Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Economy could be the issue that does in Trump

- By Ann McFeatters

When the history of the Trump presidency is written, impeachmen­t proceeding­s may be the least salient fact.

Economists are now speculatin­g that Donald Trump may be the first U.S. president to start a recession because of his unrelentin­g trade wars.

Millions of Americans are not impacted yet, although that’s not true for farmers and manufactur­ing workers, but two new data pools indicate alarming news about Trump’s tariffs and his continuing trade battles with countries such as China.

World trade in goods is now expected to grow only 1.9% this year, down from the forecast estimate of 2.6%.

In addition, American manufactur­ing factories slowed output in September, the second straight month of decline.

Both are the most troubling declines since 2009, when the world was in fullblown recession, after the sub-prime mortgage meltdown, the closest we have come to a depression since the 1930s.

Economists say there are only two reasons for this: Trump’s trade wars and the economic slowdown and uncertaint­y caused by Brexit, Great Britain’s intent to leave the European Union, a developmen­t solidly embraced by Trump.

The stock market, Trump’s favorite measuring stick for the economy although most Americans do not own stock, immediatel­y plummeted. But more concerning is that wages are stuck and manufactur­ers have stopped expanding.

Democratic presidenti­al candidate and South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg said he thinks the numbers show that manufactur­ing industries are nearing allout recession. “It just shows how out of touch the president is,” he said after the latest figures were released.

For his part, Trump blames the worrisome economic data on the Federal Reserve Bank, drawing private guffaws and skeptical comments from economic experts. The nation’s central bank has dropped interest rates twice this year on grounds the global economy is weakening, but Trump said that is not enough to weaken the dollar. He blames the strong dollar for other nations’ refusal to buy more U.S. goods and services because they cost more.

Also contributi­ng to uncertaint­y is that investors are wary of Brexit, fearing that the British prime minister’s determinat­ion to leave the European Union without a plan agreed upon by both sides will cause serious economic turbulence around the globe.

Instead of reassuring Americans that the trade wars are being resolved, to the benefit of the U.S., Trump has engaged in a barrage of outrage about impeachmen­t, insisting that his telephone call asking Ukraine for political help against his rival Joe Biden was a “perfect” call, distorted by Democrats in Congress.

In answer to those who say Trump’s plea to Ukraine was unconstitu­tional, Trump said that Democrats leading the impeachmen­t chant should be found guilty of treason. Trump does not seem to realize treason can occur legally only in time of a declared war.

The rationale for many Americans’ indifferen­ce to Trump’s continued presence in the White House is his insistence that the economy is the best it has ever been. That is true only because the population is the largest it has ever been and thus more people are working than ever before in America. But wages are not at their historic height, adjusted for inflation, and many families are above water only because they are working two or more jobs as well as overtime.

The tremors in the manufactur­ing sector, as well as the devastatio­n that has befallen farmers because of the trade wars and bad weather, will make it more difficult for Trump to tout his mantra that the economy is soaring for all.

When all is said and done, Trump’s return to the White House in 2021 for four more years lies in his ability to keep consumer confidence high.

If Democrats focus mainly on impeachmen­t, Trump will have an easier time of pooh-poohing them. He will insist that he is only talking about improving infrastruc­ture, lowering prescripti­on drug prices, getting rid of Obamacare (although with no serious alternativ­e), passing some sort of gun control (mild though it may be) and restrictin­g immigratio­n (illegal though his preferred methods might be — shooting immigrants, filling moats with alligators, topping the barriers with sharp spikes).

After 32 months in office, Trump actually has done little of substance to help most Americans. His tariffs on $112 billion worth of Chinese imports and China’s retaliator­y tariffs have made Americans’ take-home dollars stretch less far.

But Democrats have yet to show that they can walk the walk on impeachmen­t and simultaneo­usly chew down on the real work of the country.

Ann McFeatters is an op-ed columnist for Tribune News Service. Readers may send her email at amcfeatter­s@nationalpr­ess.com.

 ?? MARK RALSTON/GETTY ?? A truck passes by China Shipping containers last month at the Port of Los Angeles after new tariffs on Chinese imports was imposed by President Donald Trump.
MARK RALSTON/GETTY A truck passes by China Shipping containers last month at the Port of Los Angeles after new tariffs on Chinese imports was imposed by President Donald Trump.

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