[Congressional Record Volume 168, Number 25 (Tuesday, February 8, 2022)]
[Senate]
[Pages S553-S554]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
Inflation
Mr. THUNE. Mr. President, I don't need to tell anyone--except perhaps
the Democratic Party here in Congress--that our country has a major
inflation problem. The first year of the Biden administration has been
characterized by a huge increase in inflation. Inflation is currently
at a 40-year high. Let me just repeat that. Inflation is currently at a
40-year high. The last time inflation was this bad, ``E.T.'' was just
premiering in movie theaters and ``Return of the Jedi'' hadn't even
come out yet.
Inflation is so bad that despite wage increases in 2021, Americans
saw a de facto pay cut. A December survey by the New York Times found
that just 17 percent of Americans said their wages had kept up with
inflation.
The White House Chief of Staff may think inflation is ``a high-class
problem,'' but for the mom at the grocery store wondering if she can
afford to buy ground beef this week or for the young worker just
starting out who is wondering if she can afford to fill up her car,
inflation is a very real problem.
Americans are struggling. They are facing huge price increases at the
grocery store; huge price increases at the gas pump; big increases in
the cost of household goods, like furniture and bedding and laundry
equipment; massive increases in the cost of fuel oil and gas service;
higher electric bills; and on and on.
Inflation is weighing down businesses, too, from larger businesses to
family farms and ranches. A recent survey from the National Federation
of Independent Business found that 22 percent of small businesses
consider inflation to be the biggest challenge facing their business, a
20-point increase from the beginning of 2021--a 20-point increase.
It is no wonder that 69 percent of Americans disapprove of the
President's handling of inflation and 56 percent disapprove of his
handling of the economy.
Inflation is a major burden for American families and businesses--a
fact that seems utterly lost on members of the Democratic Party. While
American families struggle, Democrats' focus is on anything but
inflation.
What is worse, many Democrats are still hoping to pass elements of
their reckless tax-and-spending spree, the so-called Build Back Better
plan, despite the fact that it was a bloated Democrat spending spree
that helped get us into this inflation mess in the first place. Yes,
while the pandemic created inflationary pressures, a big reason we are
in our current inflation mess is because of Democrats' decision to push
through an unnecessary and partisan $2 trillion spending bill last
March.
When Democrats took office last January, inflation was well within an
acceptable range, what is known as the target inflation rate. It might
have stayed there had Democrats not decided that they needed to pass a
massive government spending spree under the guise of COVID relief and,
I might add, mere weeks after Congress had already passed a major COVID
bill. That is right. December 2020 saw Congress pass its fifth
bipartisan COVID relief bill, and that one was a nearly $1 trillion
piece of legislation that met essentially all current pressing COVID
needs. But the ink was barely dry on the page before Democrats decided
that they needed to take advantage of the COVID situation to pass yet
another bill--this time, a hyperpartisan $1.9 trillion piece of
legislation packed with unnecessary government spending and payoffs to
Democrat interest groups.
Again, there were five bipartisan COVID bills, the last of which
passed in December of 2020. It was a $1 trillion
[[Page S554]]
bill that took care of all the outstanding COVID needs. Yet, within
weeks, Democrats here in Congress were proposing another $2 trillion,
most of which had little to do with COVID or the pandemic and a lot
more to do with their partisan agenda.
But the point is, the definition of ``inflation'' is ``too many
dollars chasing too few goods and services.'' That is exactly the
situation the Democrats helped create with their so-called American
Rescue Plan. They sent too many Federal dollars into the economy, and
the economy overheated as a result. Now we are sitting here with the
worst inflation in 40 years, and instead of trying to address our
inflation crisis, Democrats still--still--want to double down on the
strategy that helped get us into this mess in the first place.
``Reckless and irresponsible spending'' is putting it mildly.
In January, Senator Tim Scott and I introduced the Inflation
Prevention Act, a bill to stop Congress from considering any
legislation that contains new spending and is estimated to increase
inflation if the year-over-year inflation rate exceeds 4\1/2\ percent.
One would hope that legislation like this wouldn't be necessary at a
time when inflation far exceeds the target inflation rate, but, as we
have seen with Democrats' reckless tax-and-spending spree, that isn't
the case.
So Senator Tim Scott and I, along with several of our Republican
colleagues, have introduced this bill, which would help prevent
reckless spending legislation, like the Democrats' so-called Build Back
Better Act, when inflation is high.
Again, let me just point out that on top of a $2 trillion spending
bill a year ago in March--less than a year ago in March--the Democrats'
prescription now is another $5 trillion in spending, financed in part
with tax increases, which also fuels inflation, and about $3 trillion
in debt on top of the $30 trillion in debt we already have.
So we have rampant pandemic inflation, attributable largely to the
massive spending bill passed on a partisan basis last March. Now,
instead of tackling inflation and putting policies in place that would
help drive inflation down, the solution Democrats are proposing is a $5
trillion spending bill.
Americans are struggling. Everywhere they turn, they are facing
higher prices, stretching their budgets to the limit. If Democrats
really want to help American families, they should abandon the reckless
tax-and-spending spree once and for all and focus on mitigating damage
they have already done with their inflationary spending.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Ohio.
Mr. BROWN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that Senator Moran
and I be able to complete our remarks prior to the scheduled votes.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.