It seems unquestionable that when China gets a cold, the market
sneezes. When the world gets China’s cold - the market seizes. As
the various exchanges register “Shock and Aaaaaaargh!” at the potential impacts
of the Corona virus there is a distinct chance that this will expose the fragility of the Trump economy. The economic boom so
frequently touted by the President is something I’ve long said was built on
toothpicks, that it might very well disintegrate if any small thing falls out of place
– and a microscopic virus seems to be proving that point. It’s also
illuminating something perhaps a bit more surprising – there are many more
things in common between Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders than the conventional
wisdom would hold to be the case.
On what do I base these assertions? First, let’s take four basic
assumptions as starting points – if you want to challenge me on those feel free but
I’m pretty confident they are correct and that the only real debate surrounds
their impact, not their existence:
1. Trump inherited a strong, improving economy from Barack Obama.
2. The tax cuts passed in Trump’s first year assisted in heating that
economy up, creating at least a mini-boom.
3. The administration has evidenced little to no concern with the growth in
the federal deficit; and,
4. The administration has aggressively sought to counter the typical impacts
associated with tariffs.
Now – let’s take those points in turn.
Trump Inherited a Strong Economy
Barack Obama’s style infuriated conservatives but, perhaps more
impactfully over the past two presidential election cycles, it frustrated and
disappointed liberals, particularly those farther left. Obama was far too
measured for their taste – liberals were expecting a figure whose every speech
would evoke the Gettysburg Address and every bill would be a new Voting Rights
Act. Instead Obama, while certainly capable of rising to the occasion
when required (witness his speech following the murders of worshippers in South
Carolina) was perhaps best described as “plodding but effective”.
(Warning: Here come the sports analogies). They wanted Jim Brown but got
Larry Csonka. They wanted Ted Williams but got Stan Musial. They
wanted Michael Jordan but got John Havlicek. (Further Warning – Irish
sporting analogy ahead) They wanted Rory McIlroy but got Padraig
Harrington.
Enough.
The point is – all of those alternatives are great in their own way –
they’re just not “the greatest ever” and aren’t all that flashy. Obama’s
probably going to end up being ranked somewhere in that category of
Presidents. Nowhere is this truer than in the realm of the economy.
The one thing no politician ever gets credit (or blame) for are the “things
that don’t happen”. If Herbert Hoover had prevented the Great Depression
– would anyone have even known? If James Buchanan had quietly sat both
sides down and stopped the Civil War from happening – I’m certain people would
not revile him as much as they do now but I’m equally sure that, because the
Civil War would not have happened, no one would realize the
danger of the bullet that had been dodged.
To me – when it comes to measuring the Obama performance – it’s a bit
like asking “how sharp are the shark’s teeth that did not bite you”? When
Obama was coming in to office the economy was in something resembling free
fall. Lehman Brothers had failed, the banking system was hanging by a
thread, the remnants of the auto industry were about to collapse without access
to cash (which is tough to get with no banks), pensions had been wiped out, the
world economy was teetering. It was bad – really bad.
But the fact
that we are sitting here today tells you that while the economy may have been
on a cliff’s edge in 2009 – it never fell off.
The fact that this didn’t happen is perhaps Obama’s greatest triumph. He did what Hoover and Buchanan did not. We’ll
never know how sharp the teeth were that did not bite.
How this
happened is one of the better stories of the last fifty or so years. In large
part it goes like this - having taken an active part in the transition between
administrations (a stark contrast to the actions of Trump as detailed in
Michael Lewis’s “The Fifth Risk”), Obama was able to effectively lobby
for the passage of an economic stimulus plan.
More impressively, once in office the administration of those funds was
accomplished in a way that managed to maximise their effectiveness. Rather than financing a number of politically attractive huge projects (in a manner similar to that done during
the New Deal) a more careful, deliberate course was followed. No enormous dams, federal office complexes or
national monuments (all of which could be named after prominent politicians) were
built – instead the money was carefully apportioned to managed projects involving strategic investments – and
ended up being historically free of waste and corruption. The entire endeavour is described in Michael
Grunwald’s book “The New New Deal”, which makes a strong case in favor of the
methods used to apportion the funds.
