Saturday, February 22, 2025

Trump's Choice--Economic War, Not Peace

 Answering Kennedy’s Call

“Our society has been peaceful and healthy for so long that for many people serious disaster has become inconceivable. Americans who parade around in amateur militia groups and brandish Nazi symbols do so partly because they are unable to conceive of what life would actually be like in a fascist state.” James Marriott of The Times, cited by Heather Cox Richardson

Our peaceful, healthy and democratic society is being rudely awakened by Donald Trump’s choices in his second term election. Because of the years of good times, Americans are not prepared for what will come next. But neither are the two ‘straight’ men doing the most damage who have chosen to take a chainsaw to the federal budget with little planning or fore thought of the consequences.

We can look forward to more chaos in the financial markets, for starters. Because Republicans’ next battle will be their attempt to pass a 2025 fiscal year budget and cut taxes at the same time. Because it is obvious that neither Trump nor Musk have any idea how our economy works.

One sign of their ignorance is Trump’s insistence that foreign corporations and governments pay the tariff taxes levied on U.S. imports. Tariffs are taxed and paid at the point of entry, either by the importers or their clients adding to their cost, which is inflationary

We are already seeing economic damage in the chaotic way Musk’s DOGE is downsizing watchdog federal agencies that monitor financial activity, such as the FCC and SEC, ignoring laws and congressional mandates. No economy can grow amid such ignorance of the ingredients that make it work, that create trust in its institutions.

GW Bush in 2000 tried to ignore most regulations that govern economic activity in Republicans’ earlier quest for a “free” market by ignoring regulations that protect markets that catch the cheaters. The Great Recession followed, the worst worldwide downturn since the Great Depression.

Republicans seem to have forgotten that lesson in their current support of what Trump/Musk are doing. Musk’s DOGE employees are not only blindly firing employees in the agencies that give consumers and investors’ confidence in the future, but the unpredictability of their actions is revealing that Musk/Trump never had a viable plan to do it.

The Clinton administration was the last administration to successfully shrink federal spending. It was carefully planned and led to the longest period of economic growth since WWII—for 10 years until the 2001 9/11 Twin-tower attacks.

They planned it carefully by taking the time to work with congress and institute budget cuts gradually over several years with the goal of shrinking government spending to 2 percent of GDP. It resulted in four years of budget surpluses from 1996 to 2000.

We are already seeing the toll on consumers from the incompetence of Musk’s DOGE hackers working in secret, some with criminal records. The University of Michigan sentiment survey of consumer confidence has plummeted.

Survey confidence dropped 10% from January to the lowest level since late 2023. The second of two readings of consumer sentiment in February slipped to 64.7 from 67.8 earlier in the month.

According to the report, Americans’ expectations for inflation over the next five to 10 years rose to 3.5% from 3.3% earlier in the month and from 3.2% in January. This is the largest month-over-month increase since May 2021.

And as if to confirm their fears, the DOW plunged almost -800 points and the S&P more than -100 points last Friday.

It is while Bloomberg reports U.S. business activity nearly stalled in February amid mounting fears over tariffs on imports and deep cuts in federal government spending, erasing all the gains notched in the aftermath of President Donald Trump's election victory.”

This is hardly a vote of confidence for an administration that was elected on the promise of reducing inflation.

Republicans and Trump’s electorate seem to have no idea what living under a fascist government means, where all power is concentrated in the executive branch under one man, with full disregard of the laws of the land, the constitution, the judiciary and congress.

It is sad they haven’t taken the more successful track to downsizing government that President Clinton took, another impeached president (not convicted). Working with congress and the laws of the land resulted in the Clinton administration’s four years of budget surpluses, not the impending chaos and economic destruction ahead caused by Trump and Republicans choice of vengeance over cooperation.

Harlan Green © 2025

Follow Harlan Green on Twitter: https://twitter.com/HarlanGreen

Thursday, February 20, 2025

Does Trump Want Another War?

 Answering Kennedy’s Call

“I’m not sure most Americans appreciate the monumental damage President Trump is doing to the post-World War II order that is the wellspring of American global leadership and affluence.” NYTimes Nicholas Kristof

There is a growing outcry over the “monumental damage” emanating from the bromance of two ‘straight’ (and white) men on a tear of petty vindictiveness settling old scores, which can have far greater consequences.

