USA Being Threatened by Biden Administration Supply Chain Issues

Even with Joe Biden administration supply chain issues piling up. In his State of the Union Speech, he took credit for improving a few things inside the American economy that simply don’t pass the test of even a cursory fact check.

First, he talked about the number of jobs added in the economy last year as being a record 6.5 million.  While that number is true, he ignored that fact that 9.5 million jobs were lost in the prior year due to the panic over the pandemic.  Fewer people are working today than were during the boom years of the Trump Presidency.

Biden then mentioned that manufacturing jobs had increased by 359,000 last year.  Unfortunately, according to data from his Bureau of Labor Statistics, that number was only 179,000 and, like the overall jobs number, fails to account for manufacturing jobs at pre-pandemic levels (note: the page with the DOL statistics has been temporarily taken down as of this writing).

Let’s give Uncle Joe the benefit of the doubt and assume that he just doesn’t understand economics as opposed to the inescapable alternative, that being he is simply lying. In generously presuming the ignorance of the President, let’s turn our attention to the much discussed, little understood, supply chain crisis and what government should, and shouldn’t, do about it.

Any businessperson has an almost inherent understanding of what the term “supply chain” means and what its function is in pathing the final delivery of goods and services to American citizens, for whom economics has created alternate terms of art in “ultimate consumer” or “end user.” While businesspeople understand the meaning of supply chain, they also understand that the supply chain itself is extraordinarily complex and not something that can be controlled by government in the manner that socialists like Joe Biden and his team tend to prefer.

Said differently, the socialists inside the Biden administration might be able to centrally manage and plan Uncle Joe’s day, but they can’t replicate the process for the supply chain.  Only market mechanisms can build an effective supply chain and in order for those mechanisms to work, government has to stay out of the way.

Rubin Review

Which brings us to the comedy-noir document released by the White House on February 24 titled, “The Biden-⁠Harris Plan to Revitalize American Manufacturing and Secure Critical Supply Chains in 2022.”  The report starts by creating a nifty acronym for Biden’s team designed to centrally manage the supply chain, the SCDTF or Supply Chain Disruptions Task Force (The acronym’s absence of vowels makes me wonder if it was originally written in Hebrew).

After starting in true Soviet-style by telling Americans how glorious things have become in Mother America since Biden took office (using some of the same false data he cited in his SOTU) the report then shares the 12 steps (apologies to those in recovery for the sacrilege) that SCDTF plans to take to “fix” the supply chain crisis

  1. Put the U.S. Economy on a Path Towards Long-Term Resilience Across Critical Supply Chains
  2. Propose a new domestic manufacturing initiative through the Export-Import Bank to strengthen U.S. manufacturing exports.
  3. Expand access to capital for small manufacturers
  4. Advance the technological leadership of both small and large manufacturers
  5. Leverage the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law to move critical goods from ships to shelves faster and more affordably
  6. Invest in sustainable domestic production and processing of critical minerals
  7. Leverage the American Rescue Plan to jumpstart a more competitive, innovative, and resilient meat and poultry supply chain
  8. Institutionalize Supply Chain Resilience Throughout the Federal Government  (This is the only one they underlined.  Must be really important)
  9. Bolster the American manufacturing of critical goods through new reforms under the Buy American Act.
  10. Fully establish a Defense Production Act Investment Program to build and expand the health resources industrial base
  11. Bolster clean energy manufacturing through implementation of the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law
  12. Restore U.S. global leadership on supply chains

The problem with the SCDTF, aside from its clear lack of an inclusion policy for vowels, is all their “solutions” for supply chain problems focus on government intervention.  Government intervention has CREATED the supply chain problem!   Having SCDTF step in to solve supply chain issues has the familiar feel of the old military joke of “Today we dig the hole.  Tomorrow we fill in the hole.”

The paradox is that since government has created the problem, government has to be part of solving the problem, and the way they can help solve the problem is by getting themselves out of the way of the market and let it solve the problem.

bob rubin

Are you concerned about inflation, ESG compliances, and the 2022 crypto crash?

Your investment portfolio can be affected by any or all of these factors.

Schedule an appointment with Bob Rubin, your dedicated, conservative financial advisor, for a free portfolio analysis today.

Get started by clicking the button below.

No BS… Just straight forward advice

Contact Bob, the Nation’s Predominant
Politically Conservative Financial Advisor Today!

Call Bob @ (561) 288-1111

Email Bob @ Bob@RubinWA.com

Or schedule a call below!