Fresh Air - Trump's 2nd Term & The Economy
Episode Date: December 4, 2024Economist David Wessel talks about Trump's plans on tariffs and tax cuts, and the potential economic impact of Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy's Department of Government Efficiency.Maureen Corrigan revi...ews Niall Williams' novel, Time of the Child.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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This is Fresh Air.
I'm Dave Davies.
In his presidential campaign, Donald Trump promised sweeping changes.
High tariffs, big tax cuts, mass deportations of undocumented immigrants, and deep spending cuts,
guided by his friends Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy.
If anyone thought Trump might pause after his win, take a few weeks to consider his cabinet choices,
and plot a phase-end of his policy moves,
they were mistaken.
Trump quickly announced a host of high-level appointments, some quite controversial.
And then three days before Thanksgiving, he declared that on day one of his administration,
he'd impose 25 percent tariffs on goods from Mexico and Canada to remain in effect until
they crack down on illegal immigration and drug trafficking into the U.S.
That prompted a visit to Mar-a-Lago from Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau
and a phone call with Mexican President Claudia Scheinbaum.
Trump also chose an economic policy team, including Treasury Secretary nominee Scott Besant,
a Wall Street veteran who's not only supported Democrats in the past,
but as recently
as 2015 was Chief Investment Officer for George Soros, a figure widely reviled by conservatives.
For a look at what all this means in the second Trump administration, we turn to David Wessel,
a senior fellow in economic studies at the Brookings Institution and director of its
Hutchins Center on fiscal and monetary policy.
Wessel spent three decades at the Wall Street Journal.
He shared two Pulitzer prizes for journalism, one at the Journal and the other at the Boston Globe, and has written three books on economic issues.
We recorded our conversation yesterday. Well, David Wessel, welcome back to Fresh Air. Good to be with you.
I want to talk about tariffs for a moment.
fresh air. Could it be with you? I want to talk about tariffs for a moment. You know, this idea that he can raise tariffs on other countries and get results, you
know, kind of hails back to the mercantilism of a few centuries ago, like
when the British Empire would get cheap raw goods from other countries and then
manufacture stuff. You know, you manage trade policy to benefit your own
industries. And his notion is that if we raise enough tariffs,
manufacturers will eventually decide
they need to locate in the United States to avoid them.
And I'm interested in your view on how realistic that is.
I mean, as a thought experiment, if we could take the clock
back decades and instead of embracing
free trade in the 90s, erected tariffs.
Could we have prevented the loss of manufacturing jobs over the last few decades?
Well, it's a good question and I am sympathetic to the view of many economists that the period
of trade liberalization after World War II benefited both the United States economy and those of
the rest of the world.
But I also recognize that globalization, such as the surge of imports from China after they
joined the World Trade Organization, was very damaging to many American businesses and communities
and workers.
And as a society, we didn't do enough to
manage that. I think that you're absolutely right in your question.
Jameson Greer, who will be the new US Trade Representative if he's confirmed,
said in a webcast with JP Morgan before the election that President Trump's
advisors do not see trade as a tool of foreign policy,
like many people in Washington do or historically have. They think of it as a
tool of domestic policy and industrial policy, very focused on building
manufacturing jobs in the United States. Okay, so a couple things to think about
here. One is a lot of manufacturing jobs in the United States have been lost, not to imports, but to automation. And that's not because of
trade, that's because of technology has advanced and profit-seeking companies looking to cut
costs, don't use workers, where they can use machines if it's more efficient. And secondly,
you sometimes hear from President Trump and his people who agree with him on
trade that somehow we should go back to the late 19th century when we had a lot of tariffs
and the economy grew slowly.
And I take my wisdom on that from a very good trade historian at Dartmouth College, Doug
Irwin, who has looked at this and he points out it is true that we had tariffs
and we had a high growth in the late 19th century, the Gilded Age.
But he observes that much of that had to do with the expansion of the population and on
capital accumulation, that is, investments, rather than on getting benefits from tariffs.