But whether
you accept the effectiveness of the incentive plan or not one thing was certain
– it was not designed to bring about immediate or even “brisk” recovery. Instead the approach was based upon
gradualism – a slow, sometimes barely discernible return to prosperity. This proved infuriating to conservatives, who
decried the pace (or even the reality) of the recovery. But more telling for the current election
cycle this was even more frustrating for the left wing of the Democratic party,
which had thought the incentive program offered an opportunity to funnel funds
to traditional government backed programs – not a stimulus package for the private sector.
The fact that this was not the approach taken led to discontent on the left –
perhaps most graphically represented by the fact that throughout 2011 one
Bernie Sanders was spending significant amounts of his time in New Hampshire,
preparing for a primary challenge to Obama. Donald Trump was contemplating a similar run - when he wasn't trying to prove Barack Obama was born in Kenya.
Obama did
have one factor acting to his advantage – the strategy was working. While the economy could, at any one given time, be described as
“lethargic” it was, over the span of years, clearly
improving. In the 2012 election Obama’s
Republican opponent, Mitt Romney, vowed to achieve 6% unemployment if
elected. This was deemed an outrageous
figure, pie in the sky stuff. Obama simply vowed to stay the course – keep the
same strategy and continue the slow growth.
Hardly the stuff of legend.
Nonetheless, by 2016, after winning that 2012 election – the unemployment rate
under Obama was not at Romney's promised 6% level - it was, in fact, around 4%. Clearly
whoever inherited the economy following the 2016 contest would be walking in to
a solid, well performing, growth-based situation. That someone turned out to be Donald Trump.
Superheating
the System
Let’s start
this next section with a question. If you were to be given a credit card with a
million dollar credit limit – are you then a millionaire? I know most would say “no” – but why
not? If you see something with a million
dollar price tag on it – you can buy it – that’s what a millionaire could
do. If you want to invest $100,000
dollars in ten separate business ventures – you could do that. That’s what a millionaire could do. If you want to fund a pension fund with a
million – you could do that. Just like a millionaire.
Of course,
what is not factored in to this is the annoying little fact that you will have
to pay back the million – eventually.
But during the period of time that the bill doesn’t come due – shit,
you’re a damn millionaire.
Here we come
to the great Republican con game of the past 40 years. While selling themselves as the staid
proponents of fiscal austerity the GOP has been the largest band of profligate
spenders in history. In each of the
Republican administrations since Ronald Reagan the federal deficit has grown,
the national debt has exploded, the revenue base has been eroded and –
incredibly – the party has promoted itself as the avatars of frugality.
Oh – by the
way – they have done so successfully
The basic
plan goes like this – you come in to office criticising the Democrats as a
bunch of socialist, half crazed, anti-American lunatics who want to give all
your money away to gang members and drug addicts. You then assure people that if they turn the
economy over to you these activities will stop, you will curtail all this
craziness and – get this – you’ll be able to cut everyone’s taxes and make sure
no one feels any pain.
Of course, these
are the things that would cause pain – cuts to military spending, cuts to
social security, cuts to medicare, cuts to student loans, cuts to transport
spending, cuts to farm subsidies, cuts to veterans’ benefits – you get it. You could get away with attacking grants to
public broadcasting (unless they are seen to be a direct threat to Big Bird),
and you could make a lot of hay cutting art subsidies or food stamps – but
those were red herrings – the size of the cuts were miniscule.
The tax cuts
however – they were not illusory. Each
administration would come in with a single, overriding top legislative priority
– get those cuts passed. The reason was
quite simple – a tax cut to a country is the equivalent of giving itself that
million dollar credit card we talked about at the beginning of this section –
except it was more like a multiple of billion dollar cards.