It is tearing apart our closest alliances that protect Americans and other democratic countries from the depredations of autocrats and dictators, such as Vladimir Putin, who must imagine himself Czar Ivan the Terrible killing hundreds of thousands of his own people in attempting to conquer Ukraine to make it a part of a new Russian Empire (350,000 dead Russians at last count, per NBC’s Morning Joe).

“We have Trump and his oligarchy of ignorant shoe shiners vandalizing the network of organizations, agreements and values—largely put in place by America since the Second World War—which have given most of us, including America, on the whole an extraordinary degree of peace and prosperity.” Chris Patten, former UK Tory Chairman cited by Nicholas Kristof.

The level of ineptitude that Elon Musk’s DOGE team shows is breathtaking, as are the attempts to hide it.

All in all, what we’ve just witnessed is a stunning display of incompetence, dismissal of critical federal workers by people with no idea of what they do and why it matters. Musk and Trump have, of course, apologized and promised to do better in the future.” Nobel Laureate Paul Krugman

Why the petty vindictiveness of our Bromancers? In a frightening insight by Timothy Snyder, Author of On Freedom, they are really ‘straight’ men trying to appear strong. But that can only be done by weakening the strong that actually stand in their way.

“Trump is a strongman in the sense that he makes others weak. He is strong in a relative sense; as Musk destroys institutions, what remains is Trump’s presence. But other sorts of power meaning vanish, as Musk takes apart the departments of the American government that deal with money, weapons, and intelligence. And then the United States has no actual tools to deal with the rest of the world.”

Dr. Snyder explained what he meant in a recent New Yorker article. Trump and Putin are both fascists, which by definition means masters of propaganda that twist words such as ‘communism’, or ‘deep state’ into meanings that feed their MAGA followers’ paranoid fantasies.

Hitler’s Goebbels, and Russia’s Stalin were masters of such propaganda that led to World War Two. It is detailed in Snyder’s bestselling book, “Bloodlands,” which describes the hideous period in the 1930s and ’40s when as many as 14 million people perished at the hands of Hitler and Stalin, with Ukraine a “particularly awful” mass grave.

And Trump is using the same fascist vocabulary today in branding Ukraine’s Zelensky the dictator, when it is Vladimir Putin.

That is why Trump and Musk’s actions threaten world peace and our own domestic order. They accomplish it by weakening the military alliances that have protected us such as NATO, while eliminating whole government departments that protect our health and safety and more environmental catastrophes, while weakening the FBI and DOJ that protect Americans from domestic and foreign terrorists.

In fact, settling old scores is an attempt to protect themselves from their own mistakes (i.e., Trump’s convictions, Musk-Tesla’s auto-drive accidents) by putting the blame on others. That is why Trump says he does not know what Musk is doing, when asked. He can therefore blame Musk or his lieutenants when said mistakes are uncovered.

Both Democrats and Republicans must now find a way now to counter Trump and Musk’s biggest mistake of all, their preoccupation with vengeance to and masks their own weaknesses that could lead to another war.

It is weakening our own strength and ability to stand up to Russia and China, where a larger war is most likely to start—because they have become emboldened by our growing weakness.

Harlan Green © 2025

Follow Harlan Green on Twitter: https://twitter.com/HarlanGreen

Wednesday, February 19, 2025

Make Trump 2.0 Irrelevant Again!

 Answering Kennedy’s Call

“The United States now has the highest percentage of low-wage workers – that is workers who make less than two-thirds of the median wage- of any developed nation. Fully 25 percent of all American workers make no more than $17, 576 a year.” Harold Myerson The American Prospect,

We know how to counter the Trump administrations attempts to wreck the U.S. economy and our constitution from his past history. Blue states in particular have the power to keep their citizens healthy and safe. They did it in his first term, as I said in a 2017 Huffington Post article, when it was becoming obvious Trump wanted to act like an anti-democratic oligarch.

Climate change has been the target of Trump’s “drill baby drill” fossil fuel supporters since his first term, yet climate change poses the greatest danger to Americans’ health and safety, particularly to our west coast inhabitants (wildfires and floods) and east coasters (hurricanes and tornadoes), not to speak of the record low winter temperatures tormenting Midwesterners.

