Biden Economic Team Predicts Long-Term Slow Growth


By Dr. Mark W. Hendrickson

What is noteworthy about the depressing title to this article is its source. In a case of uncommon candor, President Biden’s economic team has announced that once the artificially high stimulus-juiced measurements of GDP of the next two years subside, the United States will experience sub-two-percent growth for the rest of the decade. This dismal forecast wouldn’t be surprising if it came from Biden’s political opponents, but for it to come out of the White House itself is an astonishing admission.

You don’t need to have any specialized knowledge of economics to see why team Biden is projecting protracted slow growth. Consider the previous dozen years:

Shortly after former President Obama left office, I explained why he had presided over a historically weak economy. The depressing economic weakness was a direct consequence of his policies.

Subsequently, under former President Trump (until the Covid outbreak upset everything) the economy picked up noticeably, with minorities and lower-income Americans prospering as never before. While Trump was no free-enterprise radical (as is plain from his economically costly tariffs and his extravagantly wasteful spending, including sending direct payments to citizens in the name of Covid relief), he understood that the source of our country’s economic strength is the private sector. He knew that the private sector provides the wealth that government spends, and not the other way around. Thus, he cut taxes, pared back burdensome government regulations, and allowed the private sector to flourish.

Today, it is clear that Joe Biden is obsessed with erasing every last vestige of Donald Trump’s presidency. He wants to return to the status quo ante—the way things were B.T. (before Trump) when Barack Obama was president. With Biden reversing Trump-era policies and reinstating Obama-era policies, is it any wonder that the outlook is for a return to Obama-era slow growth? That is what I meant when I wrote above that you don’t need to be an economist to figure this out. Ideas and policies have consequences, and policies that caused sluggish growth in the past will cause sluggish growth in the future.

The challenge for team Biden going forward will be how to convince Americans that prolonged slow growth is the best they could hope for and the right course for our country to follow. Accompanying the announcement of years of projected slow growth after the sugar-high of massive government cash handouts wears off, the Biden economists offered a lame excuse: They said the U.S. economy is caught in the grip of “secular stagnation.” That is only half correct. Yes, stagnation was and will be the problem, but it isn’t “secular”—that is, sluggish growth doesn’t have to happen.

A more accurate description for long-term slow growth is “progressive stagnation.” The coming stagnation isn’t foreordained; it is simply the inevitable outcome of a progressive agenda that exalts Big Government and disdains free enterprise. It is the bitter fruit of the socialist mindset that despises the private-property order and craves top-down economic planning whereby government elites decree what should be produced (e.g., electric cars, wind and solar energy, etc.), even if that is what citizens don’t want or can’t afford.

Centralized economic planning—i.e., planning by a political elite—only benefits the elite while progressively impoverishing the average citizen. It will be interesting to see if, in the next two election cycles, the American electorate responds to team Biden’s progressive agenda of long-term economic stagnation.

Dr. Mark W. Hendrickson is a retired adjunct faculty member, economist, and fellow for economic and social policy with the Institute for Faith and Freedom at Grove City College.

More Resources


11/22/2024
Mighty Casey Has Struck Out
Democrat Bob Casey Jr. has served in public office in this state since taking the oath of office as the state auditor general in 1997.

more info


11/22/2024
Gaetz's Implosion Shows Resistance Is Not Futile
Trump's first nominations reveal the serious fractures in his coalition - which can be used to weaken him

more info


11/22/2024
Building a Better Ground Game Critical to Trump's Victory
American Majority Action turned out low-participation voters in battleground States to help Trump and fellow Republicans to victory.

more info


11/22/2024
The Myth That Could Cost Democrats the Next Election
Progressives staying home (almost certainly) didn't cost Kamala Harris the election.

more info


11/22/2024
Jussie Smollett, the Chicago Way and MAGA


more info


11/22/2024
It's Over--Somebody Needs To Tell Bragg's Office


more info


11/22/2024
Congress Must Seize Post-Chevron Opportunity


more info


11/22/2024
Former NIH Director Francis Collins on Trump, RFK Jr.


more info


11/22/2024
How the Left Betrayed the Jews


more info


11/22/2024
I Mean, Seriously Jaguar?
In the aftermath of Trump's victory, the ad already looks like a period piece. But aside from that - I mean, seriously? says Guardian columnist Marina Hyde

more info


11/22/2024
November 22, 1963: JFK and the Futility of Blame


more info


11/22/2024
Dems Have Lost the Plot in the View of Working-Class Voters
The road back to the working class.

more info


11/22/2024
The Trump Counterrevolution Is a Return to Sanity
We are witnessing a historic counterrevolution after Trump's victory, far different from his first election in 2016.

more info


11/22/2024
Harris Disappointed Gen Z
Trump made gains among young voters in 2024, leaving Democrats wondering why.

more info


11/22/2024
Democrats Need Their Own Donald Trump
There may be five stages of grief, but there's usually just one when it comes to political defeat - pretend to soul-search, then carry on as if nothing happened.

more info



Custom Search

More Politics Articles:

Related Articles

Trump's Prescription Drug Pricing Reform Will Have Unintended Consequences


President Trump just signed an executive order that aims to tackle U.S. prescription drug spending.. The order pegs the prices of certain drugs covered by Medicare to the lower prices paid in other developed countries, whose governments impose strict price controls.

