WASHINGTON – U.S. Senator Kevin Cramer (R-ND), member of the Senate Banking Committee and Budget Committee, penned an op-ed in Fox Business examining the impacts of Biden’s skyrocketing inflation on rural America.
“For the past 15 months of Joe Biden’s tenure as president of the United States, we’ve seen an increase in inflation every month. The rise began before Putin invaded Ukraine and before every other excuse the president has posited. When Biden took office in January 2021, inflation was 1.4 percent. Liberal economists and Obama administration officials including Larry Summers and Jason Furman rang alarm bells over a year ago when the inflation rate was 1.7 percent. Fast-forward to today, the inflation rate has surged to 8.5 percent – the highest level since 1981,” wrote Senator Cramer. “Rural America is feeling the pain worse than anyone. Inflation is rising at the fastest pace in four decades in America’s heartland… In expansive, rural states, we drive the furthest to get places. Grocery and convenient stores aren’t around the corner. We drive greater distances to stock up on everyday goods. We drive greater distances to get to and from work. And we drive greater distances to drop off our children at school.”
“North Dakota and much of rural America, however, are commodity-based economies. Farmers and ranchers may be making more on their crops and cattle, but the dollar won’t stretch as far and the input prices for things like fertilizer (which is up 300 percent), diesel, and feed are all more expensive. President Biden is wrong when he accuses producers of price gauging. Whether it’s the oil driller in Western North Dakota or the farmer in the east, I have never met a producer who wasn’t actively looking to produce more for a buying market. It is short-sighted and cynical to accuse producers of ‘corporate greed’ without acknowledging the increase in labor, material, and transportation costs they have to absorb. At the end of the day, we feel it in North Dakota, we feel it in rural America, as does the rest of the U.S.,” wrote Senator Cramer.
“We need to be serious about taking actions that will not add more fuel to the fire of inflation,” concluded Senator Cramer. “It’s time for a shift. Stop the subsidies, embrace regulatory restraint, and unleash the power of the American producer. End result: we’ll pay less while growing our economy. Rural America is hurting, but we are here to help if given the chance.”
'Free' Money Can't Fix Inflation—the American Producer Can
By: Senator Kevin Cramer (R-ND)
4.25.22
“For the past 15 months of Joe Biden’s tenure as president of the United States, we’ve seen an increase in inflation every month. The rise began before Putin invaded Ukraine and before every other excuse the president has posited. When Biden took office in January 2021, inflation was 1.4 percent. Liberal economists and Obama administration officials including Larry Summers and Jason Furman rang alarm bells over a year ago when the inflation rate was 1.7 percent. Fast-forward to today, the inflation rate has surged to 8.5 percent – the highest level since 1981.
“In the latest Consumer Prices Index (CPI) data, over the past year used cars increased 35 percent, utility gas increased 22 percent, bacon increased 18 percent, beef increased 16 percent, milk increased 13 percent, eggs increased 11 percent, and coffee increased 11 percent. Across the board, day-to-day goods were up 14.2 percent, which is the biggest annual increase since 1947.
“The 10 percent spike in grocery prices represents the biggest
increase since 1981 and the 13.8 percent spike in meat, poultry, and fish
represents the biggest increase since 1979. There’s no question this inflation
hurts Americans across the country.
“Rural America is feeling the pain worse than anyone. Inflation is rising at
the fastest pace in four decades in America’s heartland. According to the
Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), in the West North Central division, which
includes my home state of North Dakota in addition to Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota,
Missouri, Nebraska, and South Dakota, the inflation rate regularly exceeds the
country’s average. It clocked in at 8.6 percent last month. In Arizona,
Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah, and Wyoming, inflation
clocks in at 10.4 percent.
“In expansive, rural states, we drive the furthest to get places.
Grocery and convenient stores aren’t around the corner. We drive greater
distances to stock up on everyday goods. We drive greater distances to get to
and from work. And we drive greater distances to drop off our children at
school. Looking at the agriculture and business side of things, the food we
produce and the products we create have longer distances to travel – from the
center of the North American continent to the ports and hubs used to distribute
it to the rest of the country and the world. As the number one producer of dry
edible beans, canola, flaxseed, honey, rye, sunflower, wheat, including durum
and spring, in the U.S., North Dakota’s production and shipping costs are
exponentially higher. Similarly, these input costs have been baked into the
products rural America buys at the grocery store. Every product on the shelf
dons a price tag reflecting the long distance it had to travel and every facet
of the supply chain along the way.
“North Dakota and much of rural America, however, are commodity-based
economies. Farmers and ranchers may be making more on their crops and cattle,
but the dollar won’t stretch as far and the input prices for things like
fertilizer (which is up 300 percent), diesel, and feed are all more expensive.
President Biden is wrong when he accuses producers of price gauging. Whether
it’s the oil driller in Western North Dakota or the farmer in the east, I have
never met a producer who wasn’t actively looking to produce more for a buying
market. It is short-sighted and cynical to accuse producers of ‘corporate
greed’ without acknowledging the increase in labor, material, and
transportation costs they have to absorb. At the end of the day, we feel it in
North Dakota, we feel it in rural America, as does the rest of the U.S
“Even with this background of skyrocketing inflation, there are reports the Biden Administration and Democrats want to revive their reckless tax and spending spree, otherwise known as Build Back Broke.
“We need to be serious about taking actions that will not add more fuel to the fire of inflation. Under no circumstances can we flood the market with more ‘free’ money. The answer to increased costs is not to subsidize the purchase, which will only increase inflationary triggers. The focus needs to flip to the supply-side of the economy. North Dakota and middle America are paying the highest prices, all while the world expects us to fuel and feed the world. We want to help relieve the pain, but the Biden administration has taken a punitive bent toward producers, demonizing them in the hopes of shifting blame.
“It’s time for a shift. Stop the subsidies, embrace regulatory restraint, and unleash the power of the American producer. End result: we’ll pay less while growing our economy. Rural America is hurting, but we are here to help if given the chance.”