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Opinion: Trump’s Booming Economy Is No Joke
Published
6 years agoon

Over the past year, the U.S. economy added an average of 213,000 jobs every month, driving unemployment down to 3.6 percent, its lowest point since 1969. The last time this much of the American workforce was on the job, the Beatles were still a band and presidential hopefuls Pete Buttigieg, Cory Booker and Kirsten Gillibrand hadn’t been born.

By Michael Graham
InsideSources.com
The overall economy (Gross Domestic Product) grew at 3.2 percent in the first quarter of 2019 — twice as fast as the last two years of the Obama administration. Average wages grew far faster than inflation and are now at $27.77 per hour, and there’s no sign of inflation.
As legendary late-night TV host Johnny Carson might have said to Ed McMahon, this Trump economy is so hot …
How hot is it? What do economists think about the current state of our nation’s fiscal health?
“‘Spectacular’ is the only way to describe this jobs report,” economist Sung Won Sohn of Loyola Marymount University told the Washington Post, who asked in its own headline: “Is This Economy Too Good to Be True?”
And economist Ryan Bourne of the Cato Institute says that, when it comes to jobs, the economy is even stronger than it looks.
“I think the most striking thing for me is the employment-to-population ratio, which is now performing better than at the height of the pre-crash boom, once you adjust for how the population has aged since then,” Bourne told InsideSources. Adjusted for the older population, “the actual employment rate today is 62.8 percent, much higher than the estimated rate of 62.2 percent in 2006 if today’s population structure is applied.”
“The U.S. labor market, on employment rates at least, appears to be performing better now than prior to the crash,” Bourne said.
And That’s Not All
“How hot is this economy? So hot it’s reducing inequality,” Peter Morici of the University of Maryland, told InsideSources.
That’s in stark contrast to the Obama years when, despite economic growth in the wake of the Great Recession, income inequality accelerated as top earners’ wealth increased faster than lower-income families. The income gap generally worsened during the Obama administration and was still increasing during his last year in office.
It’s been a different story under Trump. In March, Goldman Sachs reported that blue-collar and middle-class wages for the previous year rose by 4 percent — twice as fast as higher earners.
“During Obama’s time, inequality increased,” Morici said in a Fox News interview. “Now inequality is decreasing — minorities, women, the handicapped — they’re all benefitting dramatically from this more robust growth. They’re being drawn into the labor market, they’re getting better jobs. So this is a really good economy.”
And then there’s rising worker productivity, which some economists believe is the single-best indicator of the underlying health of an economy and its potential for continued growth. In the first quarter of 2019, productivity rose a robust 3.6 percent, the highest rate in nearly a decade.
“In the end, all growth comes from productivity,” economist John Cochrane of the Hoover Institution told InsideSources. “We are immensely better off than our great grandparents only because each person can produce so much more per hour. Stimulus, redistribution, negotiation, splitting the pie — nothing else comes close” when it comes to impacting our economy, Cochrane says.
Some See Dark Clouds on the Horizon
And economist Mark J. Perry of the American Enterprise Institute notes this data point: Dining out.
“The Restaurant Performance Index from the National Restaurant Association provides a monthly measure of economic conditions nationally,” Perry says. “Like new cars, consumers spend more eating at restaurants when they are confident about their jobs and economic situation, etc.”
The trend from the RPI is up, and the restaurant association reports that “roughly one-half of restaurant operators expect to see stronger sales volumes in six months.”
Still, while the economic skies look clear, some economists see potential dark clouds on the horizon.
Desmond Lachman of AEI told InsideSources “one might wonder whether the economy has feet of clay. Thanks to the Trump administration we now have a ballooning budget deficit and a debt level that is on track to exceed 100 percent of GDP. We also have had the economy pumped up by a massive amount of money printing that has led to asset price bubbles and credit misallocation around the globe. We also now have an ‘America First’ policy that is heightening the chances of a trade war with China and then with Europe.
“All of this means that should the U.S. economy turn down for any reason we will not have much budget or monetary policy ammunition to fight it,” Lachman warns.