If you spend
like a millionaire for a short period of time it will become similar to a sugar
high – to all watching you from the outside you’ll appear to be doing better
than ever. You’ll have a better home,
drive a better car, wear better clothes, eat better food. The same is true of a country after a tax
cut. There’s more money out there (lots
more for some), there’s more economic activity, business is up, spending is up,
unemployment goes down. And here’s the thing that Democrats don’t seem to
realize – this is not “illusory”. The
economic boom that accompanies a tax cut is quite real- it’s just not
sustainable.
Republicans,
in fairness to them, have made feeble attempts to cut spending for some of the
large, pain inducing programs previously listed. The problem is this – those are all good
programs. Not just popular – but good, important, necessary areas in which
government is expected to, and should, perform.
We need a military. We need social security. We need functioning roads
and airports, educated students, health care for veterans and the elderly
(really, more than just that) – so when you attempt to cut those programs – you
lose elections. So while the previous Republican administrations of Reagan and
the two Bushes probably did intend to cut spending to offset their tax cuts
(although it is hard to envision how they ever thought they’d cut enough) they
were never actually able to do the job – and it wasn’t because of the
Democrats.
We know this
because during the two Democratic administrations there was actual evidence of
fiscal responsibility. The Obama
successes have been detailed – but during the Clinton years the federal
government posted surpluses – an unheard of development. (Obama did not but
that was largely down to the stimulus package and TARP program inherited from
Bush II). This was helped by the brakes
applied by Republican congresses – but remember – they never went after the
really important programs because, well, they were important.
Which brings
us to Donald Trump. Trump, who is not a
conservative and was not, until the party morphed into his image, a Republican,
has simply done away with all pretense when proposing an economic plan. He passed huge tax cuts upon taking office,
knowing that this would superheat the strong economy he inherited, he made no
effort to reduce spending other than cosmetic things like spending on national
parks, he actually boosted spending on things like his ridiculous wall, “Space
Force” and other chimerical programs. At
the same time he reduced regulation, knowing this would open the gates for
companies to exploit areas without fear of federal restraints. (This is called “getting government off your
back”. Other examples of operations
where government was not “on the back” of big business would be WorldCom,
Enron, Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers and some Dutch tulip company back in the
day).
Unsurprisingly
all of this additional money, reduced regulation and promise of more of the
same led to the spurt in economic growth the country has enjoyed for the past
few years. It is not illusory – the
economy is in a legitimate “boom” period – but, like a gangly teenager going
through a growth spurt – it’s getting bigger but not “stronger”.
Treating the
economy like this is dangerous, and cannot be sustained for long. Trump doesn’t care. As far as he is concerned it only has to be maintained
until November, long enough for him to tell everyone how great things are. That’s why the latest Chinese export has him
so worried. The Corona virus just might disrupt
his timetable.
Why Does This
Matter?
Look – if
this was only about who was going to end up as President after the November
election – this really wouldn’t matter.
Economies go up and down, elections get held, there are plenty of other
reasons to cast a vote that don’t involve deficits, budgets, taxes, monetary
theory, trade policy – the wonky things. Go ahead - vote for (or against) someone
because of guns, abortion, the judiciary, civil rights – those are all
incredibly, incredibly important. But I want people to at least consider the
following arguments because I think they are important as well.
As I’m
writing this I’m looking through the collected works of someone whom I greatly
admired. Paul Tsongas was a Democratic Senator
from Massachusetts whose office I worked in while attending college. He was unreservedly liberal when it came to
social issues, but was also a self-described “pro-business” Democrat. This
meant that he did not, for example, automatically discard someone’s value as a
person simply because they were rich. To him the word “billionaire” would have simply
meant someone who had a billion dollars, not someone who was inherently
evil. Prejudice is prejudice, no matter
if it is based on skin color or dollar signs.
He was also a
great opponent of something that is not really thought about much anymore. Here is something he wrote about in 1991 (and
that I touched on at the beginning of this article):
The students will not believe the teacher. How could this be, they will ask. How could
Reagan and Bush have gotten away with balanced budget rhetoric at a time of
massive budget deficit realities? How could they lull the American people into
accepting such staggering debt without widespread revolt?
