Michael Roberts despre Donald Trump și economia americană

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Donald Trump and the US economy

The US presidential election is just eleven months away and the US economy appears to be slowing down.  Eight years after the election of Barack Obama at the depth of the Great Recession, the economic policies of the administration and the forecasts of sustained recovery by mainstream economics have failed.

The latest Atlanta Fed estimate for US real GDP growth in the last quarter of 2015 is just a 0.7% annual rate.

Atlanta

If that turns out to be right with the first official estimate out this week, then the US economy will have grown (after inflation) by just 1.8% in 2015, down from 2.4% in 2014.  In addition, industrial production and manufacturing output have slowed to a trickle and retail sales, a measure of how much is being bought in the shops, has also slowed markedly.

US manuf

And most important, corporate profits are falling and companies are reporting fewer earnings in their quarterly results.  When profits fall, investment and then employment will eventually do so.

Stock markets globally are worried about the slowdown in China and in the collapse in oil prices.  This has brought recessions in many energy and commodity producers, like Russia, Brazil, South Africa and even Canada.  And just at this time, the US Federal Reserve decided to hike its interest rate, claiming that all was well in America.  Instead there is a rising risk that the US could enter a new slump in 2016 or 2017 – right at the time of the election of a new President.  And whoever is elected, do they have any idea of how to avoid a new slump or get America out of it when they are elected?

On the Republican side, we are offered a range of neo-conservative, pro-gun lobby, anti-abortion, anti-gay rights, anti-labour, anti-welfare, anti-tax, climate change denying multi-millionaires, the noisiest and most popular (among Republican party supporters) of which apparently being Donald Trump.

Let’s leave aside Trump’s provocations on gays, immigration, muslims, and ‘liberals’ and instead have a look at the economic policies he advocates for America.  The Republican party leadership represents Wall Street, the big corporate moguls and the military-industrial complex.  But Republican party activists are mostly small businessmen and, older white ‘middle class’ male workers in America’s suburbs who reckon or are told that what is wrong with America’s economy is too much government, too high taxes and too much free trade and immigration that do not protect Americans.  This is the classic petty-bourgeois (to use Marx’s phrase) view.

It is these people that the billionaire Trump appeals to.  So his economic proposals boil down to cutting taxes, reducing government spending (but not medicare needed by his elderly supporters), taxing imports to ‘protect’ American jobs and reducing bureaucracy.

But, of course, Trump’s economic plan does not really help his base of support.  He wants to cut income tax for all and corporate taxes.  The biggest beneficiaries of this would the very rich.  Top billionaires would see their taxes decline from 36 percent to 25 percent, and corporations would get a cut from 35 percent to 15 percent. On average, most people would see their tax bill reduced by about 7 percent of their after-tax income, but savings for the top .1 percent of the wealthy would be $1.3 million in savings, which amounts of 19 percent of their income.

These tax cuts if implemented, would, according to the Tax Policy Center, cause a loss of government revenues worth $25 trillion over the next ten years.  So just to get to 2025 without increasing the deficit, government spending would have to be cut by about 20 percent.  The biggest loophole in the Trump tax plan, according to Robertson Williams of the Tax Policy Center, is the “pass through” provision that would allow self-employed contract workers to have their income taxed at the lower 15 percent rate (this again is a policy aimed at Trump’s base).

Trump says he’d raise tariffs on foreign goods to help American industry and impose punitive sanctions on China and Mexico, which are America’s two largest trading partners.  This would break the NAFTA agreement.  If the US were to impose tariffs (driving up domestic prices), retaliation would follow from trading competitors. All of this is anathema to the Republican grandees who follow the demands of Wall Street and the big corporations for ‘free trade’.  But it sounds great to the self-employed and other small businessmen who are struggling to make ends meet, even though reduced government services would hit them too

So the strategists of capital in Wall Street and Main Street are getting worried.  It seems that Trump could actually win the Republican nomination.  The weakness of the other candidates and his appeal to activists is winning the day. Sure, it is likely that Hillary Clinton, if chosen as the Democrat candidate, would easily beat Trump in the presidential ballot.  And, on balance, that would be better than Trump. But Clinton is being pushed to the left by the campaign of Bernie Sanders and her election would probably involve higher taxation, more regulation and some concessions to labour. It would be more much preferable to find another Republican candidate or, now it seems, even a third party runner.

