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Strategies & Market Trends : The Financial Collapse of 2001 Unwinding -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: robert b furman who wrote (3105)8/22/2019 11:15:14 PM
From: Elroy Jetson1 Recommendation

Recommended By
kidl

  Respond to of 13876
 
Trump’s tendency to double down on bad ideas doesn’t bode well for the economy

There are lots of reasons to worry about how President Trump would handle a recession, should we tip into one. There’s his incompetent economic team. Or the limited fiscal policy tools at his disposal, given that Republicans already spent nearly $2 trillion on tax cuts. Or his efforts to discredit the Federal Reserve just when we’ll need it most.

One underrated concern: Trump’s tendency to double down on stupid and destructive ideas, despite — perhaps because of? — overwhelming evidence of their stupidity and destructiveness.

Trump’s worst policies, economic or otherwise, tend to follow a pattern. First, he posits something like: Sure, the experts say that has predictably high costs and bad consequences. But ignore them! Believe me, it’s a great idea, and it’ll be completely costless.

To wit: Tax cuts will pay for themselves, without injury to deficits. China will pay all the tariffs, without harm to U.S. importers, manufacturers, retailers, farmers. Mexico will pay for the wall, without costs to U.S. taxpayers or international relations.

Free lunches, all around.


Then when it becomes clear those lunches weren’t free — in fact, they were quite pricey — the pitch changes. Okay, Trump and his cronies admit, maybe we’re suffering some pain now. But that pain will be worth it, because eventually it will pay off.

Someday the tax cuts will pay for themselves. Someday the trade war will pay off. Someday Mexico will pay for the wall.

In fact, to get us closer to someday, we just need more tax cuts, more tariffs, more fights with neighbors to the south. Because, hey, you know what they say: If a bad idea doesn’t work out, just make that bad idea even bigger.

Learning from mistakes and reversing course are never options; wishing away the foreseeable fallout always is. That wishing-away is also a team effort, and one that predates Trump. Republicans have for years been lying that tax cuts will eventually pay for themselves, if we’re only patient.

Ask Kansas how that worked out.

Even so, Team Trump has lately elevated this goal-post-moving to an art form. Consider how White House aides first publicly dismissed any indication that recession risks were rising, insisting that Democrats and the media were fabricating such fears. Then White House acting chief of staff Mick Mulvaney acknowledged to GOP donors this week: Okay, okay, we might have a recession, but it’ll be “moderate and short.”

Sounds an awful lot like, “Recessions are short and easy to win.

Other Republican officials have been aiding and abetting Trump’s pigheadedness, too, in some cases hoping to turn it to their advantage.

On Thursday, for instance, Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) cheerfully tweeted that he’d spoken with White House National Economic Council Director Larry Kudlow about the economy. Scott concluded from their discussion that Congress should use Treasury’s supposed tariff revenue windfall to come up with a plan to cut taxes elsewhere. Kudlow recently confirmed Trump’s interest in this idea.

Which raises a couple of questions.

First of all, isn’t that tariff revenue allegedly already earmarked for farmers? And second, tariffs are themselves taxes on Americans.

Oddly, Republicans always seem to believe that tax cuts will pay for themselves through higher growth — except when the taxes in question are Trump’s new taxes.

The reason, of course, is that positing this would require forcing the president to admit error, something he’s less and less likely to do the worse things get. Indeed, should economic growth not just slow (as it already has) but reverse, one could imagine him becoming even more protectionist, more isolationist, more insistent that the world is zero-sum.

We got a glimpse of this Thursday, when Trump complained how unfair it was that Germany, one of nine major economies now in or on the brink of recession, enjoys the privilege of offering negative sovereign debt yields. Trump sees this not as a sign of a country in crisis but rather a country somehow trying to cheat the United States.

The possibility of a synchronized global downturn would require some sort of coordinated global policy response, just as it did a decade ago during the Great Recession. But rather than evaluating how we got to the present situation, or how to make amends with the allies we might need to help get us out of it, we already know what Trump’s objective will be: proving his very wrong ideas were very right all along.



To: robert b furman who wrote (3105)8/22/2019 11:22:50 PM
From: Elroy Jetson1 Recommendation

Recommended By
kidl

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 13876
 
Trump is increasingly untethered from reality

Quick, can you name the White House press secretary? Do you have any idea what she looks or sounds like? Stephanie Grisham has held that job for nearly two months now, but if her name doesn’t ring any bells, it’s because she hasn’t yet given a single official press briefing. Trump has foolishly decided to act as his own exclusive spokesman, putting all his prejudices, misconceptions, resentments, insecurities, grudges and fears on ugly display.

The result is what we witnessed Wednesday on the White House lawn.

