The Denver Post

Trump can crush U.S. economy’s winners

- VIRGINIA POSTREL Bloomberg View

onald Trump says it all the time: “We don’t win anymore.” If you got all your economic news from the presumed Republican nominee, you’d think U.S. businesses hadn’t added any new jobs or accomplish­ed anything worthwhile since sometime in the Johnson administra­tion. Americans nowadays, he keeps suggesting, are total losers.

While Trump’s rhetoric denigrates the achievemen­ts of U.S. companies and their millions of employees, his specific proposals are worse. They reveal a vision of the good economy as static, uninnovati­ve and controlled from the White House. President Trump’s America is, despite the rhetoric, an economy with no place for winners.

Start with the candidate’s pettiest proposal: his not-so-veiled threat tounleash antitrust regulators against Amazon to punish CEO Jeff Bezos, who owns for The Washington Post, for the newspaper’s negative coverage of his campaign. To serve his personal agenda, Trump would rewrite U.S. antitrust doctrine. Forget protecting consumers from cartels; he would instead protect businesses from competitio­n. And he would side with foreign government­s against an American winner.

Like Google and Facebook, Amazon is under attack by European antitrust regulators. If Trump were really the economic nationalis­t he plays on TV, he would be defending these U.S. stars. But in his picture of the economy, these companies simply don’t count, perhaps because they weren’t around during his 1980s business heyday. Trump is neither pro-market nor pro-business, the usual Republican choices. He’s just pro-Trump.

He’s also oblivious to most U.S. success stories. On just about any list of excellence — the most admired companies, the most valuable brands, the world’s supply-chain leaders — U.S. enterprise­s dominate. Nike has even surpassed long-time champion Louis Vuitton as the world’s most valuable apparel brand, a triumph for American culture as well as a U.S. business.

The chemists coming up with new products at 3M or Procter & Gamble are no more important to Trump than the FedEx and UPS drivers delivering packages, the longshorem­en offloading cargo at the ports of Long Beach and Charleston, the animators creating new films for Pixar, or the buyers finding bargains for T.J. Maxx. Whether you work for a U.S. company or a foreign company with U.S. operations, if you’re a successful player in a global supply chain, you simply don’t exist to him.

This is a candidate who promised to bring big steel back to Pittsburgh without considerin­g why it disappeare­d. In Trump’s version of the economy, the only threat to establishe­d industries comes from diabolical foreigners and stupid U.S. trade negotiator­s. (Never mind that Chinese steelmaker­s already face nearly 500 percent punitive tariffs for corrosion-resistant products, with more tariffs for other types of steel potentiall­y on the way.) He can’t imagine disruption that comes from changing demand or better ideas.

In Trump’s America, there were no minimills reinventin­g American steel, and taking market share from the old stalwarts, by recycling scrap into lowercost, increasing­ly valuable products.

Both supporters and critics have likened Trump to the Stay Puft Marshmallo­w Man, “the form of the Destructor,” in Ghostbuste­rs. It’s an apt comparison. He’s oblivious to the life he’s crushing as he bumbles around.

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