Bidenomics? President tells Americans why his policies are good for their pocketbooks

As the 2024 presidential campaign heats up, President Joe Biden is seeking to boost public confidence in the economy and build support for his efforts to raise wages and reduce consumer costs.

Polls show Biden receiving low marks from voters for his economic record amid a two-year inflation spike that has eased but remains historically high. Just 33% of adults say they approve of his handling of the economy, according to a poll last month from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.

Biden said Wednesday in a Chicago speech, in which he touted a set of policies the White House has begun referring to as "Bidenomics," that it will take time for Americans to see the effects of new laws.

"And I'm not here to declare victory on the economy," Biden declared. "I'm here to say, 'We have a plan that is turning things around incredibly quickly. But we have more work to do."

Broadly, Biden says his stimulus plan swiftly lifted the economy from the pandemic-induced recession. But critics say it went too far and helped trigger soaring inflation and rising interest rates that have the U.S. facing the prospect of another downturn.

What is Bidenomics?

Here are Biden’s main claims about his economic strategy − "Bidenomics" − and USA TODAY’s analysis of it:

Strongest recovery, lowest inflation

Biden says his policies have driven the strongest recovery among the world’s major economies and the lowest inflation. This is generally accurate, experts say.

Credit the American Rescue Plan (ARP), the $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief package that Biden spearheaded and Congress passed in March 2021. Among other things, it doled out $1,400 stimulus checks to most households, extended generous unemployment benefits and provided more aid to small businesses.

The rescue bill – which followed $4 trillion in similar COVID-19 relief measures in 2020 – was needed because the economy was at risk of slipping back into recession, says Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody's Analytics.

"We didn’t know how well the COVID vaccine was going to work," Zandi says. "Who knew how the pandemic was going to play out? If you have uncertainty you want to err on the side of doing too much."

Without the rescue plan, 4 million fewer jobs would have been created in 2021, Zandi estimates.

But conservative economists say the stimulus wasn’t needed because the economy was already bouncing back from the COVID-19 recession. Employers had added more than 1 million jobs during the first two months of the year, just before Congress passed the rescue package.