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The following is presented as part of The Columbian’s Opinion content, which offers a point of view in order to provoke thought and debate of civic issues. Opinions represent the viewpoint of the author. Unsigned editorials represent the consensus opinion of The Columbian’s editorial board, which operates independently of the news department.
News / Opinion / Columns

Crook: Trump offers a trifecta of economic madness

By Clive Crook
Published: October 7, 2024, 6:01am

In judging Donald Trump’s policy pronouncements, voters are advised to take the former president “seriously but not literally.” There’s rarely much choice, given that so many of his promises, taken literally, are unintelligible. Yet the former president has made commitments on economic policy that are not only intelligible but might also be actionable — that is, they’d fall (arguably) within his powers as chief executive.

Taking such pledges both literally and seriously is hardly frivolous. Given the closeness of the race, it’s a disturbing exercise. Whether he knows it or not, Trump is promising to cripple the U.S. economy.

Start with trade. Bloomberg Economics has run the numbers on his proposal to put a 60 percent tariff on imports from China and 20 percent on products from other countries.

A jolt of this magnitude is hard to assess, because it’s uncharted terrain. Using the World Trade Organization’s model of global trade, the study finds that U.S. imports would drop by between 40 percent if only China retaliated with higher barriers and 55 percent if other trade partners retaliated too.

Some U.S. producers, shielded from foreign competition, would gain. Export-oriented sectors would lose — and so would consumers in the aggregate. The net effect is unambiguously large and negative.

This self-wounding trade shock is just one element in Trump’s strategy for putting foreigners in their place. Warwick McKibbin, Megan Hogan and Marcus Noland of the Peterson Institute for International Economics, using another global model, have simulated the effects of new trade restrictions together with the promised deportation of unauthorized immigrant workers and moves to curb the independence of the Federal Reserve.

Call it a trifecta of economic idiocy. It would cut U.S. output in 2028, says the PIIE study, by between 2.8 percent and 9.7 percent. Employment would be lower by roughly the same margin. And inflation would peak in 2026 at between 6 percent and 9.3 percent; it wouldn’t get much below 4 percent through 2040.

All three of these policies — tariffs, deportations and undermining central-bank independence — are individually harmful.

Tariffs act as a supply-side shock. Deportations shrink both aggregate supply and aggregate demand. (Desirable as it might be to repair the country’s dysfunctional immigration rules, unauthorized immigrants still add to the labor force, demand goods and services, and contribute to the public purse.) And pressuring the Fed to keep interest rates low to spur growth would come at the cost of higher inflation, higher risk premiums on U.S. assets, capital outflows and lower investment. Once combined, the negative effects of the three proposals are compounded.

Fiscal recklessness

The trifecta is by no means a worst-case Trump scenario. It doesn’t factor in his fiscal recklessness. His tax proposals include extending the soon-to-expire provisions of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act; eliminating taxes on Social Security, overtime pay and tip income; lowering the corporate tax rate to 15 percent for companies that make their products in the U.S.; and more. The revenue gained from tariffs, though substantial, wouldn’t come close to meeting the cost, so Trump’s plans would add substantially to a budget deficit that’s already dangerously big.

Yet note one crucial point: He would need Congress to go along with these broader fiscal plans. As president, he could plausibly raise trade barriers, deport unauthorized immigrants and lean on the Fed, all at his own initiative.

Who knows what he would do? Most likely, Trump himself has no clue. But voters should take his economic promises both literally and very, very seriously.


Clive Crook is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering economics.

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