Jason Gottesman, the press secretary for the Republican House Speaker, Rep. Bryan Cutler, criticized the proposal in an emailed statement because of its potential impact on inflation.
“While Gov. Wolf and his legislative allies spent the entire spring and budget negotiations working to put forward policies that would only exacerbate the record-breaking inflation that has driven up costs on even the most basic necessities and crushed real wage growth, Republicans were advancing a significant inflation-fighting economic agenda,” he said.
In February, the inflation level in the United States was at 7.9%. But some economists argued that it could prove temporary because of the pandemic and the war in Ukraine. Instead, inflation continued to increase.
The $500 million cost of the program is such a small fraction of the state’s more than $700 billion economy, Wolf said, that he didn’t think this new program would cause any additional inflation.
Rep. Sara Innamorato argued that the increase in inflation was the very reason that these $2,000 payments were needed.
“More and more, we are hearing from working people who are just trying to make ends meet in the face of a COVID-19 recovery, rising inflation on basic goods, and–despite fancy titles–jobs that don’t actually pay a living wage compared to actual expenses it takes to just survive,” she said.
Wolf said he didn’t have any new ideas or incentives to win Republican support. “I’m not sure this deserves negotiation,” he said.