“From the same month one year ago, the PCE price index for June increased 2.6 percent. Excluding food and energy, the PCE price index increased 2.8 percent from one year ago.” BEA.gov
President Trump hasn’t succeeded in convincing the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates or fired Chairman Jerome Powell just yet. So he fired the head of the Labor Department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics without cause that published the weak July unemployment report instead.
It is heralding another era of stagflation that has destroyed the wealth of too many Americans.
It now looks like he wants to recreate what happened to two other Republican Presidents—manipulating the data to disguise the fact that looming inflation can be a big problem as it was in the stagflation of the 1970s and housing bubble and Great Recession of 2008 that was the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression.
President Nixon first tried it when combatting the looming oil price-inspired inflation from the Arab Oil Embargo by fixing prices to keep them artificially low, then pushed his Fed Chair Arthur Burns to keep interest rates low in the face of slowing economic growth caused by the OPEC embargo.
It resulted in 14 percent inflation in 1980 that caused then Fed Chair Paul Volcker to raise the Fed Funds rate to 20 percent, resulting in two recessions early in President Reagan’s tenure.
President GW Bush also tried it in 2000 by pushing then Fed Chair Alan Greenspan to keep interest rates low to finance his wars on terror. Greenspan held interest rates too low for too long, which resulted in the housing bubble and Great Recession that followed.
And now Trump is looking for a successor to the Senate-vetted BLS official, Dr. Erika McEntarfer, who will manipulate employment statistics for him. The result will be less trusted unemployment reports, masking the effects of historically high tariffs that will again create product shortages and slow economic growth.
The Labor Department’s unemployment report understated what happened in the past three months, as I said last week. The U.S. economy created 73,000 nonfarm payroll jobs, but just 19,000 and 14,000 payroll jobs in revisions to May and June totals when more data came in (see graph).
The change in total nonfarm payroll employment for May was revised down by 125,000, from +144,000 to +19,000, and the change for June was revised down by 133,000, from +147,000 to +14,000, per the BLS.
Trump’s main reason for wanting to manipulate economic facts? He also wants to hide the damage to the employment numbers from what could be the loss of one million immigrants leaving the adult labor force, many of them running for cover because of the Gestapo tactics of Trump’s Homeland Security masked Storm Troopers breaking into homes and businesses to round up as many undocumented immigrants as possible, as I said last Friday.
It’s really the first indication of the immigrant’s importance in our economy, and why most of July’s hiring was in healthcare (55,000) while government employment lost 12.000 jobs and -87,000 jobs this year.
The next economic shoe to drop will be the changing of the guard at the Federal Reserve. Trump could not bully Fed Chair Powell to lower interest rates sooner, but that will soon change when he appoints a new Fed Chairman.
He will want to politicize the Fed as he is doing to the rest of the federal government when Powell steps down next year, so that he can enact more Republican ‘trickle down’ economic policies first initiated by President Reagan: in particular the tax cuts + deregulation that supposedly increases efficiencies and productivity, but instead increased corporate CEO pay to more than 300 times that of their employees while weakening union collective bargaining laws.
The results of ‘trickle-down’ economics have been frightfully obvious for decades. The Reagan-era creation has succeeded in maximizing profits of the owners of capital and corporate CEOs while suppressing incomes of salaried workers via right to work laws and low minimum wages, mostly in the poorest Republican controlled red states.
It’s why economists are now calling this the second Gilded Age. We are seeing the results—higher inflation and slowing economic growth once again unless a majority of Americans can be convinced to stop the steal of the worst robber baron of all.
Harlan Green © 2023
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