Financial FAQs
“It’s 100 days into the Trump Presidency and looking more and more like President Trump is no more effective at running the country than his business interests. His book, The Art of the Deal was meant to tout his negotiating skills, but the results were never very successful.” 2017
I wrote this Huffington Post piece in April 2017 after President Trump’s first 100 days in office, and nothing has changed in Trump 2.0. There was no significant legislation then and nothing has been accomplished in 2025 to date, other the Trump’s initiation of a worldwide tariff war, while Republicans are attempting to renew the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) that was his sole accomplishment in Trump 1.0.
Why? Because Trump’s negotiating skills have been overblown, as evidenced by his countless business failures and multiple bankruptcies. But he has been able to disguise his weaknesses, such as his inability to stay focused his need for attention, thanks in large part to his first biographer, Tony Schwartz, in Trump: The Art of the Deal, who created the myth that he was a skilled wheeler-dealer.
But it wasn’t real, Schwartz said later to New Yorker Magazine’s Jane Mayer in a famous 2016 interview.
“I put lipstick on a pig,” he said. “I feel a deep sense of remorse that I contributed to presenting Trump in a way that brought him wider attention and made him more appealing than he is.” He went on, “I genuinely believe that if Trump wins and gets the nuclear codes there is an excellent possibility it will lead to the end of civilization.”
Trump with all his weaknesses—his lies, self-aggrandizement, and short attention span—is now getting a second attempt to destroy the U.S. economy.
Renewing the TCJA, even though Moody’s downgraded U.S. Treasury debt to Aaa because the renewal won’t pay for itself, is endangering the “full faith and credit” of the U.S. Government.
The Penn Wharton Business School model predicts it would add at least $4.5 trillion to the federal debt. Cuts to Medicaid, food stamps and clean energy programs would save $1.6 trillion. But this is more than offset by the incomes of the wealthiest 1 percent and 0.1 percent.
The result is that today we have a wanna-be autocrat in charge of an economy “that creates an environment in which corruption and bribery are necessary to gain access to the ruler and either win his favor or avoid his wrath,” writes Barron’s columnist Lewis Braham.
Sound familiar with Trump’s Meme-coin investments and solicitation of $billlions from Middle east potentates?
There is a tremendous amount of research on the decline of sustainable economic growth in autocratic regimes. MIT economist Daren Acemoglo won his Nobel Prize for researching the superior growth of “inclusive” (more democratic) vs. autocratic (exploitive) governments.
“The good news is that democracy can be rebuilt and made more robust,” says Professor Acemoglo.
“The process must start by focusing on shared prosperity and citizen voice, which means reducing the role of big money in politics...The task of remaking democracy thus falls to center-left forces. If Trump’s victory serves as a wake-up call for the Democrats, then he may have inadvertently set in motion a rejuvenation of American democracy.”
In fact, we have little choice but to rebuild our democracy if we want to preserve the most basic freedoms it’s taken centuries to win.
Harlan Green © 2025
Follow Harlan on Twitter: https://twitter.com/HarlanGreen
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