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Republican leaders blame stimulus for rising US inflation

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Republican Senate leaders on Tuesday

railed against rising US inflation rates, blaming the price increases on the

flood of money from a pandemic stimulus package pushed by Democratic

President Joe Biden earlier this year.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell used the recent rise in prices seen

as the American economy has reopened to argue against Biden’s new spending

plans for infrastructure and social programs.

“The country’s awash in inflation. The country is flooded with money. The

last thing we need to do is to pile on with another massive reckless tax and

spending spree,” McConnell said at a press conference.

“Gas prices are over $3 a gallon in every state in the union. There’s no

relief in sight. It’s a direct result of flooding the country with money,” he

said.

Consumer prices jumped 5.4 percent in September compared to a year earlier,

half of which was due to rising food and housing prices, according to

government data.

Rising global energy prices also have taken a toll, with oil topping $80 a

barrel for the first time in years.

Consumers have rushed to buy homes, cars and other products in a surge of

demand as the worst days of the pandemic have passed, while supply challenges

such as the scarcity of computer chips, shipping containers and truck drivers

have increased costs.

US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has argued that the spike in inflation

is mostly “transitory” but that it could last for some time given the

“unprecedented shock to the global economy.”

But she also said employers who are struggling to find workers to fill open

positions may have to raise wages — which could also feed inflation.

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell has repeatedly said that price

pressures will fade somewhat as pandemic effects are worked out, and that the

central bank can act against inflation, if necessary.

McConnell has argued the nearly $2 trillion American Rescue Plan enacted in

March was excessive, though many economists credit the stimulus with

preventing a worse economic crisis.

Biden’s Democrats are working through their differences over two spending

packages, one that includes $1.2 trillion for infrastructure and another

allocating about $2 billion for social programs, which they intend to pay for

through new taxes.

Senate leader Chuck Schumer, who presides over the razor-thin Democratic

majority in the chamber, expressed confidence that the programs will win

approval.

“I believe that we will get this done, and we will get it done soon,” he

told reporters. “I know that Democrats in both chambers are working really

hard to get this consequential, desperately needed legislation across the

finish line.”

Source: Bangladesh Sangbad Sangstha (BSS)