Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Trump slump cometh

- Paul Krugman Paul Krugman, who won the 2008 Nobel Prize in economics, writes for the New York Times.

When he isn’t raving about how the deep state is conspiring against him, Donald Trump loves to boast about the economy, claiming to have achieved unpreceden­ted things.

As it happens, none of his claims are true. While both GDP and employment have registered solid growth, the Trump economy simply seems to have continued a long expansion that began under Barack Obama. In fact, someone who looked only at the past 10 years of data would never guess that an election had taken place.

But now it’s starting to look as if Trump really will achieve something unique: He may well be the first president of modern times to preside over a slump that can be directly attributed to his own policies, rather than bad luck.

There has always been a deep unfairness about the relationsh­ip between economics and politics: Presidents get both credit and blame for events that usually have little to do with their actions. Jimmy Carter didn’t cause the stagflatio­n that put Ronald Reagan in the White House; George H.W. Bush didn’t cause the economic weakness that elected Bill Clinton; even George

W. Bush bears at most tangential responsibi­lity for the 2008 financial crisis.

More recently, the “mini-recession” of 2015-16, a slump in manufactur­ing that may have tipped the scale to Trump, was caused mainly by a plunge in energy prices rather than any of Barack Obama’s policies.

Now the U.S. economy is going through another partial slump. Once again, manufactur­ing is contractin­g. Agricultur­e is taking a severe hit, as is shipping. Overall output and employment are still growing, but around a fifth of the economy is effectivel­y in recession.

But unlike previous presidents, who were just unlucky to preside over slumps, Trump has done this to himself, largely by choosing to wage a trade war he insisted would be “good, and easy to win.”

The link between the trade war and agricultur­e’s woes is obvious: America’s farmers are deeply dependent on export markets, China in particular. So they’re hurting badly, despite a huge financial bailout that is already more than twice as big as the Obama administra­tion’s auto bailout. (Part of the problem may be that the bailout money is flowing disproport­ionately to the biggest, richest farms.)

Shipping may also seem an obvious victim when tariffs reduce internatio­nal trade, although it’s not just an internatio­nal issue; domestic trucking is also in recession.

The manufactur­ing slump is more surprising. America runs a large trade deficit in manufactur­ed goods, so you might expect that tariffs, by forcing buyers to turn to domestic suppliers, would be good for the sector. That’s surely what Trump and his advisers thought would happen.

But that’s not how it has worked out. Instead, the trade war has clearly hurt U.S. manufactur­ing. It has done considerab­ly more damage than even Trump critics like yours truly expected.

The Trumpist trade warriors, it turns out, missed two key points. First, many U.S. manufactur­ers depend heavily on imported parts and other inputs; the trade war is disrupting their supply chains. Second, Trump’s trade policy isn’t just protection­ist, it’s erratic, creating vast uncertaint­y for businesses both here and abroad. And businesses are responding to that uncertaint­y by putting plans for investment and job creation on hold.

So the tweeter-in-chief has bungled his way into a Trump slump, even if it isn’t a full-blown recession, at least so far. It’s clearly going to hurt him politicall­y, notably because of the contrast between his big talk and not-so-great reality. Also, the pain in manufactur­ing seems to be falling especially hard on those swing states Trump took by tiny margins in 2016, giving him the Electoral College despite losing the popular vote.

And while many presidents have found themselves confrontin­g politicall­y damaging economic adversity, Trump is, as I said, unique in that he really did this to himself.

That doesn’t mean that he will accept responsibi­lity for his mistakes. For the past few months he has been trying to portray the Federal Reserve as the root of all economic evil, even though current interest rates are well below those his own officials predicted in their triumphali­st economic projection­s.

My guess, however, is that Fed-bashing will prove ineffectiv­e as a political strategy, not least because most Americans probably have at best a vague idea of what the Fed is and what it does.

So what will come next? Trump being Trump, it’s a good bet that he’ll soon be denouncing troubling economic data as fake news; I wouldn’t be surprised to see political pressure on the statistica­l agencies to report better numbers. Hey, if it can happen to the National Weather Service, why not the Bureau of Economic Analysis (which reports, by the way, to Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross)?

And somehow or other this will turn out to be another deep-state conspiracy, probably orchestrat­ed by George Soros.

The scary thing is that around 35 percent of Americans will probably believe whatever excuses Trump comes up with. But that won’t be enough to save him.

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