Tuesday, 4 March 2025
I wanted to watch Trump's address to Congress because I cannot tell from the fragments I see on CNN if Trump has a plan for the economy.
He does appear to have a plan. And he did say that fixing the economy is "among my very highest priorities" (to fix it, to improve it, something like that. I missed the word). But after that, the next thing I have in my notes is Trump calling the post-pandemic inflation "the worst inflation, perhaps ever, in the history of our country" which is a crock of shit. Trump does not have enough respect for our economy to tell the truth about it. As you know, I think the Employment Level data for the first month of Trump's second term was fake news. And as you can imagine, I am not happy that Trump wants to change the way GDP is measured.
Hey, the data for GDP excluding the government component is already available. If you want to take government spending out of GDP you can do it in seconds. At FRED, grab the GDP series and subtract from it the GCE series. Done.
Oh, and at Vox, a good read: Economic growth is slowing — so Trump wants to redefine “economic growth”. The NY Times has Commerce Secretary's Comments Raise Fears of Interference in Federal Data.
Next, Trump blamed Biden for the price of eggs. Then he described his plan to fight inflation: "Reducing the cost of energy and ending the flagrant waste of taxpayer dollars." How, sir, how are you gonna do that? Fire everyone you can fire, and drill-baby-drill? That's it, I guess. Nothing esoteric in that. But how does it fix the bird flu problem?
My note-taking was rushed, and my handwriting is illegible at best. My notes have Trump saying "by getting rid of fraud in social security we will cut grocery prices." I gagged on that line when he said it. Prices and costs are related. If not, then prices and profits are related. It shouldn't be hard to figure out the problem even if it is something other than bird flu.
And then, Trump promised to balance the federal budget. Note that he did not promise to avoid creating a Greater Depression in the process. That's my concern, the worst-case bad ending. And Trump is already messing with the GDP data, so you know he is worried also about the worst case. Trump doesn't want to be Herbert Hoover, and all that.
At one point Trump said he wants to make interest payments on car loans tax-deductible, "but only if the cars are made in America." That was interesting. However, by making loans less costly, deductible interest encourages people to go deeper into debt. And the problem with our economy, the biggest of all the problems with our economy, is that the private sector is already so deep in debt that we can no longer borrow enough to offset the cost of debt service and have enough left to boost the economy by spending it. This is the problem that needs to be solved. Making interest on car loans tax-deductible will not solve the problem. It will make the problem worse.
To be clear, federal debt is not the problem. It is a problem, yes; but the federal debt is not the cause of the private-sector problem. Federal debt, really, is a measure of the size of the economic problem of the private sector. Excessive private-sector debt is the cause of the private-sector problem. If we rely less on borrowed money and more on income -- if policy creates this change -- then a reduction of business interest cost can offset an increase in labor cost, with something left over to boost business profits.
I may regret saying this, but I think Trump is modeling himself to be our Caesar, ending the Republic and creating an Empire. He would be far better off, as would we all, if he modeled himself after Solon, the forgiver of debt.
In the Tuesday night speech, Trump mentioned a lot of new investment. In my notes I have him saying "$1.7 trillion of new investment in just the last few weeks." A sentence or two later, that new investment spending turned into announcements of plans for investment "in the US instead of in China". Not sure I got that last quote right, but I got the gist of it.
If Trump wasn't lying about that investment, good. I could probably set aside my concern about a Greater Depression, and I would be happy to do that. But he lies all the time, so I can't trust him on the big new dollars of investment. I will look into it, after I finish these remarks. I wish I could do better. But he's the one that lies all the time, so it's on him.
In my notes, just before my note about
the new investment, Trump called his first term the "most successful
economy in the history of our country." Bullshit.
The next thing in my notes, after the grandiosity of taking credit for the most successful economy in the history of our country, is Trump saying
reciprocal tariffs begin April second.
Whatever
tariffs other nations set on our products, we'll set matching tariffs
on their products. That's kinda cute, in a way. More complicated than it
sounds, I think, because we don't buy the same products from them that
they buy from us. But it is cute. And it might be a way for Trump to
negotiate the tariff rates to lower and lower levels over time. I think that might be what he has in mind.
Well, the speech went on for a while longer. He started introducing people from the audience and I started losing interest. But I waited it out to the end. And while I did, I wrote this in my notes:
Trump's plan for the economy seems to be tariffs, tariffs, and tariffs.
I didn't hear him say anything about finishing his first-term project, the wall between the US and Mexico to keep foreigners out. His second-term focus is evidently on another wall, a different wall, a wall of tariffs intended to keep foreign output out.
I oppose globalization, but I don't think tariffs are a good idea. I think the good idea would be to figure out why US economic growth is in long term decline, and solve that problem, the problem of excessive private-sector debt.