Seizing Patents Will Hamper COVID-19 Vaccine Development


It's full speed ahead on the scientific front in the fight against COVID-19. We're on track to have an arsenal of vaccines and medicines for the novel coronavirus within a year.

Fix Our Medical Insurance Dilemma


Give all Americans the option to buy into Medicare. I've paid into Social Security and Medicare my entire life. I'm still paying to be on plan B and supplemental coverage. I also pay for prescription insurance. I often feel like a coffee coupon from McDonald's would pay for about as much medicine as my prescription card pays.

Pandemic Hasn't Broken the Employer Health Insurance System


Over 55 million Americans have filed for unemployment since COVID-19 struck. But for the most part, they haven't lost their health insurance. An astounding 98 percent of workers who had employer-sponsored health benefits before the pandemic are still enrolled in workplace plans, according to a July report.

With New Drug Pricing Order, Trump Flirts with Socialism


President Trump's recent executive order on drug prices gets almost everything right -- except the solution.

Executive Order for Price Controls Will Harm Innovation and Patients


President Trump just signed a new executive order to reform our healthcare system. While his desire to lower costs for patients is appropriate, the proposed changes would do more harm than good.

Where Has the Truth Gone?


“Want to buy a new car with bad credit? No problem. Come into our dealership and we will get you approved—guaranteed! You will be pre-approved in two minutes—100 percent are accepted. You will not be denied, no matter your circumstances. Don’t get unnecessarily hassled by other dealers, you deserve a new ride.”

Martin Luther King, Jr. and America’s "Promissory Note"


Each January, we honor Martin Luther King, Jr. for his leadership in combating racial segregation and securing civil rights for African Americans. However, critics lately have charged that King’s legacy has been “whitewashed,” or remembered selectively. A 2019 Guardian editorial laments that Americans have “Disneyfied” the reformer, saying that we recall his earlier, comforting successes while overlooking his later frustrations and political radicalism. Psychologizing the critique, a 2020 NBC News opinion piece decries that King’s memory is abused for the purpose of cultivating “complacency” and a sense of “absolution.”

Minimum Wage, Maximum Discrimination


Since the days of Adam Smith, economists have sought a set of social institutions which permit “neither dominion, nor discrimination,” to use Nobel Prize-winning economist James Buchanan’s phrase. In this, economists are joined by all people of goodwill—including those in the Biden administration, which has enshrined equity and inclusion as cornerstones of how they’ll govern.

Don't Put Community Cancer Care Centers Out of Business


Ruth is a 67-year-old woman living with metastatic lung cancer. She receives care at a treatment center near her home in rural southern Illinois. There are larger hospitals over an hour away in St. Louis, but she doesn't have the time or financial resources to travel there as often as she would need to.

From the Dawn of the American Twilight


Fifty years ago this spring, my wife and I, both Air Force intelligence officers, returned to Udorn Air Base, Thailand from an “in-country rest & recuperation” trip to Chaing Mai. That night I worked the mid-shift in the intel shop at headquarters 7/13th Air Force. It fell to me to prepare and deliver the morning intelligence briefing to the major general who thought he ran air operations in Northern Laos; a delusion since that war was run by the U.S. Department of State and the CIA with Air Force support.

Outside the Lines: American Corporations and Society


During a heated 1990 U.S. Senate race in North Carolina between the Republican incumbent Jesse Helms and Democratic challenger Harvey Gantt, basketball superstar and North Carolina native Michael Jordan was asked to endorse Gantt’s candidacy.

God, Joe Biden, and the National Day of Prayer


President Joe Biden’s omission of the word God from his National Day of Prayer proclamation last week has evoked a firestorm of protest. Christian Broadcasting Network commentator David Brody, evangelist Franklin Graham, Catholic League president Bill Donohue, Fox News, and other politically conservative media outlets all criticized Biden’s failure to mention God.

Government-Funded Labs Don't Invent New Drugs


House Democrats just introduced a bill designed to lower prescription drug prices. It doesn't. But wait, it gets worse. The Lower Drug Costs Now Act, or H.R. 3, is a reprise of a 2019 bill that passed the House but failed to gain support in the Senate.

Pandemic Proves Value of Homecare


Doctors, nurses, and the scientists who created COVID-19 vaccines have all emerged as heroes during the pandemic. But there's another, underappreciated group that's been crucial to the country's pandemic response -- those who provide home-based medical equipment, services, and care.