In fact, he thinks tariffs may have discouraged businesses
from investing because it made the imported capital
goods more expensive.
And finally, he points out that the growth in that period,
the growth in productivity or output per hour of work,
was most rapid in sectors like utilities and services, which
had nothing to do with tariffs.
So it's one of those economic things
where there's a correlation.
We had tariffs that a lot of growth in the late 19th century, but one didn't cause the
other.
Now, Trump did impose tariffs in his first term.
And when he imposed tariffs on steel and clothing and kitchen cabinets and the like, did companies
in the United States make more of that stuff?
Did it have a benefit?
Some but not very much.
Those tariffs are a lot more modest than the ones that he is proposing now.
Basically, what tariffs do is they raise the cost of imported goods.
And by raising the cost of imported goods, the idea is it's easier for American manufacturers to make this stuff
because they have higher costs than, say, the Chinese or the Malaysians or the Koreans or whatever. But in many cases they impose tariffs on
things that we don't make in the United States or don't make very much of, shoes
and clothing and stuff like that. So all that does is raise costs. And then
there's a separate set of tariffs and these are the ones that President Biden
continued. They have to do with preventing China from surpassing us as the world's leading economic
power.
And I was taken by something that Alan Wolf, who used to be a trade representative, said
in a piece he wrote for another think tank that tariffs are like medicine.
If you have a little bit, it can cure you. And if you have too much, it's poisonous.
And I think the risk here is that President Trump,
if he does what he has threatened to do,
will end up with the kind of poisonous tariffs
that raise costs in the United States.
After all, a lot of stuff we import
goes into making other things in the United States.
We import a lot of food.
Does he really want to raise the price of food in the United States?
So these across-the-board tariffs are economically unwise
and I think would be quite damaging if there's something more than a negotiating tool.
Right. You know, it's interesting that Trump actually signed new trade agreements
with Canada in Mexico in his first term after some of these tariffs were imposed, which I guess
the 25% tariffs would violate, but I guess that's all negotiable. But it does seem
that a lot of industries have taken advantage of the trade agreements among
the United States, Mexico, and Canada, and have built a lot of integrated supply
chains, you know, sending material to Mexico to be manufactured and then
bringing it in as a part for a different process,
this would really shake things up if these tariffs went up, wouldn't it?
Absolutely. And remember, one of the things that happened was we told people we didn't want to import a lot of stuff from China,
so some of them responded by producing things in Mexico for sale into the United States.
So the business community, not only the Canadian and Mexican leaders,
but the business community is all up in arms about this threat
to essentially tear up the renegotiated Canada-Mexico-U.S. free trade agreement
that President Trump was so proud of before.
But I think that on the tariffs and stuff like that, I think that's a negotiating thing. Look, it's perfect
He has made this threat to do something on day one day one is January 20th
But he's already started the negotiations with the Canadian and Mexican governments if it goes, right
He'll be able to say on day one. I already cut a deal with Mexico and Canada
They're gonna to stop immigration,
stop illegal drugs, and I won't have to impose tariffs on them
and see what a great deal maker I am.
So I think this is just Trump negotiating in advance.
It's rather unusual, to say the least.
It's almost as if we have two presidents at the same time.
But I think that's a deliberate strategy,
and we'll see how well it goes.
You know, one of the things that I didn't know until I read this in the New York Times was that
when these tariffs were imposed in the first term, you know, a process was set up so that
individual companies could apply for exemptions. And I think the Times reported that the Commerce
Department fielded up to a half a million of such requests. I mean, that would seem to be the kind of thing that could both undermine your trade
policy and also just prove, you know, ripe for favoritism and corruption.
Absolutely. So, and I think we already see industry lobbyists gearing up for this.
If you can get and if you can make a case that you need an exemption and you can convince the Commerce Department
Or whoever that you need it and you get it then you're happy. How do you get that?
Well, is the other is this tied to campaign contributions?
Is it tied to supporting other parts of their policies a lot of?
