Sen. Paul Blames Rise of Inflation on Biden Administration’s ‘Free Checks’

Sen. Paul Blames Rise of Inflation on Biden Administration’s ‘Free Checks’
Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) speaks during a hearing in Washington, on April 26, 2022. (Al Drago/AFP via Getty Images)
Naveen Athrappully
9/22/2022
Updated:
9/22/2022
0:00

Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) is blaming the Biden administration for triggering a rise in inflation and warns that more price increases are on the horizon.

We are losing “more to inflation” than what the government handed out in the form of free money, Paul said in an interview with Newsmax while responding to a NerdWallet study on how inflation affected household spending. “The inflation came from the free checks that were passed out. They shut the economy down. They sent free checks to everyone. And they said, oh, this will make up for it. But guess what? When people add up how much they’re paying for gas and the grocery store, it’s canceled out all the free money,” he said.

Paul believes more inflation is coming as roughly $2 trillion of the government money tied up in cities, counties, and state governments has yet to be spent. As this money gets into the economy, it’s going to push up prices of goods higher, he warned. “We’re going to get more inflation, so this isn’t over.”

The 12-month U.S. Consumer Price Index (CPI), a measure of inflation, has remained at or above 7.5 percent for every single month this year. Since Joe Biden became president in January 2021, the CPI has risen from 1.4 percent to 8.3 percent in August 2022.

The NerdWallet study cited in the Newsmax interview estimates that American household spending, which totaled $61,300 in 2020, is poised to rise to $72,900 in 2022. This is an increase of $11,600, or close to 19 percent, within a span of just two years.
Average monthly spending during this period is estimated to climb by $961, with groceries rising by $101, gasoline by $209, shelter by $120, and household utilities by $70.

Inflation Denial, Energy Price Increase

Despite inflation causing hardship to Americans, President Biden continues to downplay the situation. In a recent interview with CBS’s “60 Minutes,” Biden said that the inflation rate month to month was “just … an inch, hardly at all.”

“We’re in a position where, for the last several months, it hasn’t spiked. It has just barely … it’s been basically even,” Biden said.

Come winter, Americans will be facing the pain of higher heating costs. A forecast by the nonprofit National Energy Assistance Directors Association estimated that an average U.S. household will pay roughly 17 percent more this winter than last year to heat their home, hitting a 10-year high.

Between 2021–21 and 2021–23, the cost of home energy is expected to register an increase of over 35 percent.

“Of even greater concern, the total cost of home heating would increase from $127.9 billion to an estimated $149.9 billion,” the forecast states. “The additional costs will fall hardest on lower-income households.”