Many people have complained about New York Times headlines, with reason. All too often an equivocating, sanewashing headline belies the excellent reporting that follows. But yesterday the Times got it right about the first-quarter decline in GDP: “Trump boasts about the economy, but says weak data is Biden’s problem.”
There will be much more of this as the data get worse, which they will. (I’m going to keep treating “data” as plural unless it refers to a Starfleet commander.) In fact, I worry a lot about Trump putting pressure on the statistical agencies to report better numbers. He has already said that reports of rising prices are “fake news”.
For now, however, it’s important to be clear that the bad news is all on Trump’s head, and we mustn’t let him get away with claiming otherwise.
It’s true that most of the time presidents have much less impact on the economy than many people believe. It’s also true that a president’s policies usually don’t have large economic effects in the first few months of their administration.
But Trump’s policies have been so extreme that they are already making the economy visibly worse. In particular, expectations of high tariffs began distorting business decisions even before the tariffs went into effect. If you look at the GDP numbers released yesterday, you see a huge surge in imports coupled with a large surge in inventories. Both of these clearly reflected businesses “front-running” expected tariffs, racing to buy as much from China in particular as they could before the tariffs went into effect.
And the effects of Trump’s policies will become even clearer, and even worse, over the next few months. Those insanely high tariffs on China have led to a collapse in shipments from China to the United States, which will soon be reflected in soaring prices and, probably empty shelves.
We’re also already seeing signs of Trump’s policies causing broad economic weakness:
Trump himself seems to be aware that he’s causing major supply-chain disruptions.
“You know, somebody said, ‘Oh, the shelves are going to be open,’” Mr. Trump said. “Well, maybe the children will have two dolls instead of 30 dolls, you know? And maybe the two dolls will cost a couple of bucks more than they would normally.”
OK, having Trump come out as a critic of consumerism and proponent of the higher, spiritual side of life wasn’t on my bingo card.
What I and everyone else did expect was that when the economy turned bad, Trump would refuse to accept responsibility and blame his predecessor. And right on cue, that’s what is happening.
So this is a good time to remember that Trump actually inherited a very good economy, one that was outperforming all its peers. From The Economist, last October:
When Trump moved into the White House, America had historically low unemployment and inflation only slightly above the Federal Reserve’s (arbitrary) target of 2 percent. Look at the “misery index,” the sum of inflation and unemployment — a crude but usually pretty good measure of how the economy is doing. As of January that index was quite low by historical standards:
Were there deep underlying problems, reasons to believe that the appearance of prosperity was somehow misleading? No. I’ll probably write at some point about claims by Trump’s minions that the Biden economy was somehow bad despite low unemployment and inflation combined with rising real wages. But for now let me just say that none of these claims stands up to even casual scrutiny.
In short, pay no attention to Trump’s excuses. The U.S. economy was in good shape when he came in. If everything is going to hell — which it is — he has nobody but himself to blame.
MUSICAL CODA
Treating "data" as plural! Thank you. You should get a Nobel Prize for that.
1. Is trump an idiot? Yes. Is he being driven by really smart and evil people? Highly likely. They are the ones sweating the details of the cruelest and vilest policies, particularly wrt immigration and the federal workforce, deregulation of the environment, etc. They type up his festering executive orders. They probably manage some of his feed on xitter and remote control his Press Nazi.
Two questions here:
a) who are these people and why don't we out their names? These are not Leonard Leo et al. Nor are they the kabuki idiots who hold cabinet positions (Hegseth, Noem, Gabbard, RFK, ...). They are concrete deep state apparatchiks and we need to know who they are. Just like the press outed the Dunning Kruger doge kids (e.g., "Big Balls" Coristine), we need to know.
b) why don't these smart people rein in trump's idiotic economic policies? The common argument is that the oligarchs can buy stuff (e.g., farmland) for pennies on the dollar when everyone goes bankrupt, but what good will that farmland be if we can't export anything to China due to their tariffs? As a corollary, wouldn't MAGA be far more successful if the economy were doing great? That would give them cover to do all the other racist, nazi evil stuff that they are trying to do, and trump's approval ratings wouldn't be tanking at lightning speed.
So why on Earth would they want to mess with the economy? (In spite of his obvious current state of decline, Carville is still right about "it's the economy, stupid!").
2. Are trump's voters a bunch of cultists? Most definitely. They need a daddy figure, they hate anyone who is not white and Christian, and will find apologies till kingdom come for the putrid ape. Will they ever wake up? I would submit that our best chance is to hit a massive depression very soon, and hopefully before the rule of law is torn to shreds. There are multiple evil competing processes at play in destroying our country, we just need to find the lesser evil and that happens to be a deep depression.
3. What the f. is Congress doing. They could legislate to end this nonsense very quickly. They aren't. This means that GOP senators and representatives are 110% complicit and even more guilty than trump, since they can't plead insanity or any kind of mandate. Nobody really voted for what is happening, and congress critters didn't even go campaigning on "mass deportations" or 'tariffs", which trump did. I guess he's at least making good on that promise.
Marie Antoinette said "let them have two dolls" - try explaining that to your kids and grandchildren, magats.