More pointedly, they will ask, why did people allow
this enormous accumulation of debt which now burdens their generation? This,
of course, raises the pointed question of generational morality.
That was
1991. The annual budget deficit that he
was up in arms about was $245 billion. This
year it is estimated to surpass $1 trillion.
For one year.
That is
nearly inconceivable and, to me, represents an enormous danger. The problem is – it doesn’t seem to bother
too many people on the right (Trump) or the left (Sanders) very much at
all. At least anymore.
Republicans
were, at one time, up in arms about the deficit. Having signed on to Trump’s
use of the company credit card (and the accumulation of a one trillion annual
bill) that is not the case any longer.
Democrats (other than the Tsongas wing of the party, who are becoming
increasingly less conspicuous) have never been overly concerned about the
concept of deficit spending, though the level of unsupported expenditure has
not been as high under Democratic presidents as Republicans since the 1960’s. The Bernie contingent certainly has no problem with such spending.
In fairness
to both parties the lack of concern about the rate of deficit spending is not
simply a case of “whistling past the graveyard”. Economists on both the right and the left are
able to justify their position on deficits on the grounds that the true measure
of the impact of the deficit is not the overall size of the debt, but the cost
of servicing that debt. If interest
rates are low then the cost of servicing the debt will not become a drag on the
economy – instead the borrowing will act as a kind of “perpetual stimulus” keeping
the debt easily serviceable while the economy motors along. Here, in theory, is how this works itself out
according to a recent article in Slate:
The main reason economists have
traditionally warned governments against borrowing too much is that doing so
could slow down the economy by pushing up interest rates and “crowding out”
private investment. In theory, a country could also end up trapped in a debt
spiral, where it can no longer meet its interest payments and is forced to
default. But for developed nations that print their own currencies (sorry,
Greece), those aren’t really serious concerns these days. As Olivier Blanchard,
the former chief economist of the International Monetary Fund, has explained at
length, we live in an era of rock-bottom interest rates that have made it
easier for governments to sustain even high levels of debt. In the United
States, interest payments as a percentage of GDP are just over half of what
they were in the mid-1990s. The signs of crowd-out are also all but
nonexistent: Borrowing is cheaper for companies now than at any time since the
1950s. There are also signs that advanced countries can carry vastly higher debt
loads than we do and still be just fine: Japan’s debt-to-GDP ratio is more than
double ours, and yet it’s currently borrowing money at negative interest rates,
meaning investors are essentially paying Japan to hold their money.
The Slate article goes on
to note that while this is currently the prevailing wisdom – they could
be wrong. That moment of humility is expressed thusly: “In the end, all predictions about the economy are
informed guesses, and it’s possible that, down the line, circumstances might
change in unexpected ways.” That
seems to be the position on all sides – they could be wrong, but there is no
evidence to that effect and it’s a bet worth taking.
The problem is – there is
evidence to the contrary and if you have any regard for history – fairly recent
history – you would never take that bet.
It was only the 1970’s when the country faced interest rates that were
in the high teens. Yes – that was forty odd years ago – but that’s the thing –
if rates spike every 60 years or so – then within the next 20 years we’ll see a
repeat event. When that happens the
irresponsible growth of the national debt will not be “just fine” – it will be
crippling.
I can just see the people
who know a bit about the events in the ‘70’s shaking their heads. “What happened during that time was unique –
you can’t base policy on the chance of an energy crisis, coupled with currency
devaluation and slow economic growth repeating itself”. What are the odds of
something like that happening again?
