The Trump administration’s five dumbest economic ideas
Stock markets can erase national debt? Trump invented a decades-old economic theory last year? On both counts, not so much.
Early in the
morning on March 2, Donald Trump tweeted that
“trade wars are good, and easy to win.” When other countries “get cute”—meaning
they enjoy trade surpluses with the U.S.—the president’s cure is simple: “don’t
trade anymore.” Voilà, problem solved, he wrote: “We win big. It’s easy!” The
reviews were instantly
poor. “This is fundamentally incompetent, corrupt or misguided,” wrote Adam
Posen, president of the Peterson Institution for International Economics. In
his popular daily newsletter on March 5, Gluskin Sheff + Associates chief
economist David Rosenberg predicted an “outright global trade war.”
The U.S. Department of Commerce counts 46,608 employees among its ranks. The president’s own Council of Economic Advisers exists to advise the president on policies that “foster and promote free competitive enterprise” and “avoid economic fluctuations or to diminish the effects thereof.” The U.S. International Trade Commission stands ready to “provide independent analysis and information on tariffs, trade and competitiveness.” But Trump’s administration has revealed that all the economists in the world, and all the informed advice they can muster, are no match for extemporaneous politicians and their lackeys.
Since Trump
took power, he’s lead the charge on promoting baseless claims and crackpot
theories about what makes an economy tick. Here are five of the strangest
positions they’ve championed in front of a mic (or on Twitter).
1. Donald
Trump celebrates trade wars, calls them easy to win, and says countries that
don’t have steel aren’t countries.
Trump’s
threat to slap a big tariff on steel imports, which on its face appears to
apply to all countries but may ultimately be contained to only certain
exporters if it ever comes to pass, appeared to be an example of the president
creating policy on the fly. He unleashed a series of tweets on the morning of
March 2.
Most
economic observers dispute the president’s basic thesis that trade deficits
are, on their own merits, harmful to any nation’s economy. But the uncertainty
created by the blanket threat may be even more damaging to the global trading
system, which is premised on more liberalized trade and negotiations to that
end, not protectionist rhetoric that oversimplifies and misconstrues the
consequences of trade deficits. Also at issue: the president’s contention that
a country requires steel to be a country.
2. Donald
Trump thinks a stock market boom pays off national debt.
https://x.com/JuddLegum/status/918281845275586560?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E918281845275586560%7Ctwgr%5E9165ba4713bbd86d46f430ac704ba4586d3a0cf6%7Ctwcon%5Es1_&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fmacleans.ca%2Feconomy%2Feconomicanalysis%2Fthe-trump-administrations-five-dumbest-economic-theories%2F
On Oct. 11,
2017, the president conflated stock market growth with a reduction of the
national debt. “We picked up $5.2 trillion just in the stock market … Maybe in
a sense we’re reducing debt,” he claimed on Fox News. At the time, Wall Street
was on a tear and the Dow Jones index had closed just shy of a record-high
23,000 points. What did that mean for the federal government’s debt load? Not
much. As the U.S. Federal Reserve helpfully illustrates, national debt hit its
own record high late last year—which isn’t surprising, since the debt has risen
consistently for years. Trump, no
stranger to debt in his previous life in business, may not spend a lot
of time looking at charts.
Donald Trump thinks he invented a common economic phrase he did not invent.
On May 4,
2017, Trump sat down with
editors from the Economist. During that conversation, he claimed
ownership of an economic turn of phrase—”priming the pump”—that predated
his usage by at least 80 years.
“I came up
with it a couple of days ago and I thought it was good,” he said. The New
York Times fact-checked that claim, reminding readers that priming the
pump, which means infusing economic stimulus into the economy to jumpstart
growth, dates back to at least the Great Depression and is widely attributable
to the economist John Maynard Keynes. Google Ngrams illustrates the dramatic
degree to which “priming the pump” was a topic of conversation as the world
battled economic depression all those years ago (though Trump’s use of the word
did spike
its proliferation last year).
4. Rick
Perry thinks supply creates demand.
On July 6,
2017, as Energy Secretary Rick Perry toured a coal-fired power plant in West
Virginia, he offered a lesson
in Economics 101: “Here’s a little economics lesson: supply and demand. You
put the supply out there and the demand will follow.”
Perry may
have been defending a principle called Say’s law, the view that entrepreneurs
who create things—i.e. increase supply—will generate enough spending—for
example, through salaries paid to employees—to increase demand. The Economist largely
defended the basic tenets of Say’s law last year. Then again, in
2015, New
York Times columnist Paul Krugman dismissed the
theory as “refuted three generations ago.” Krugman argues that low demand hits
supply hard. In other words, “economies with persistently weak demand seem to
suffer large declines in potential as well as actual output.”
Perry may be
confident that increased coal production will find new customers, but he won’t
find many of those new customers in the U.S., Canada or China. The
International Energy Agency projects that global coal demand will increase
marginally over the next five years, but that particular fossil fuel will see
its share of global energy consumption shrink over the same period.
5. Mick
Mulvaney is surprisingly honest about his own shallowness.
When the
Trump administration was doing the math on its tax reform proposal, it looked
to Office of Management and Budget Director Mick Mulvaney to make sense of the
numbers for reporters. As Vox explained,
Mulvaney committed an egregious error that would make accountants groan, and
former Treasury secretary Larry Summers called “a logical error of the kind
that would justify failing a student in an introductory economics course.”
What was the
error? Mulvaney said the proposal, which would on its own add $1.3 trillion to
the national debt, would cause enough economic growth to make the whole thing
revenue-neutral and also eventually balance the budget. Most
observers think it’s impossible for tax cuts to spur enough growth to achieve
both those goals—but it’s hard to dig into Trump’s logic, because Mulvaney
didn’t offer much. From Vox:
Mulvaney
offered a baffling defense of this accounting strategy at his Monday briefing
with reporters.
He explained
that the budget assumes tax reform will be deficit-neutral because “it was in
all honesty the most efficient way to look at it.” How so? Well, he explained,
“if we said it’s going to add to the deficit, then we have to go into more
detail than what’s in the summary right now, [and] if we say it’s going to
reduce the deficit, we have to go into more detail than what’s in it right now.
And we simply are not in a position to do that.”
So how was
the tax plan going to achieve revenue neutrality? Because the administration
said it would.
Honourable
mention: Sarah Huckabee Sanders explains the U.S. tax system using a beer
analogy.
COPY THE LINK BELOW AND PASTE TO YOUR BROWSER
https://youtu.be/c0g5T_MWWHA
During her
daily press briefing on Oct. 30, 2017, press secretary Sanders explained the
progressive U.S. tax code by comparing it to a hypothetical night at a D.C.
bar, where 10 fictional journalists pay various proportions of the bill at the
end of the night depending on their ability to pay. Her point was that the
wealthiest reporter always pays the most; as the bar tab falls, the
one-percenter journalist who gets the biggest break still pays more than anyone
else—but gets an earful anyway.
Admitting
the “silly” story was an “oversimplification,” Sanders used the analogy to deny
claims that Trump’s tax reform plan would disproportionately benefit wealthy
taxpayers. The Washington Post dug into the scenario and
determined that Sanders wasn’t
painting a full picture: the two richest journalists do pay more, but they
also combine to earn more than half of all income—an important consideration in
any conversation about tax rates.
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