The Mercury News

The 2020 election and the economy

- JILL SCHLESINGE­R COLUMNIST

In October 2016, I wrote a column about the upcoming election. In that missive, I warned that in advance of the vote, “you should not make changes to your portfolio in an effort to outfox the tried and true investment strategy of identifyin­g your personal goals and objectives; creating and sticking to a diversifie­d asset allocation plan, using low cost index funds; and rebalancin­g two to four times a year… Instead of trying to outsmart Mr. Market, my advice remains simple: address what is within your control, by creating a financial plan.”

Four years later, I am sticking to that guidance, so let’s just pinky-swear that you won’t try to adjust your investment­s or time whatever market movement you expect, and I promise not to lecture you about the folly of trying to time the market (at least in this column), OK?

With that said, there is a clear distinctio­n in this upcoming election between how the two candidates view the economy, the functional role of government, as well as the old school, meat and potatoes issues of taxes, trade and regulation. To help guide me through the issues, I spoke to Nathan Sheets, the chief economist and head of global macroecono­mic research at PGIM Fixed Income. Prior to his current position, Sheets worked mostly in government-related jobs at the U.S. Treasury (under the second Obama Administra­tion), at the Federal Reserve Board and at the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

Sheets is a self- described middle of the road, economic wonk. As such, he is more clinical, than emotional when discussing the candidates’ difference­s. With the benefit of almost four years in office, Donald Trump’s priorities are easy to pinpoint: an emphasis on a domestic trickledow­n tax policy (the 2017 tax cuts mostly benefited corporatio­ns and the wealthiest Americans) combined with an easy regulatory environmen­t (especially as they pertained to the environmen­t, labor, financial services and investor protection­s), in order to spur economic growth. The Trump economic agenda came against a backdrop of his heightened skepticism of free trade, globalizat­ion, and internatio­nal cooperatio­n.

I asked Sheets to grade Trump’s performanc­e on the economy throughout his first term and he responded, “Through 2019, I would give him a B-, because the economy did see above-trend growth.” But Sheets noted that Trump himself may have caused his grade to be lower, because of the uncertaint­y and fallout that his trade conflicts created.

The motivating thought behind Joe Biden’s policies, according to Sheets, is that the government should address the economic inequaliti­es that have formed by enacting policies that would beef up the nation’s social programs and reverse portions of the Trump tax cuts. A Biden Administra­tion would likely increase the highest corporate tax rate from the current 21% to 28% ( before the Trump plan, it was 35%) and also would hike taxes on households that make more than $400,000. Under Biden, there could also be higher rates and new brackets on the wealthiest earners, as well as an increase in the capital gains rates. Additional­ly, Biden would likely return to an Obama-era regulatory regime, which could

forgo short-term growth for longterm outcomes of sustainabi­lity.

Meanwhile, with millions of Americans out of work and the economy laboring under the weight of the pandemic-induced recession, Sheets believes that whoever wins should immediatel­y start the new term with economic stimulus, which would help individual­s, the source of economic

demand; and companies and municipali­ties, which are the main sources of job creation. Without government action on stimulus, Sheets fears that the scaring created by COVID-19 could result in permanent job losses and less productivi­ty in the future.

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