“The U.S. just released its latest congressionally mandated Climate Science Special Report that says 2017 wreaked the most catastrophic destruction in 90 years with an estimated $175 billion in property damage. Only the San Francisco Earthquake (1906), Chicago Fire (1871), and Great Flood (1927) caused more destruction,” I said then.

Trump’s other first term attempts at relevance included, “his fiasco of an Asian trip, where he fawned over foreign leaders who gave him massive pageants, but no trade concessions, while abandoning the Trans- Pacific Partnership.

“The remaining 11 countries, including Japan, Australia, Mexico and Malaysia, said they had revived the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) deal, a multilateral agreement championed under the Obama administration.

And also, “American leaders from state capitals, city halls and businesses across the country have shown up in force” in Bonn, Germany, to discuss carrying out the 2015 Paris climate agreement,” said California Governor Jerry Brown and Michael Bloomberg in today’s New York Times.”

This is when President Trump announced at the beginning of his Presidency that he was abandoning the Paris Accord in favor of supporting a return to coal and oil energy. But that wasn’t what the rest of America wanted, as some 50 percent of U.S. states and cities were represented in Bonn.

And now it is his indiscriminate use of import tariffs that threaten to wreck international trade.

President Trump’s attempts to return to the predominately white middle class of the 1950s have become irrelevant to most of the problems facing Americans and the world today. Trump is ignoring the damage revenge policies will do to the U.S. economy, and his own red state supporters by also attempting to destroy American’s social safety net, including cuts to Medicare and Medicaid that most harm red state citizens, protections against climate change, and wanting to downgrade the military alliances that have kept us safe.

Trump’s first term policies have been irrelevant in so many ways. He has done nothing for his red state supporters. As Thom Hartman highlighted in my last blog, red states continue to suffer most from:

— Spousal abuse
Obesity
— Smoking

— Teen pregnancy
— Sexually transmitted diseases
Abortion (at least before Dobbs; now it would be “forced births”)
— Bankruptcies and poverty
Homicide and suicide
— Infant mortality
— Maternal mortality
— Forcible rape
Robbery and aggravated assault
— Dropouts from high school
Divorce
Contaminated air and water
— Opiate addiction and deaths
Unskilled workers
— Parasitic infections
— Income and wealth inequality
— Covid deaths and unvaccinated people
— Federal subsidies to states (“Red State Welfare”)
— People on welfare
— Child poverty
Homelessness
— Spousal murder
Unemployment
— Deaths from auto accidents
— People living on disability
— Gun deaths

Climate change is a good start, since the worldwide droughts have been a major cause of the worldwide migrations escaping from poverty that have upset the existing geopolitical order.

Let’s continue to make Trump and Republicans’ actions irrelevant that are attempting to destroy our federal government by supporting cities, states and even international organizations (UN, WHO?) that pursue the policies that have kept America great and the world at peace—policies that build rather than destroy, that breed trust and community, rather than hatred and division.

This strategy doesn’t minimize the suffering Trump has already inflicted on so many Americans but could mitigate some of the cruelty to come.

Harlan Green © 2025

Follow Harlan Green on Twitter: https://twitter.com/HarlanGreen

Monday, February 17, 2025

Donald Trump Is No Populist

 Answering Kennedy’s Call

An NBC News poll last April showed that Trump had a 26-point lead among voters who don’t follow political news. In contrast, voters who got their political news from newspapers, the most comprehensive form of daily news, supported Joe Biden by a vast margin, 70 percent to 21 percent. David French NYTimes

image

Mother Jones

It’s becoming clear what Donald Trump and Elon Musk have in common, when Musk has said he loves Trump 'As Much as A Straight Man Loves Another Man' on X. It is their unbridled greed that harms anyone on their way to greater fortunes.

Neither Trump nor Musk are populists. It is clear we are seeing two apex predators at work as the 2nd Gilded Age is peaking. They are doing what the Oligarchs who support Trump have always done, preyed on the weakest and most ignorant.

That is why corporate profits are at a post-WWII high, 11.8 percent of GDP, when Trump Republicans want even more tax cuts with the federal budget now 120 percent of GDP. And people without college degrees die about eight years sooner than those with four-year degrees, according to NYTimes David Brooks.

