[Congressional Record Volume 168, Number 60 (Tuesday, April 5, 2022)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1950-S1951]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]



                               Inflation

  Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, the American people are seriously 
worried about the direction our economy is headed. Just between January 
and March, the share of people reporting high living costs as the most 
important

[[Page S1951]]

problem facing our country actually doubled and so did the share of 
those most worried about the price of gas.
  Consumer price hikes have now set new 40-year records multiple months 
in a row. More and more American families are feeling the pinch. And 7 
in 10 say they do not like how President Biden is handling it.
  It was clear from the start that the Biden administration's war on 
affordable energy would punish American consumers, and even liberal 
economists warned that flooding our economy with partisan spending 
could trigger broad inflation.
  Sure enough, American families have now endured 9 straight months of 
inflation above a 5-percent annual pace, and the worst effects are 
being felt in the most vulnerable pockets of our society.
  One analysis of spending on household staples found that cost cutting 
``is most pronounced among lower-income Americans.''
  As the Washington Post reported, ``lower-income workers like 
[Jacqueline] Rodriguez have seen some of the fastest wage growth of the 
pandemic era. But those gains are being eroded by the highest inflation 
in 40 years. . . . `It's outrageous how much everything has gone up,' 
Rodriguez said. `I go to the supermarket to buy chicken, and I have to 
make a decision on what meal I'm going to cook based on the prices. . . 
. Everything is more expensive.' ''
  Another group who especially remain vulnerable are seniors on fixed 
incomes. One retired teacher in North Carolina recently said it like 
this:

       Just surviving day to day has become a big concern of 
     mine--because, how in the world? . . . I'm starting to panic. 
     I'm starting to think, ``How am I going to keep paying for 
     everything?''

  Many retirees already face health challenges or other hardships so 
there is simply no wiggle room in their budgets.
  One California man explained that cancer was the reason he had to 
retire in the first place. Now he is ``scraping the bottom of the 
barrel. . . . I do most of my food shopping in markdown bins and don't 
buy much else.''
  One White House official has seemed to endorse the sentiment that 
inflation is ``a high-class problem.'' A whole lot of low-income 
Americans and retired Americans could very readily set them straight on 
that.
  Last autumn, the administration's top spokeswoman scoffed at what she 
called ``the tragedy of the treadmill that's delayed.''
  Well, that may be the extent of the pain that inflation and supply 
chain problems are causing certain affluent people--people like those 
inside the beltway having to wait a little extra on luxury purchases--
but I can assure the President's team that many Americans are hurting a 
lot worse than they are.
  The very least the administration must do is stop digging; no more 
reckless spending, no gigantic tax increases that would damage the 
economy even further.
  Yet Senate Democrats won't give up on yet another reckless spending 
spree, and just last week, the Biden administration proposed to smack 
the country with the largest tax hike in American history.
  The last thing American families can afford is more of the same 
recklessness that got us where we are.