Americans dogged by persistently high prices are finally getting signs of relief as inflation has slowly but steadily cooled over the past year — but that's no thanks to President , according to Republican presidential candidate Chris Christie.
"Inflation has started to retreat, I think almost exclusively because of [Federal Reserve] policy," Christie, the former governor of New Jersey, said Tuesday on CNBC's " ."
"We're certainly not seeing any reduction in spending by the Biden administration, and they're still printing lots of free money," Christie said.
The Fed is not entirely faultless, he said. "They may have waited too long to do what they were doing on rates, and therefore had to raise them much more quickly," said Christie, "and I would be critical of that."
But Biden and his predecessor, former President , both deserve the lion's share of the blame due to their profligate spending, the former governor argued.
"In the end, the cause of this is Joe Biden and his spending and Donald Trump and his spending during his time in the White House," said Christie, whose presidential primary campaign has been aggressively critical of Trump.
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The Biden administration has put his inflation-fighting efforts front and center in his first term in office. He championed a sweeping spending bill in 2022 dubbed the Inflation Reduction Act and has for the easing of the inflation rate since its passage.
But recent show majorities of registered voters disapprove of how Biden has handled the economy and inflation in particular, exposing a major weakness as he seeks reelection in 2024.
Christie, making a pitch for his candidacy on CNBC, vowed to rein in federal spending, which he argues is at the root of U.S. inflation woes.
Fed policymakers, in turn, will start to lower rates when they see that the executive branch is not burning through trillions of dollars in deficit spending every year, he said.
"I am willing to say no to more federal spending," Christie said.
He also would not say if he would reappoint Fed Chair Jerome Powell, whose term expires in May 2026. "It depends on how he does from here out," Christie said.