This is why women with only a high school degree or less are five times as likely to have children out of wedlock or women with a college degree. And by the sixth grade, children of poor families are performing at four grade levels lower than the children of affluent families.

These sad statistics cited by David Brooks in a recent NYTimes op-ed are the result of years of tax cuts without paying for them by Republican administrations that has made the red states they govern the poorest states. and resulted in the record federal debt we now have.

Worsening the harm to ordinary Americans, Trump and Musk want to root out DEI personnel and programs that promote greater opportunity and replace them with even less competent personnel, such as Pete Hegseth, JFK, Jr. and Tulsi Gabbard.

In just Donald Trump’s first week in office, it’s becoming obvious that the lies he promotes will be no different than during his first term as president. He is counting on the American electorate who voted for him to not believe what they are seeing, as I said recently—a worsening climate, worsening inflation, less healthcare services, military preparedness, and public education.

These disparities exist mostly in the red states, to no one’s surprise, where essential public services are less available. There is an enormous poverty gap between the red and blue states, and Republican administrations have done nothing to bridge it.

“Some of the chasms are sociological. People with only high school degrees or less are much more likely to say they have no close friends. They are more likely to live in towns where social capital is collapsing and the young are fleeing.”

Why is it so many Americans don’t believe what they see? This is largely due to where they live—the red states.

Thom Hartman of the Hartman Report, a NYTimes best-selling author, says it’s because Republicans worship cheap labor — and having a steady and reliable supply of cheap labor requires widespread poverty.

It is what Trump’s electorate voted for, while:

— Blue states account for about 71 percent of America’s GDP, whereas Red states only produce 29 percent of our income and wealth.
The median family income in Blue states is $74,243. In Red states it’s $63,553. Individual states highlight the disparity: New Jersey’s median income is $89,703, while Mississippi’s is $49,111.
— Counties that voted for Biden in 2020 are more diverse, being 35 percent nonwhite compared to 16 percent nonwhite populations in counties that voted for Trump.
Counties that voted for Biden in 2020 are better educated, with 36 percent of their population having some college education compared to Trump’s counties at 25 percent.
— Residents of Blue states live 2.2 years longer, on average, than residents of Red states. Hartman lists many more disparities on his website.

Why don’t Trump believers follow political news; news readily available in most mass media? It is why red state economies have foundered, while Trump wants to govern as he did his real estate empire; with family and loyal friends, no checks and balances; which has largely been a failure.

It is why the 2nd Gilded Age will end when Americans—particularly his populist supporters—realize this bromance of two ‘straight’ men will make all of US less safe, healthy, and wealthy.

Harlan Green © 2025

Follow Harlan Green on Twitter: https://twitter.com/HarlanGreen

Friday, February 14, 2025

Inflation Is Back?

 Popular Economics Weekly

“Kentuckians can’t afford the high cost of Trump’s tariffs,” which could cost the average Kentucky resident $1,200 a year. “[P]reserving the long-term prosperity of American industry and workers requires working with our allies, not against them.” Senator Mitch McConnell


Senator Mitch McConnell’s op-ed in the Louisville Courier Journal (thanks to Heather Cox Richardson) tells us why the former head of the Republican Senate voted against Pete Hegseth for Defense Secretary and Tulsi Gabbard for Director of National Intelligence. He considers their history of incompetence a threat to our national security.

And it looks like that will happen, if President Trump and his Oligarchs get their way with tariffs. But signs of higher inflation are beginning to appear in the New Year that may hinder their implementation of higher tariffs.

Senator McConnell had been the Democrat’s biggest thorn until now, including stonewalling Presidents Obama’s pick of Merrick Garland for the Supreme Court, but of late has been more concerned with the damage that President Trump may do to national security.

Most of the tariffs Trump has announced are targeting our closest allies, thereby weakening them economically. Our closest allies are also our largest trading partners, so they have the low-hanging fruit that Trump first wants to pick by collecting taxes on their exports.

This, of course, increases his wealth and that of his supporters, almost all billionaires in their own right. But a budget battle is looming in March over annual expenditures and the debt ceiling that must be raised to pay for the tax cuts they want, and little room to maneuver with Republicans’ thin House majority.