The thing is – there are
any number of situations that mirror that scenario – some of which are
repeating themselves during this current period. How about this – in the next 10-15 years
global warming could create a situation where it is readily apparent that
energy policies have to change. This
creates a 1970’s type energy crisis. The
reason such a change becomes “readily apparent” is the impact of rising sea
levels on urban areas – huge infrastructure changes may be needed to preserve the
seafronts in Boston, New York, Miami Beach – every major city that is
coastal. This leads to economic chaos
and monetary shortages which manifest itself in high interest rates. The high rates cause spikes in the debt
service payments that are the current generation’s legacy. This leaves the next generation slaves to this debt and unable to
finance the needed rebuilding program. They'll essentially have to deal with the economic mess
for their entire lives. Nothing in this
scenario involves anything particularly “new” – and while it isn’t something
that will inevitably happen –it certainly could.
Suddenly the bet everyone seems so willing to make isn’t such a sure
thing.
The “Modern Monetary
Theory” that pushes for the continuance of deficit spending is enormously risky
– and flies in the face of Tsongas’s cry for “generational morality”. The willingness of the extremes on the right
and left to overlook that fact is troubling, as is the point of view that
“moderates”, the tag applied to people who still worry about things like running
trillion dollar deficits, are seen as being “against change” or “snowflakes”
(depending on who is doing the name calling).
Since both Trump Republicans and the Sanders contingent on the
Democratic side agree that deficits aren’t that big a deal – a vote for either
of them in November makes very little difference on this issue. Plus, that’s
not the only issue that Sanders and Trump agree on – when it comes to China,
where the Corona virus started (remember the Corona virus- this is an article
about the Corona virus…) Trump and Sanders aren’t that different either,
especially when it comes to one particular area – tariffs.
What’s the Deal with Tariffs?
Up to now I’ve been giving
examples of how Donald Trump has attempted to superheat the economy, creating a
boom that, while unsustainable in the long term, could very well last long
enough to get him re-elected. It’s a
strategy very similar to the one that Michael Cohen described Trump using when
seeking to finance a deal – he creates a deceptive cash flow picture, convinces
the target banks to front him cash for a speculative deal (in effect “vote for
him”) and then after securing the funds he’ll default and force a
re-negotiation.
There was one element of
the Trump administration’s actions that did not seem to fit this model – the
use of tariffs, which has been a staple of Trump’s trade war with China. Tariff’s are a controversial tool – whether
they are effective at all is still very much up for debate. One thing, however, is certain. In the short term the use of tariffs by
themselves are a drag on the economy.
It raises the price of goods within the borders of the nation that
imposes them, and, due to the inevitable retaliatory measures that the targets of the tariff will impose, it
reduces trade for impacted industries and sectors.
The key phrase there is
“by themselves”. Trump, when putting
tariffs in place, typically never uses a tariff alone but accompanies the action with massive amounts of federal assistance
for the impacted sectors. If any other
administration were to try this the immediate cry of “socialism” or “welfare”
would arise – but Trump has the Republican party so strung up that no one is
left to make that charge. Nonetheless – it is true – the single largest trade
based social welfare program in U.S. history is being run by Donald Trump right
now.
Remember when we talked
about the Obama administration’s supervision of the stimulus package? One of the larger elements of that package
was the effort to preserve the auto industry.
Most Republican’s hated that program. Mitt
Romney advocated for letting the automakers declare bankruptcy rather than
spend any federal money to support them.
It was derided as the worst instance of socialist meddling in U.S.
history. All told the auto industry benefited from about $18 billion in
federal largesse, which was a hell of a lot of money. Still – there is a U.S
auto industry today and so the effort can be deemed a success from that point
of view.
Republicans in Congress
still profess to hate the whole thing (even though it was started by George W.
Bush). The market, according to them, should
have been left to decide the matter.
All such bailouts are bad policy say these staunch conservatives.
Ummmm. Well, maybe not all such bailouts.
You see, since the
beginning of Trump’s trade war with China the U.S. agricultural industry has received
$28 billion in federal subsidies, dwarfing the auto bailout. This is just as “socialist” an approach as
that taken by Obama (and, before him, Bush). Wait a second – strike that. This is far more socialist than the
auto bail out. At least the auto
industry was actually failing – the U.S. agricultural community isn’t in danger
of collapse, they were just not going to be making as much money as they did
before Trump imposed tariffs on the Chinese.
