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Trump buys into the Krugman con

Trump buys into the Krugman con - Peter Diekmeyer

August 8, 2018

Leading economic indicators suggest that the Republicans are headed into the fall mid-term election season with the wind at their backs.

Real GDP growth hit 4.1% during the second quarter. The unemployment rate recently slipped to 3.9%, and the US Federal Reserve is finally starting to meet its inflation targets.

Things are so good that U.S. president Donald Trump calls it “the greatest economy in the history of America.”

Yet while all appears well on the surface, there are growing concerns among gold investors about the sustainability of the current pick-up.

Works well in practice… but does it work in theory?

Part of the problem relates to the old joke about French university professors. “It works well in practice,” they reportedly ask. “But does it work in theory?”

The same question underlies Trump’s economic practices. They are clearly generating short-term results. But they don’t appear to adhere to any underlying philosophy.

Republicans liken Trump’s tax cuts and his deregulation efforts with policies implemented by the Reagan Administration. However, the comparison is far from perfect.

For one, the Trump Administration’s growing tariffs on imported goods, which amount to hidden sales taxes, are gradually undoing the effects of his earlier tax cuts.

Worse, the Trump Administration’s practice of choosing which sectors will benefit from protective tariffs and which won’t amounts to a drastic increase in government intervention in the economy.

Making government great again

Taking a step back, Trump’s policies incorporate many of the “big government” themes advocated by mainstream economists from both major political parties during much of the past four decades.

Led by Paul Krugman, a Nobel Prize winner, New York Times columnist and professor at CUNY, the economics profession has consistently advocated growth in government spending, borrowing and credit creation in the hopes of spurring economic growth.

For all of its talk of change, the Trump Administration appears to be following along, though at a cost. For example, government spending and the national debt are now higher than they were under the Obama regime.

The Congressional Budget Office projects that the U.S. government debt is on track to hit $30 trillion during the coming decade.

“Keynesian” and “supply side” economics on steroids

At first glance, comparing Trump’s polices (and those of his advisors, such as Larry Kudlow) with Krugman’s, whose ideas are more closely identified with those of the Democratic Party, seems ludicrous.

However, both schools of economic thought (broadly known respectively as “Keynesian stimulus” and “supply side economics”) amount to increasing government spending, shifting money to favorite interest groups and funding this through massive deficit spending.

During the current year alone, the U.S. government added nearly a trillion dollars in new debt.

(Note government borrowing data is slightly different than actual deficit data, which politicians manipulate by keeping key elements off the balance sheet.)

It should thus hardly come as a surprise that America’s economy grew during the past quarter. As legendary investor Jim Rogers likes to joke: “Let me put a trillion dollars on a credit card and I will show you a really good time.”

The Krugman con: decreasing marginal productivity of debt

The bad news is, while such policies give the appearance of working, it’s only because governments (as hard as this is to believe) don’t account for debt increases when they calculate GDP.

Richard Fisher, former president of the Dallas Fed, says that borrowing to finance government spending is like taking heroin. The trouble is that the U.S. economy needs increasingly larger doses to stay afloat.

More technically, the “marginal productivity of new debt” decreases over time. So, as the chart below (compiled by Real Vision) demonstrates, it takes more and more new credit to spur each new dollar of economic growth.

Critics argue that such policies are unsustainable and will eventually end in a deflationary collapse or hyper-inflation.

In the past, we have called Krugman’s advocacy—and that of much of the mainstream economics profession—for growing government spending, borrowing and system-wide credit at a faster pace than the economy itself, the “Krugman Con.”

Trump Administration’s recent moves suggest that it is fully on board.

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About the Author

Peter Diekmeyer has been a business writer/editor with publications such as Sprott Money News, the National Post and Canadian Defence Review and Jane's Defence for nearly three decades. He has studied in MBA, CA and Law programs but dropped out of all three after failing to convince the academics that they were wrong about everything.  Diekmeyer has interviewed more than 200 CEOs and filed reports from dozens of countries. 

His most terrifying moment came when he spoke to central bank economists for the first time and realized that (unlike politicians) they actually believed their own analysis and forecasts. 
He has been a regular contributor to the Sprott Money blog since 2015.

*The author is not affiliated with, endorsed or sponsored by Sprott Money Ltd. The views and opinions expressed in this material are those of the author or guest speaker, are subject to change and may not necessarily reflect the opinions of Sprott Money Ltd. Sprott Money does not guarantee the accuracy, completeness, timeliness and reliability of the information or any results from its use.

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