This also endangers just how Republicans have increased their wealth exponentially since the 1980s while chiseling away at the benefits (such as Medicaid) that increase the wellbeing of the less wealthy—many of whom live in the red states they control.

It is unfortunate that President Trump’s wave of tariff announcements have occurred at the same time as inflation is beginning to rise again. This is incredibly bad timing when he said that he would bring down inflation on ‘Day 1’ of his presidency.

For instance, the retail Consumer Price Index for prices that directly affect consumers is back up to 3 percent y/y after hitting its low point of 2.4 percent last September. The rise in prices was mostly due to soaring food prices (eggs/bird flu) and energy prices (gas and oil)—probably because of the very cold winter.

McConnell’s main worry seemed to be how the tariffs would weaken relationships with our closest allies that help to protect us from the likes of Putin’s Russia or China’s Xi. Trump is using tariffs as a blunt weapon to bring down the budget deficit, while disregarding national security concerns that tariffs are supposed to enhance, which should be to increase the sourcing of strategic raw materials, such as steel and aluminum.

But we don’t really have a problem with aluminum and steel sourcing because our current alliances already supply what we need. That’s why we know Trump’s real reason is not to enhance national security, but to enhance his own financial security enriching himself and the billionaire class by taxing more imports to bridge the huge budget deficit gap.

So how in fact can we reduce the current inflation surge? We must reduce the demand side of the equation, which the Fed is helping to do by keeping short term interest rates slightly higher (4.25% to 4.50%) than current inflation. It makes credit more expensive for investments as well as consumer spending.

Reducing government investments will also reduce demand, because it flows into the private sector where it’s spent by consumers and businesses. But the Oligarchs want only to reduce the size of government expenditures that don’t directly benefit them, such as healthcare, environmental protection, and consumer protection by reducing regulations they don’t like that also reduce their profit margins.

Why otherwise fire so many Inspector Generals who monitor financial misbehavior? Or, why fire so many FBI agents who protect our national security, which is a sign they care little about our national security.

The problem is how to make government more efficient, but that also benefits the less wealthy? Everyone agrees there’s a lot of waste, but also necessary public investments that improve infrastructure, protect the climate, and national Research and Development that the private sector won’t do.

But Oligarchs want only to cut the benefits of everyone else.

Harlan Green © 2025

Follow Harlan Green on Twitter: https://twitter.com/HarlanGreen

Wednesday, February 12, 2025

Are Consumers In Danger?

 The Mortgage Corner

Total consumer credit rose $40.8 billion in December, after a $5.4 billion decline in the prior month, the Federal Reserve said last Friday. In percentage terms, it is the biggest gain since June 2022.

Will consumers lose their mojo? They shopped until they dropped during the holidays, which is why retail sales were up 3.9 percent in December as well. To do this consumers were spending more than they were earning. The question now is when will consumers run out of savings, and stop shopping? That will in fact determine economic growth in the New Year.

Revolving credit, typically credit-card debt, made up most of the increase, rising at a 20.2% annual rate. That follows a 12.1% drop in the prior month. Nonrevolving credit, mainly auto and student loans, rose at a 5.8% rate after a 2.7% rise in the prior month.

That’s the fine line the Fed’s Chair Powell is attempting to walk at their semi-annual congressional update this week. He didn’t say outright that the tariffs that President Trump has announced will cause inflation to spike so they can’t drop interest rates any lower, in answering questions.

"We are in a pretty good place," Powell told the Senate committee - citing tariffs, immigration, fiscal and regulatory policy as the key variables the Fed will "try to make sense of".

Therefore we won’t actually know the future until we see that happens when the new tariffs on imports kick in and those countries retaliate with their own tariffs on U.S. exports.

So January will be another story as consumers must begin to spend less to replenish their savings. A sign of their hurt is that the delinquency rate has risen, with some 3.5% of card balances past due by 30 or more days and 1.8% of accounts delinquent. Both figures are more than double the post-pandemic lows recorded in 2021, said Bloomberg.

Another hint on future consumer behavior is how small businesses are feeling. The NFIB Small Business Optimism Index fell by 2.3 points in January to 102.8. This is the third consecutive month above the 51-year average of 98. The Uncertainty Index rose 14 points to 100 – the third highest recorded reading – after two months of decline.

