When Economists and Presidents Clash
Economist Peter Schiff is calling out President Donald Trump in spectacular fashion, challenging him to a public debate about inflation and the U.S. economy. This comes after Trump took to Truth Social to bash Schiff as a "Trump-hating loser" who "has already proven to be wrong."
The gloves are off, and Schiff isn't backing down.
"Trump claims I hate him because I told the truth about inflation. He's clearly not aware of all the times I endorsed his re-election or defended him against unfair criticism and lawfare while Biden was president," Schiff fired back on X.
Schiff's main argument? Both Trump and former President Joe Biden share responsibility for America's "affordability crisis," and Trump's second-term policies are making the situation worse, not better. "If I'm as wrong as he says I am, let him prove it," Schiff said, extending the debate challenge to Trump or any of his representatives.
What's Really Happening with Prices
Trump defended his economic track record by claiming that Schiff is mistaken about rising prices. "He thinks prices are going up when, in fact, they are coming substantially down," Trump posted on Truth Social, also taking a shot at Fox News for giving Schiff airtime. "Check out the 'booker' who put this jerk on!"
But other economists are sounding similar alarms. Moody's Analytics Chief Economist Mark Zandi warned that a "serious affordability crisis" is emerging in the U.S., pointing to Trump's tariffs and restrictive immigration policies as factors "juicing" inflation.
The numbers tell a sobering story. According to a Visual Capitalist report from last month, the middle-class lifetime bill has crossed $5 million, with healthcare, housing, and education costs hitting particularly hard.
Economist Justin Wolfers argued that Trump's "original sin" was promising voters on the campaign trail that prices would actually fall. "In a healthy economy, they almost never do," Wolfers noted.
Meanwhile, economic data released on Friday offered a mixed picture. The Fed's preferred inflation gauge, the Personal Consumption Expenditure price index, eased slightly in September, while consumer spending rose in line with forecasts.
Schiff's Track Record on Trump
This isn't Schiff's first rodeo criticizing Trump's economic agenda. He previously slammed Trump's proposal for a $2,000-per-person tariff dividend, warning it would balloon the trade deficit.
Schiff has also taken aim at Trump's cryptocurrency ventures, calling out a private gala dinner invitation for top holders of the Official Trump (TRUMP) meme coin as outright corruption.
The debate challenge remains open, though it's unclear whether Trump or any administration officials will take Schiff up on the offer. For now, the war of words continues to play out on social media, with both sides digging in on their views about who's responsible for America's inflation headaches.