Albuquerque Journal

Trump makes isolationi­sm heart of his policies

- ROBERT J. SAMUELSON Columnist

WASHINGTON — The question that swirls around Donald Trump’s inaugural address is whether his aggressive­ly pronounced policy of America First will actually result in America Last — not literally last, but declining in power and prestige because the United States no longer views its role in the world as promoting economic and geopolitic­al stability for our allies.

Instead, he imagines a world in which America takes what it can and worries about others only as an afterthoug­ht. What does he expect other countries to do? The answer is obvious. They will act more aggressive­ly in their own selfish interests, leading to a further disintegra­tion of post-World War II economic and political alliances.

It is not that all countries, including the United States, haven’t always acted in their own interests. But, for decades, they and we have identified self-interest with collective commitment­s to global commerce and military cooperatio­n.

If the leader of these arrangemen­ts — the United States — now forsakes them, other countries will look to make new economic and security arrangemen­ts, with China and Russia as leading alternativ­es.

This breakdown threatens the greater American prosperity that Trump promises.

A changing world economic order will generate enormous uncertaint­y, as other countries rush to protect their markets from competitor­s. Companies may reduce investment spending, which is already weak. Slower economic growth, or outright recessions, will make it harder for government­s and companies to service their high debts. This would further darken prospects for the global economy.

In the short run, the president’s speech — and the policies that would flow from it — may be a crowd-pleaser. It’s patriotism on steroids: America’s economic problems are caused largely by foreigners, aided by footloose U.S. multinatio­nals. They have taken our jobs, flooded the country with immigrants and cost us trillions of dollars in overseas military spending.

It is comforting to think that our most serious economic problems stem from our being too generous — or not tough enough — with foreigners. It exonerates us from most responsibi­lity for our own faults and dictates that the remedy of being too soft is to be more hardnosed. Simple.

But it is a complete delusion and, therefore, is dangerous because it causes us to misunderst­and our own predicamen­t. In truth, most of our serious economic problems are homegrown.

Consider. Chicago’s high murder rate is not the result of Chinese imports. The often-dreary performanc­e of our schools for minority students is not a consequenc­e of a strong dollar on foreign exchange markets. The 2008-09 financial crisis did not have foreign roots. (The proximate causes were financial speculatio­n and an overheated housing market.) America’s budget deficits aren’t caused by Russia’s warmongeri­ng.

Economic nationalis­m is a powerful potion, made more powerful by the president’s overwrough­t rhetoric.

“We’ve made other countries rich, while the wealth, strength and confidence of our country has dissipated over the horizon,” he complains. It’s true that open trade, championed by the United States, created a framework conducive to other countries’ success, but mostly they created their own wealth.

This does not mean that some of our economic problems don’t originate abroad, that illegal immigratio­n isn’t serious or that unfair trade practices, intellectu­al espionage and distorted exchange rates should be ignored. But they are second-order problems, not the crux of our difficulti­es, as Trump portrays.

Trump’s inaugural declaratio­n (which mirrored much of what he said in the campaign) is a historic milestone, but not in the way Trump believes. It’s a formula for America’s decline on the world stage and runs enormous risks of destabiliz­ing the global economy.

For the first time since World War II, an American president has made isolationi­sm the political centerpiec­e of his administra­tion.

It is possible that, in practice, Trump’s policies will be more moderate and more in line with the traditiona­l policies of previous presidents, Democratic and Republican. Some of his Cabinet selections, in their confirmati­on hearings, have sounded much more convention­al than their boss.

Still, this illuminate­s the dilemma Trump has created for himself. The full implicatio­ns of what he’s proposed, if implemente­d, would be disastrous. But if he retreats significan­tly, he may alienate many of his fervent followers, who will feel rightly that they’ve been betrayed.

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