This is wealth redistribution that rivals, well, Mao Tse Tung, amongst
others. Yet, magically, this enormous
grant of federal money passes into the hands of a favored group without any
appreciable objection from the GOP.
Why?
The reason goes back to the motivation behind
the Trump tax cuts and deregulation movements.
The economy only gets superheated when people (and corporations) have
cash to spend – and if a tariff is going to remove cash from as big a sector of
the U.S. economy as the agricultural industry – then that would endanger the boom – and cash would need to be thrown at that sector to avoid such a result. In order to prevent tariffs from
having the effect tariffs always have – you must counteract the tariff
through direct government intervention – and if that is “socialist” in its
nature – well, Donald Trump and Eugene Debs would pretty much see eye to eye on
that one.
One other person who would agree with using
government funds to counter the impact of tariffs is Bernie Sanders – who was
loudly proclaiming this same strategy long before the Republicans in Congress
became converts. Trump and Sanders both
espouse the same strategy for using tariffs – use them as protectionist
measures for securing domestic jobs while aggressively providing government
assistance to those who are impacted by this blatant interference with free
trade. You can agree or disagree with
the approach – that’s a different discussion.
All I am trying to establish here is that Sanders and Trump do not differ
that much in their current positions on tariffs.
However – please note that the key word here is
“current”. If, as I think the rest of
this essay makes clear – the economic trend of the first three Trump years is
unsustainable – then the Trump approach to tariffs and trade will likely end as
soon as the first cracks in the boom appear. There are a number of reasons for
this – but the primary one is the fact that a trade war is not something that
is of long-term use to Donald Trump. A
superheated economy that gets him re-elected is fine – and protective tariffs
where no one feels any pain in the short term help achieve that goal. But once that
has been accomplished – a trade war with China is never going to be in the best
interest of an international developer like Trump. Watch for the pressure on China to ease if Trump
is re-elected.
How Does the Corona Virus Threaten This?
The house of cards that is the Trump economy is
predicated on one overriding premise – make it last long enough to get him
through November. If the economy
collapses or evidences significant weakness before then – the whole thing falls
apart. Corona virus is possibly the bug
in the punch bowl. The unsustainability
of a boom engendered from stimuli like tax cuts, regulators looking the other
way and tariff programs that offer an excuse for rampant federally funded
welfare unravels if people are suddenly afraid to spend and speculate because they
are worried about the global impact of a pandemic.
Instead of pumping all that money in to the system people will hold it –
and the boom will end.
Again, do not make the mistake of calling a
boom like this “artificial”. The
economic effects are real – it’s just that they are not capable of lasting –
and when you come out the other side of an accelerated "boom" cycle you do worse, as an economy, than you
would have if you had simply let the economic trend develop organically.
In short, this is an argument for, that dirty
word again, moderation. When you drink
moderately you have a good time, and while you might be a bit tired after
spending a long night out with friends – you are up for doing it again. When
you drink heavily you have a great time, but it doesn’t last as long and
you throw up in the cab on the way home and can’t figure out why that one guy
won’t talk to you anymore. When you eat moderately
you enjoy a good meal. When you pig out
your taste buds explode with ecstasy – and then you feel like garbage and have
to pop an endless series of antacids to stop the reflux. The same thing goes for economic
moderation. The Obama recovery was slow,
sometimes agonizingly so, but it was built to last. The Trump bump – God only knows what’s going
to happen when we wake up from this one.
This is an essay about Corona – and a
few other things. In the end the Corona
virus may end up being a bit like Toto in The Wizard of Oz. While everyone is looking at the smoke and
mirrors at the end of the hall – it may quietly draw back the curtain of the
man creating that ruckus. Here’s the
thing – Frank Morgan, the actor who played the Wizard – he looks and sounds a bit
like Donald Trump. He also can be
mistaken, at times, for Bernie Sanders.
Stay healthy everyone. And vote wisely.
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