I'm not sure exactly where you get your numbers. In any event, after this year Biden will have ran the largest deficit of any President.
If you and others use economics to make political declarations, they usually don't make sense in any context. Trump's declarations doesn't always make sense. Either does Biden.
As far as your concern that Biden is being unfairly blamed for inflation, some of it is unfair. I personally don't like a lot of his spending initiatives. The Inflation Reduction Act was a not so brilliant attempt at political manipulation. You can tell me all day that government spending does not fuel inflation. I find rhetoric like that just as crazy as anything Trump says.
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U.S. National Debt by Year
The U.S. national debt is the total of what the federal government owes creditors. The U.S. has always carried debt, but the total has expanded rapidly since 2008.
I don't see anything anywhere to support your numbers but if Donnie says it, it must be true.
Gotta love this part : Presidential decisions can also lower the federal deficit and reduce borrowing. For example, the Congressional Budget Office predicts that the Inflation Reduction Act, which was passed in 2022 under President Joe Biden, could reduce the federal deficit by $58 billion over a decade.
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And this : Spending also increased under then-President Donald Trump by about 50% from fiscal year 2019 to fiscal year 2021. This was largely driven by tax cuts and COVID-19 relief measures. Those types of moves, along with increased government spending and decreased tax revenue from high levels of unemployment, can generally cause the national debt to rise sharply.
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