Business News

Trump is wrecking his own economic agenda


This, by now, ought to be clear to President Trump: He can have high tariffs. Or he can have low interest rates. But he can’t have both.

The problem is that Trump does want both, and he seems to think he can outmuscle or outsmart markets into providing benign business conditions while he riles everything up with tariffs that raise costs and prices. At this point, Trump has tried Maximum Tariff, and markets have responded with Maximum Consequences. The unanswered question now is whether Trump will accept the consequences, which, ironically, would undermine other key parts of his agenda.

If not for Trump, investors would be enjoying a sweet spot in markets and the economy right now. Data giving a read on the pre-tariff economy reveal that inflation — the scourge of the past three years — was heading back to near-normal levels while growth and unemployment held up. That would have been the elusive “soft landing” in which inflation comes down without a recession.

Read more: The latest news and updates on Trump’s tariffs

Inflation in March dropped from 2.8% to 2.4%, close to the Federal Reserve’s target of 2%. “Before the tariff tantrum, both consumer and producer inflation trends were slowing down, not speeding up,” economist David Rosenberg of Rosenberg Research wrote on April 11. “There would have been a time when this would have caused bond yields to plummet.”

Declining inflation, or deflation, usually brings interest rates down for several reasons. It gives the Fed more room to cut short-term rates without worrying about stoking higher prices. It dials down the inflation premium long-term bondholders tend to demand. It can also suggest a slowing economy in which demand falls, lending declines, and the price of money — interest rates — goes lower.

But rates have been rising since Trump went to Maximum Tariff on April 2, the day he announced double-digit tax hikes on imports from dozens of trading partners. Trump dialed those back on April 9 while at the same time pushing the tariff on most Chinese imports to a ruinous 145%. Interest rates continued rising, with the benchmark Treasury jumping from 3.9% on April 4 to 4.5% just a week later.

That’s a big jump in a short period of time, signaling that something disruptive is going on. Economically, markets are deciding that the Trump tariffs will push inflation higher than it would otherwise be, slowing the US economy, lowering the return on US assets, and making other types of investments more attractive by comparison. Rates will have to be higher to draw investors back into US Treasury securities or any other asset linked to the US economy.

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top button
Close

Adblock Detected

Kindly Turnoff your Ad-blocker.