They’re Calling This the ‘Roaring 2020s’
And Ted Bauman, senior research analyst and economist at Banyan Hill Publishing, has an outlook that’s positively bleak: “How good is this economy? So good that people are seriously comparing it to the 1920s!” Bauman said, joking.
“They’re calling this the ‘roaring 2020s.’ Stock prices are at all-time highs. The wealthiest 1 percent once again hold enormous wealth and call the shots in government. The labor movement is on its heels and inequality is as high as it has ever been. Government deficits have exploded in the aftermath of big wars. Nationalism is on the rise,” Bauman said.
“But we’ve still got more than a decade to go until the anniversary of the Great Crash of October 2029, so what’s not to like?”
Bauman’s view is definitely an outlier. Even media outlets and think tanks hostile to the Trump presidency have acknowledged the economy’s success, and predictions of doom from just a few weeks ago today look downright embarrassing.
On Feb. 28, Obama White House economist Jason Furman tweeted: “Given the large amount of fiscal stimulus in 2018 is unlikely to be repeated and the labor market has less room than it did a year ago, it’s very likely this is a high-water mark for the recent period.”
Given the large amount of fiscal stimulus in 2018 is unlikely to be repeated and the labor market has less room than it did a year ago, is very likely this is a high water mark for the recent period. Growth in 2019 is tracking around 1% and potential growth is around 1.75%.
— Jason Furman (@jasonfurman) February 28, 2019
If this economic success continues into 2020, Donald Trump may get the last laugh.
About the Author
Michael Graham is political editor at InsideSources.
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Steve Borchers
June 26, 2019 at 6:07 pm
We are in near zero interest rates because most Americans are living check to check, can’t afford a new car (us new car purchases near all time low). The new norm is two incomes/household, college is grossly overpriced, we do not have capitalism, never had, its called Mercantilism. Trump is owned by the zionist elites, being bailed out and blackmailed by them. We will go to war w Iran, the last of 7 countries on the Zionist Agenda/Gen. Wesley Clark. We need a total global economic reset. With deriviatives totaling $1.2 Quadrillion, the ultra elites are bankrupted due to their dishonesty, ie: fiat, but it might take a world war to solve it. If you have not accepted Jesus Christ as your lord and savior, you better get much deeper with him for the sake of your salvation. Peace, love, I wish you all well.
Nick Davis
July 21, 2019 at 5:15 am
The reality is there is only an economic boom in the low and minimum wage jobs. What good is low unemployment if the employment available is near minimum wage? There are no high paying factory type jobs, no increase in consumer SAVINGS. This is an economy based on debt, lots of it. The clues are everywhere: Commercials for loans of $100 to $500. Car Title Loans and Payday Loan stores everywhere. And interest rates near zero, for more than a decade, held down by corrupt bankers. “Buy this product is 4 easy payments of only $19.95.” These are the canaries in the economic coal mine, and the canaries are dying. Nearly all of the recent tax breaks went to the wealthy 1%, who are not buying any durable goods, but instead investing their money Goldman Sacks style to squeeze more money by skimming from the top; the so called Banking Industry, which produces nothing, and simply transfers wealth from the poor to the ultra rich. And with nearly every economic pundit pundit proclaiming how great everything is, the only reality is “the end is near”. In 1999, some goofy market guru proclaimed the era of depressions, recessions and hard times was gone, never to return. That kind of stupidity guarantees the return of just those conditions. And they did. We don’t have capitalism; we have cronyism. The corporations are now defined as “people” but since you can’t put them in jail, they skirt or break the law with impunity. Corporations and Individuals control the very government agencies tasked with their regulation. The corruption is palpable. And it will all end, with a very painful “thud”. And of course, who will be blamed, and who will pay? Why the middle and lower classes of course. It is the setup for social upheaval as the masses realize they have been had. History records that situations like those that exist today never last, but end in quiet social upheaval, or violent conflict, with the economy collapsing, and everybody losing. Venezuela anybody?