Austin American-Statesman

Mnuchin urges markets to shrug off tax cuts, debt worries

Treasury secretary sees Trump policies having positive effect.

- By Saleha Mohsin Bloomberg News

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin brushed aside signs that investors are nervous about rising prices and criticism that growing debt will harm U.S. economic security, declaring that President Donald Trump’s policies won’t cause inflation.

“There are a lot of ways to have the economy grow,” Mnuchin said in an interview aboard a train to Philadelph­ia on Thursday, where he toured the U.S. Mint. “You can have wage inflation and not necessaril­y have inflation concerns in general.”

He also said he isn’t concerned about foreign investment in new U.S. debt, which analysts expect will exceed $1 trillion this year.

An unexpected­ly large jump in average hourly earnings in January set off a stock market swoon as investors worried about higher inflation and interest rates. In addition, long-term Treasury yields have surged in recent weeks, in part driven by concerns that widening budget deficits under the Trump administra­tion will fuel inflation.

As Trump’s chief economic cheerleade­r, Mnuchin has consistent­ly deflected any suggestion that the president’s policies could have a downside. He sidesteppe­d the idea that tax cuts and increased federal spending Trump has signed into law amount to an economic stimulus.

“Is it very good for the economy? Absolutely,” Mnuchin said of the tax cuts. “One of the reasons why the president won the election is because most middle-class Americans had very little wage growth.”

Jeffrey Gundlach, the chief investment officer at Los Angeles-based DoubleLine Capital, expressed skepticism about the Treasury secretary’s assessment.

“Mnuchin: policies will raise wages w/out inflation. Yeah, sure,” the billionair­e bond manager wrote on Twitter Thursday evening. “If by miracle wages go up w/out inflation not good for profits. If wages go up w/ inflation not good for bond yields, ergo P/E ratios. Hmmm,” he wrote in a second tweet.

Much of the new U.S. debt will be bought by foreign investors. Foreign holdings of U.S. Treasuries stood at $6.3 trillion as of the end of last year, hovering near a record amount and almost double the level when the recession ended in 2009. China alone holds about a fifth of foreign-held debt, making it the U.S.’s largest creditor.

The director of national intelligen­ce, Dan Coats, told the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee on Feb. 13 that the U.S. debt, now at $20.8 trillion, is “unsustaina­ble” and “represents a dire threat to our economic and national security.”

“I would urge all of us to recognize the need to address this challenge and to take action as soon as possible before a fiscal crisis occurs that truly undermines our ability to ensure our national security,” Coats said.

But Mnuchin said that foreign investors in U.S. debt don’t worry him.

“I’m not concerned about that for national security risks,” he said, adding that what’s important is that the U.S. can afford to finance its military and intelligen­ce operations.

Mnuchin’s remarks on the tax cuts reflect the administra­tion’s public argument for them. Kevin Hassett, chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, has said that the tax law signed in December will help bolster productivi­ty gains by encouragin­g companies to invest in efficiency-enhancing equipment, allowing the economy to grow faster without spurring inflation.

The Treasury secretary also suggested that the U.S. is less vulnerable to oil-driven inflation because of rising energy production in the country.

“We’re no longer fully dependent on foreign oil,” Mnuchin said. “Energy is always a big concern in terms of inflation, among the geopolitic­al risks.”

After ebbing in 2017, inflation recently picked up. Consumer prices in January were 2.1 percent higher than a year earlier, up from 1.6 percent in June.

Wages also are rising. Average hourly earnings rose 2.9 percent in January from a year earlier, the fastest pace since the recession ended in June 2009. With unemployme­nt at its lowest level since 2000, companies increasing­ly must pay more to hire and retain the workers they need.

 ?? AARON P. BERNSTEIN / GETTY IMAGES ?? Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin contends that the tax cuts signed into law this year should not cause inflation concerns: “One of the reasons why the president won the election is because most middle-class Americans had very little wage growth.”
AARON P. BERNSTEIN / GETTY IMAGES Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin contends that the tax cuts signed into law this year should not cause inflation concerns: “One of the reasons why the president won the election is because most middle-class Americans had very little wage growth.”

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