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Americans Slapped With ‘Invisible Tax’ As Recession Sets In

Not a single piece of positive economic data has emerged since Joe Biden took the helm.

American families continue to suffer as a result of Biden’s fiscal policies, and, according to the latest report, it’s only going to get worse.

Inflation, as measured by producer wholesale prices, ticked down to a still-smoldering 10.8% for the year ending in May, according to a report Tuesday from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, near the highest on record.

The producer price index gauges the wholesale prices of goods, which are eventually passed down to consumers.

The report comes just days after a report for the month of May found that consumer prices increased a bruising 8.6% on the year — the fastest annual rate in four decades. The high rate of inflation has damaged Joe Biden politically and undercut support for his spending proposals.

“Prices this high signal a supply and demand imbalance,” Consumer Brands Association CEO Geoff Freeman said.

“[Consumer packaged goods] companies are asking not only how much critical commodities will cost, but if they can find them at all.”

In order to drive down inflation, the Federal Reserve has begun hiking interest rates. The central bank announced in March that it would raise its interest rate target by a quarter of a percentage point and then hiked rates by half a percentage point last month.

The Fed met again this week before announcing a historic rise in interest rates.

Prior to Friday’s consumer price index report, it was a near certainty that the central bank would conduct another hike of 50 basis points, but after the bad report, investors now support the interest rate hike — an aggressive tack that hasn’t been taken since 1994.

The S&P 500 fell into a bear market on Monday, an indication that investors are worried about the economy’s future as interest rates rise. The S&P 500 fell nearly 3.9% at close, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average lost more than 875 points and the Nasdaq composite shed about 4.7% of its value.

A survey, conducted by the Financial Times in partnership with the University of Chicago’s Booth School of Business and released on Monday, found that 68% of the leading academic economists surveyed believe the most likely timing of a recession will be sometime next year, and, after the two years the American people have had, a recession is the last thing we should be put through.

Where’s freedom in America anymore? Was it completely sucked out of society the very moment Joe Biden was installed in the White House?

How much more economic warfare can the American public take before someone finally does something about it?

Only time will tell…

Author: Sebastian Hayworth


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