Walking to the waiting helicopter, Trump paused and took questions from reporters for 35 minutes, unfazed by the midday 89-degree heat and smothering humidity. He made much news and little sense.

When he looked to the sky and proclaimed that “I am the chosen one,” you had to wonder whether his egomania, which we’re accustomed to, might have blossomed into full-scale delusions of grandeur.

Again and again, he tried desperately to compare himself favorably with his predecessor, Barack Obama. He did so by telling ridiculous lies that are easily disproved by the historical record — no, Obama didn’t institute the cruel policy of separating thousands of migrant families at the border, Trump did; no, Obama wasn’t denied permission to land Air Force One in the Philippines. You had to wonder whether Trump, who was the loudest voice in the racist “birther” movement, might have some kind of obsession with Obama and his continuing popularity around the world.

Trump said he canceled his planned state visit to Denmark because the Danish prime minister was “nasty” in calling Trump’s desire to purchase Greenland “absurd.” It is absurd, of course, but leave that aside. It happens that Obama is scheduled to visit Denmark in September. Might Trump have feared that he would be met with protests and then have to watch Obama bask in the adulation of much bigger crowds?

We also heard Trump repeat and amplify his offensive claim that American Jews who vote for Democrats are being “disloyal” to Israel. The notion of dual loyalty is a vile anti-Semitic trope that goes back centuries. Does Trump think dredging it up somehow helps him politically? Or is it one of a host of deep-seated ethnic and racial stereotypes that he now blurts out because no one is empowered to stop him?

If the president seems to be spiraling out of control, it’s because he’s frantically worried about losing his bid for reelection — but also because the insulation that once protected him from reality has been stripped bare.

Insider accounts of the Trump White House have spoken of the rages, obsessions, fixations and biases that spill out of the president behind closed doors. But there were officials in place who could temper his rashest impulses. When he was chief of staff, John F. Kelly even managed to establish some measure of control over the flow of information to and from the president — a necessity for any administration to be able to set priorities and follow through on them.

But Kelly is gone, along with everyone else who had the stature, experience and courage to at least try to make this mess into a functional presidency. The information flow? Now it’s whatever Trump watches on Fox News — or hate-watches on CNN or MSNBC — and immediately tweets about.

Trump’s most influential remaining adviser is Stephen Miller, the anti-immigration zealot who survives by applauding and reinforcing Trump’s worst instincts. When Trump said Wednesday the administration wants to end birthright citizenship (which the Constitution guarantees), everyone could guess where that was coming from.

Cabinet members are like the guys in the parade who walks behind the elephant with a broom and dustpan. After Trump abruptly canceled his trip to Denmark, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo hurried to offer words of reassurance to the Danish foreign minister. Acting chief of staff Mick Mulvaney, a strident budget hawk his entire career, has apparently just given up as the deficit soars toward $1 trillion.

The nation and the world need a competent, capable White House but won’t have one anytime soon. Instead, we’ve got a teetotaling president who sounds like the angry guy at the end of the bar, mouthing off about whatever he sees when he looks up at the television. Closing time can’t come fast enough.




To: robert b furman who wrote (3105)8/23/2019 6:31:52 PM
From: GPS Info  Respond to of 13876
 
I agree with you.

OK, but I’m not sure what you agree with. Do you hope Trump will have more private sector jobs than Obama? Do you agree that the tariffs could drive down job growth?

I'd like to see the free market hire people vs. BIG GOVERNMENT.

Forgive the review, but public-sector jobs are generally government jobs. The ‘free market’ jobs are also called private-sector jobs. Like you, I want to see higher growth in the private sector than in the public sector.

Yet Bush Jr hired a lot of TSA people - which I suspect includes the government payroll.

Yes, those are jobs are within the Department of Homeland Security, and so they are on the government payroll. The top chart shows private-sector jobs and the bottom chart shows all job growth from January 2016. So, the top chart would NOT show any of the TSA hires because those are public-sector jobs, and the bottom chart does NOT included job growth for the Bush Jr administration. The top chart show that during the Bush administration there was a net negative job growth, due largely to the dot-com crash of 2000 and the housing market crash of 2008, which continued into the subsequent years.

Thus the spinned chart you reference.

I can only assume you mean the top chart with the private-sector jobs. I don’t understand how that chart has been ‘spinned’ as you suggest because it’s clearly label as private-sector jobs.

...
Wikipedia:
The public sector (also called the state sector) is the part of the economy composed of both public services and public enterprises. Public services include public goods and governmental services such as the military, Law enforcement, infrastructure (public roads, bridges, tunnels, water supply, sewers, electrical grids, telecommunications, etc.), public transit, public education, along with health care and those working for the government itself, such as elected officials.
...
Organizations that are not part of the public sector are either a part of the private sector or voluntary sector.
en.wikipedia.org