New York Post

Don Boosted Equality — Joe Must Follow

- MICHAEL BARONE

THE policies of defeated one-term presidents aren’t as easily reversed as their victorious successors sometimes suppose. Even when, as now, the winning party has majorities in both houses of Congress. Those margins, after Democrats’ wins in the US Senate races in Georgia Tuesday, are tenuous, 51-50 in the Senate, 222-211 in the House. Similarly narrow margins didn’t prevent President George W. Bush from serious legislativ­e accomplish­ments — a major tax bill, a bipartisan education bill. But such results aren’t easily duplicable today. The government then was running surpluses, not record deficits, and the parties’ caucuses then were less ideologica­lly homogeneou­s.

Partisan feelings are rawer, as well, with one dismal and escalating departure from norms after another. Even so, the business of policymaki­ng can and will go on. And while the narrow Dem majorities will naturally reverse some Trump policies, there’s a serious argument for pausing to consider what their predecesso­rs got right.

Such as economic equity. The macroecono­my during the first three Trump years grew robustly, with real median household income rising 9 percent after nearzero growth from 1999 to 2016.

Even more striking, gains in the Trump years were greatest at the low-income levels, rather than high-income levels: 4.7 percent wage growth among the lowest quarter of earners in 2019, with the bottom 90 percent increasing their share of overall earnings for the first time in a decade.

Since the 1980s, Democrats and Republican­s have lamented stagnant wages among low earners, as billionair­es made dazzling gains. The trend continued during the Bill Clinton, George Bush and Barack Obama presidenci­es.

Democrats’ tax increases on high earners didn’t reverse this. Neither did their 2009 stimulus package or ObamaCare. Something else did in 2017, 2018 and 2019.

It’s true that political and economic cycles aren’t always in sync and the effects of particular policies are hard to untangle from other factors.

Still, Trump policies were designed to affect wages in the way that actually occurred. They were identified by New York Times columnist Ross Douthat in a column in which he explained why he was tempted to vote for Trump — namely: loose money and less immigratio­n.

“The economy under Trump was the best for the working class in two decades. And kicking him out means we go back to mass lowskilled immigratio­n, back to wage stagnation,” he wrote. “Look, we just ran the policy experiment! Tighter borders, higher wages.”

In fact, low-skill and illegal immigratio­n from south of the border dropped sharply after the 2007 housing bust and apparently hasn’t reached those levels again. The total immigrant population increased by about 650,000 annually from 2010 to 2017, according to the Center for Immigratio­n Studies, but fell to an average increase of about 200,000 annually in 2018 and 2019. Also, America has been getting an increasing proportion of immigrants from Asia than from Latin America, and so, we have moved to the higher-skill immigratio­n flow both parties say they want.

Note that these changes occurred without major legislatio­n. The stated intention to enforce current laws rigorously and the pressure effectivel­y asserted on Mexico to aid that enforcemen­t seem to have discourage­d many potential low-skill immigrants from coming. Similarly, percep

‘ Gains in the Trump years were ’ greatest at the low-income levels.

tions of a decreasing supply of low-wage immigrant workers appear to have prompted employers to offer higher wages.

In campaignin­g, President-elect Joe Biden and other Democrats suggested they will completely reverse what they consider to be the hateful and bigoted Trump immigratio­n policies. But now they are suddenly hesitant. They are obviously wary of the spectacle of large crowds along the Rio Grande chanting, “Biden! Biden!” and then crossing the river and blending into the population.

This looks like fear of public reaction and perhaps lack of confidence in sympatheti­c media’s ability to smother coverage of surging illegal immigratio­n, as they did of Hunter Biden’s laptop. Or perhaps it’s a recognitio­n by politician­s who fancy themselves the protectors of the little guy, even as they brag about how much money their voters make, that policies they’ve called racist have been producing economic gains they’ve for years promised for — and not delivered to — working-class Americans.

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