“Overall, small business owners remain optimistic regarding future business conditions, but uncertainty is on the rise,” said NFIB Chief Economist Bill Dunkelberg. “Hiring challenges continue to frustrate Main Street owners as they struggle to find qualified workers to fill their many open positions. Meanwhile, fewer plan capital investments as they prepare for the months ahead.”

Speaking of hiring challenges, Goldman Sachs put out a graph that shows just how important ‘unauthorized’ workers are to the U.S. economy. They make up approximately half of the jobs native-born Americans won’t take.

“The key risk is probably not a scenario in which annual deportations reach into the millions, but one where an immigration crackdown creates a climate where employers are afraid to employ unauthorized immigrants or unauthorized immigrants are afraid to go to work, potentially leading many to stay out of the workforce or even to leave the U.S. on their own,” said Goldman Sachs of their survey.

And we have just learned that inflation may be on the rise again, with the retail Consumer Price Index above 3 percent. The financial markets are reacting because of the news. It isn’t a good time to be imposing tariffs, in other words.

Harlan Green © 2025

Follow Harlan Green on Twitter: https://twitter.com/HarlanGreen

Tuesday, February 11, 2025

Tariff Wars--Part III

 Popular Economics Weekly

“It is inconceivable that other countries won’t retaliate, even if some of the governments might not want to retaliate, their citizens will demand that you can’t allow yourself to be beaten up. When you make like a gorilla thumping on his chest, are countries just going to say, ‘Are we chopped liver?’ Their politics will demand that they do something.” Nobelist Joseph Stiglitz

The real tariff wars have now begun. Not only has Trump announced 25 percent tariffs on all steel and aluminum imports but will soon instigate so-called reciprocal tariffs on those that impose tariffs in response.

Such blanket tariffs do not make economic sense, and it counters the advice of Trump’s own chief tariff negotiator, Robert E. Lighthizer.

Lighthizer, just wrote in a NYTimes Op-ed that “Countries with Democratic governments and mostly free economies should come together and create a new trade regime.”

Yet the just announced tariffs fall on our most democratic and free economic allies—Canada, Brazil, Mexico, South Korea, Japan, and Germany with which we already have trade regimes.

He has justified his tariffs with an outright lie; that foreign governments or export entities pay the tariffs when it is in fact a tax on the importer, or consumers when it’s passed on to the users of said imports.

Then why the lie, that Trump has maintained since his first term that didn’t work out so well for Americans? U.S. farmers, for instance, had to be reimbursed with taxpayer funds for the lost soybean and wheat exports that China would no longer buy.

Lighthizer all but admitted in a recent 60 Minutes interview why Trump has maintained the lie. The import taxes collected will help to finance the tax cuts that Trump wants, which benefit his wealthiest supporters, already immensely wealthy oligarchs, many sitting behind him during his inauguration.

And he cannot finance those tax cuts without a new budget agreement, because even his Republican supporters won’t tolerate a larger budget deficit with total federal debt now 120 percent of Gross Domestic Product, the highest since World War Two.

Does Trump really listen to his chief tariff negotiator when he has essentially abandoned just such existing trade regimes as NAFTA, the EU’s, or Obama’s Transpacific Trade Agreement? The 11 Asian countries left in the PTT agreement; Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, and Vietnam; went ahead and created their own trade regime when Trump abandoned it to keep from taxing each other’s imports.

The financial markets are reacting as they did when Trump first announced tariffs on Mexico and Canada, then quickly rescinded for 30 days—all indexes are plunging and interest rates continuing to rise in the expectation of higher inflation due to the rising prices that will follow.

And this at a time when the Federal Reserve must decide whether the inflation bogey man is back. Why wouldn’t those countries affected by Trump tariffs raise their tariffs in response, less they look weak to their citizens when Trump’s gorilla is thumping on their chests?

There is also the fact that higher taxes will mean slower growth, and so in wanting to appear strong, Trump will in fact be weakening the economies and alliances that have kept the U.S. strong.

Harlan Green © 2025

Follow Harlan Green on Twitter: https://twitter.com/HarlanGreen