So the talk is that billionaire Michael Bloomberg, the owner of the financial services company and former mayor of New York, could be the man to step in and defeat Trump.  Apparently, Bloomberg is exploring an independent run for president and is willing to spend $1bn to finance a campaign.  But backing Bloomberg is a risky strategy for capital.  Many of Bloomberg’s positions on social issues from the environment to gun control are closely aligned with the Democrats.  So his candidature could simply hurt the chances of Hillary Clinton and put Trump into the White House.

So Republican Wall Street financiers are still thinking of finding another Republican.  Billionaire Charles Koch, the man who finances many Tea party groups within the Republicans, commented to the Financial Times that he was “disappointed” by the current crop of Republican presidential candidates and especially critical of Trump and Cruz. “It is hard for me to get a high level of enthusiasm,” he said, “because the things I’m passionate about and I think this country urgently needs aren’t being addressed.”

What is he proposing?  Apparently to fix the convention with money: “state legislators who are Republicans, congressmen, senators, local committeemen should join with the donors so they don’t send the party into suicide.” The donors and their allies would handpick their candidate, “winnowing the field”.

That’s what happening with the Republican Tweedledee.  But what is happening with the Democrat Tweedledum?  There, Clinton is facing a strong challenge from Bernie Sanders, the ‘socialist’ senator from Vermont.  That again is another sign that union workers, public sector employees and active working class Democrats are fed up with the dominance of the Democrat establishment, financed by hedge funds and big business and so tied to their policy needs.  Sanders has called for a living wage for all, government investment, breaking up the banks etc.

These policies are mild in their impact on a capitalist economy in successful times, but they are unacceptable in a capitalist economy still struggling to grow after the Great Recession and possibly heading back into economic slump.  So, for capital, it would be a disaster if Sanders won the Democrat nomination because it would pose a new threat to the profitability of capital.

But Sanders is also opposed by supposedly liberal reformist elements on the Democrat side.  Top Keynesian economist and NYT blogger Paul Krugman has launched a series of posts against Sanders.  Krugman is opposed not particularly because he is against Sanders’ mild measures, but because Krugman considers them unrealistic in the face of a Republican Congress and the might of Wall Street and the media.  So we ‘liberals’ ought to settle for Hillary so that we can get a few things done, as we did under Obama!

As Krugman put it, “accepting half loaves as being better than none: health reform that leaves the system largely private, financial reform that seriously restricts Wall Street’s abuses without fully breaking its power, higher taxes on the rich but no full-scale assault on inequality.”

Sanders’ more radical program is doomed.  You see, if Obama could not do anything at a time when Bush and Republicans were discredited with the Great Recession in 2008, there is even less chance now.  Of course, this argument assumes that Obama ever advocated anything radical to control the financial sector, reduce inequality or help labour.  On the contrary, Obama appointed Wall Street bankers to bail out the financial institutions, Ben Bernanke to help the banks with cash and a Treasury team that aimed to curb government spending.

But Krugman argues that a campaign for a “radical overhaul of our institutions” is a pipe dream because the ‘broad public’ will never support it.  You see, even Roosevelt could not carry out a radical program at the depth of the Great Depression because of opposition from ‘Southern racists’ with the Democrat party.  Actually, Roosevelt was never interested in eradicating racism and segregation in the south and the southern Democrats did not oppose radical economic measures.  The opposition came from Wall Street and mainstream economics; the former because of their vested interests; and the latter because of their blind belief in the market.

Krugman is right when he says that the “thing that  F.D.R. created were add-ons, not replacements: Social Security didn’t replace private pensions, unlike the Sanders proposal to replace private health insurance with single-payer. And Social Security originally covered only half the work force, and as a result largely excluded African-Americans.”

Roosevelt started out with big talk about radical changes in the American economy.  In his inaugural speech on election in 1933, Roosevelt said that in “the long run is the problem of controlling by adequate planning the creation and distribution of those products which our vast economic machine is capable of yielding… Too many so-called leaders of the Nation fail to see the forest because of the trees. Too many of them fail to recognize the vital necessity of planning for definite objectives. True leadership calls for the setting forth of the objectives and the rallying of public opinion in support of these objectives.”   There was a need for a “federal role so assertive that the country’s national government would be called on to supervise all forms of transportation and of communications and other utilities which have a definitely public character.”

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