the presidency would be? An endless parade of aides and officials marching into the Oval Office with good news?

A positive attitude can be a great strength, but what Biden keeps exhibiting is a certain naïve, unrealistic faith that everything will work itself out.

When asked about the possibility of a recession, Biden could have been more honest and said that he simply didn’t know what the new GDP numbers would be, but that he knew inflation was hurting Americans and he would continue to adjust his policies to reduce it. Instead, Biden and his team keep insisting that America can’t possibly be in a recession because unemployment is low. This is like a student getting a bad score on a test and insisting that the grade can’t be low because they answered some of the questions right.

ADDENDUM: Our Alexandra DeSanctis offers the public some much-needed explanatory journalism:

Every significant state abortion limitation as it pertains to exceptions for medical emergencies. Though not every law explicitly names ectopic pregnancy and miscarriage management, each is perfectly clear in its definition of abortion and clear about leaving room for doctors to act in cases of medical emergency. It’s important to note that, while many laws do explicitly name these procedures, it is not necessary to do so in order for those types of treatment to remain legal.

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