Democrats have traditionally had at least a slight advantage over Republicans when it comes to being the party voters trust more to handle the economy. But President Joe Biden is deep underwater on that front in recent polls.
That’s crystal clear in a Monday poll from CNN and SSRS. According to their findings, “a majority of US adults say Biden’s policies have hurt the economy, and 8 in 10 say the government isn’t doing enough to combat inflation.” Moreover, only 34 percent of respondents approve of his handling of the economy, while 66 percent disapprove. (Apparently nobody CNN asked was undecided this time around.)
What most Americans don’t seem to get is what it means for the federal government to “fight inflation.”
The political implications for the downward trend line of Biden’s numbers aren’t great. But what’s got to be frustrating for the White House is that so much of what’s being measured here is the country’s mood — which can be both fickle and resistant to any fixes the president has in his toolbox.
Let’s use the inflation question from this poll as a prime example. Respondents were asked: “Do you think the U.S. government is doing (too much), (too little), or the right amount to try to reduce inflation?” Eighty-one percent said “too little,” while 15 percent answered it’s doing just enough. (Another 4 percent responded “too much,” and I have follow-up questions for them.)
What most Americans don’t seem to get is what it means for the federal government to “fight inflation.” For that, we turn to another recent poll, this one released on April 30 by Axios and Ipsos. It found that 34 percent of respondents knew the Federal Reserve plays a role in fighting inflation. Encouragingly, 51 percent had heard the Fed had increased interest rates in March as part of its efforts to rein in price increases.
But here’s the bad news for Biden: The vast majority of Americans don’t know the Fed is independent of the White House. Respondents were asked to identify whether the statement “the President can order the Federal Reserve to address inflation” was true or false. Fifty-two percent didn’t know. Another 23 percent incorrectly said it was true.
It’s also not clear that Americans get what the Fed’s interest rate increases entail and what it hopes to achieve. Rate increases are meant to make it harder to borrow money, which in turn prompts saving by individuals and businesses instead of spending, cooling off an economy. What a cooler economy most likely means, though, is a rise in unemployment and a freeze in wage increases.
The Fed triggered a recession in the early 1980s to help finally get the inflation of the 1970s under control, kicking off the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression at the time. Most respondents in a CNBC survey of economists, fund managers and strategists believe the Fed’s upcoming moves will trigger a recession. It’s hard to imagine that’s what most of the 81 percent of Americans CNN surveyed have in mind as their preferred solution.








