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This time, it is President Trump who is engineering a recession. His tariffs will raise prices to both producers and consumers. His mass intimidation of immigrants who do low-wage work in everything from construction to agricuture to nursing care to fast food will raise labor costs as these workers are driven into hiding or deported, and employers scramble to find replacements.
Trump’s mass firing of government workers and mass cuts in governent grants will reverberate through the economy. People who lose their jobs drastically cut their own spending. It is Keynes in reverse. Industries from airlines to autos to hotels are revising their forecasts downward.
But as in the late 1970s, this reduced economic activity will not cut prices as in the usual dynamic, because the higher prices produced by Trump’s tariff war have nothing to do with supply and demand; nor does the artificial worker shortage created by his demonizing of immigrants. And with inflation rising, the Fed’s response, as in 1979, may be to raise rates rather than cut them.
It’s a fine mess, of Trump’s own making. His policies are inconsistent, incoherent, and implusive, reflecting his own deeply impaired cognition.
Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick has intermittently succeeded in talking Trump out of doubling down on tariffs and in talking the Canadians and Mexicans into holding off retaliating. It’s a fool’s errand. Lutnick’s reward is that Trump allies are now putting out the word that if the economy keeps going south, Lutnick will take the fall and be tossed overboard.
If a normal president embarked on a path that produced catastrophic results, his political advisers would utter the six magic words: “This will piss off the voters.”
Trump is so crazed that not even that concern deters him. Rather, he is inclined to shoot the messinger.
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