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It’s Joe Biden versus the Trump economy

  |   By Liz Peek Staff

Joe Biden, astonishingly still the front-runner in the 2020 Democratic presidential primary race, wants to take on the Trump economy. Good luck with that.

With the majority of Americans, even many who detest him, giving President Trump high marks for his handling of the country’s financial affairs, Biden will struggle to convince voters that they want to go back to the Obama era. And make no mistake — that’s what Biden wants to do.

Biden traveled to his home state of Pennsylvania recently and talked up the policies that he and “Barack,” as he calls his former boss, put forward during their eight years in office. “Things were beginning to really move,” he said, claiming that Trump is in the midst of “squandering” that momentum.

Is that true? Has the economy weakened since Trump become president? Obviously not.

Unemployment stands at a 50-year low, the poverty rate is the lowest since 2001, U.S. household wealth hit an all-time high earlier this year, there are more than one million unfilled jobs and in 2018 the share of income held by the top 20 percent fell by the largest amount in over a decade, as did the Gini index, which measures inequality.

Lower unemployment has translated into higher wages, which have finally filtered through to middle-class families, with the greatest gains accruing to the lowest income brackets.

The Heritage Foundation’s Stephen Moore recently reported that, based on data from the Census Bureau, “middle-class incomes, after adjusting for inflation, have surged by $5,003 since Donald Trump became president in January 2017. Median household income has now reached $65,976 — an all-time high and up more than 8 percent in 2019 dollars under the Trump presidency.” 

Moore points out that under Obama, average monthly middle-class incomes increased by $11, while so far under Trump they have grown by $161.

 

 

Published on The Hill


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