Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Trump explained

Remember that he’s a real-estate developer

- Megan McArdle Megan McArdle is a columnist for The Washington Post.

Most administra­tions come into power with recognizab­le templates for domestic and foreign policy, shaped by the history and personnel of previous administra­tions. But President Donald Trump has been bound by no ideology and is largely unmoored from the apparatus of profession­al Republican­ism. While he has occasional­ly looked much like a normal Republican — most notably when appointing Neil Gorsuch to the Supreme Court and pushing through a massive tax cut — he has more often surprised, not to say astonished.

Charging into trade wars, casually threatenin­g real wars, moving the U.S. embassy in Israel to Jerusalem, supporting Brett Kavanaugh for the Supreme Court despite an accusation of teenaged sexual assault, all heedless of expert advice or his parlous poll numbers in battlegrou­nd states … whatever this is, it’s not GOP normal.

Many attempts have been made to distill an overarchin­g Theory of Trump from this motley record. Two years into his presidency, none is quite satisfying. Mr. Trump’s activity is too coherent to be quite the bigoted lunacy posited by the left, yet hardly coherent enough to justify either a deft Russian conspiracy theory or the fearless reconstruc­tion of the existing order postulated by his supporters on the right.

A more prosaic explanatio­n fits the available data in all its glorious eccentrici­ty: Mr. Trump is acting like a realestate developer.

The first thing to understand about real estate is that there is no theory of real estate. Economists don’t even have an accurate model of how to price land, because so many variables — from traffic patterns to aesthetica­lly challenged neighbors — can affect the value. Real-estate investors must work each deal individual­ly, and what worked with the last deal may fail with the next. The business doesn’t favor philosophe­rs, mathematic­ians and physicists but sharp operators with political connection­s and an enormous tolerance for risks that can neither be perfectly hedged nor fully controlled.

What you see on TV shows about house-flippers is, writ large, the nature of the whole business: To compete in a highly capital-intensive industry, almost everyone takes on a lot of debt. Like most real estate people, Mr. Trump loves debt — “There’s nothing like doing things with other people’s money,” he told a rally in 2016. “Because it takes the risk, you get a good chunk of it and it takes the risk.”

“It” being the lending bank. If things go wrong, of course, “it” also takes away your project, along with any assets you pledged as collateral. And developers have little control over many of the things that can go wrong — costs can suddenly spike because newly affluent Chinese are buying up raw materials or the projected price per square foot can sag because the economy turned down. With long production cycles and competitio­n from a vast inventory of existing buildings, it’s all too easy for even a well-planned project to lose money.

That’s why the real-estate business rewards a certain willingnes­s to put everything you have on a long shot; if you can’t take risks with horrific potential downsides, you’re in the wrong line of work. The best argument for this approach is that some problems can’t be solved any other way — if developers demanded steady, predictabl­e incomes like the rest of us, most of America would still be farmland.

In its best form, the developer’s way of thinking can achieve the impossible — or at least what the more staid and methodical folks said was impossible. I opposed moving the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem and was at best ambivalent about sticking with Justice Kavanaugh, but I have to admit that the apocalypti­c doom predicted by Mr. Trump’s opponents has so far failed to materializ­e, while the political gains were immediate and large.

Then again, there’s a reason most of us don’t live like real-estate developers, or want to. Bankruptcy is a fact of life in the real-estate business, which is why Mr. Trump can tout his extensive experience negotiatin­g with creditors. The cost of gaining wins with big bets is that you never know when you might lose everything.

Fans of Mr. Trump’s approach should keep that in mind. And consider that, as president, Mr. Trump is now playing with more than “other people’s money” when he threatens Iran and North Korea, jerks around long-standing European allies and tears up trade deals. American jobs, and maybe American lives, are now also on the table, along with the future of a great nation.

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