Really the worst of what we sometimes call crony capitalism before we move on to other stuff
I just want to come back to where I began.
Is it realistic to think that tariffs
can force or compel or encourage companies
to actually establish manufacturing
in the United States?
Encourage, yes.
Look, we have a lot of foreign automakers
who make their cars in the US.
And some of that was the result of trade policies,
where we made it more attractive
for them to build a plant here than to import the cars from Germany or Japan. At the margin,
yes, it will encourage some investment in the United States, but at a cost. And the
question is, how much are we going to pay and higher consumer prices for every job that's
created here? And how many of these manufacturing plants that open here
are actually going to employ a lot of workers as opposed to be highly automated facilities?
So yes, at the margin it'll make a difference, but as a macroeconomic thing,
if you think of the good of the US economy as a whole,
I think it's pretty clear to me it's a negative.
The jobs of the 50s and and 60s aren't coming back.
No, and remember, manufacturing employment
is a very small fraction of all employment
in the United States, less than 10%.
So Bob Lighthizer, who was the intellectual machine
of the trade policy in the first Trump administration, who
for some reason didn't get one of the jobs this time around,
in his book, he basically says,
I think it's a good deal for America if consumers pay more for what they consume in order for
us to have more manufacturing jobs in the United States. Well, I'm not sure that if
the question were put that way, a lot of consumers and voters in the United States would actually
agree with that, but
they elected a president and some members of Congress who do believe that.
And it'll be interesting to see what happens.
Remember in Trump's first term, inflation wasn't an issue.
Well we've learned that Americans do not like inflation and Democrats are going to point
out every price increase that's tied to Trump tariffs, they're going to blame it on President Trump and his trade policies, and they're going to get some
support from the Fortune 500 and maybe the Walmarts and Amazons of the world, and we'll
see how popular these policies prove to be if they're really put in effect.
You know, speaking of rising prices, is it smart for consumers today, anticipating higher
tariffs and higher prices to make big purchases or stock up on stuff?
I don't know.
I read that some people are doing that and some companies are pushing that as a tactic
to get more sales.
I can understand if you're a company and you sell something that's imported from China,
that it might make sense to fill your warehouse now in the hopes that you can get in before the tariffs are imposed. I don't think that most
consumers are that sensitive to, not that many things we buy that would go up in price so much
that it'd be worth, you know, you're going to buy 10 years worth of socks to avoid a price increase?
I don't know about that.
Maybe replace your fridge.
of socks to avoid a price increase. I don't know about that. Maybe replace your fridge.
I mean, you know, there's always this game with cars. You know, if there's going to be tariffs
on cars, do you want to buy one now? But you have to offset that by what's happening in the auto
market and what incentives are available and what tax credits for EVs are available now that might
not be available if Trump and the Republicans do away with them. So it's a pretty big calculation.
I'm personally not like stocking my seller with French wine
in anticipation of tariff increases.
So let's talk about tax cuts,
the tax cuts that Trump has said
he wants to get accomplished.
The tax cuts that came from the 2017 bill
passed in his first term, the Tax Cuts and
Job Act, many of the provisions in that law will expire at the end of 2025.
So that's going to be an issue and he wants to renew those, right?
First of all, what was the impact on the deficit of the tax cuts of 2017?
Well, they increased the deficit.
You cut taxes, you bring in less revenue.
You can hope that it'll make the economy grow faster and you recover some of that in increased
revenue but not all of it.
Most of the corporate tax cuts in the 2017 act are permanent.
The ones that are expiring are the ones that affect all of us, all individual income taxpayers and some businesses.
And I think now the overwhelming assumption is that Congress will vote to basically extend
all the tax cuts that are expiring.
Then they'll maybe do some kind of fancy gimmickry to say it's not going to cost very much, but
basically that's about $4 trillion over 10 years above what the Congressional
Budget Office predicts would happen if the law was not changed.
Right.
So if that happens, where are we on the deficit?
What do economists think?
Is it reaching alarming levels?
The right answer to this question is it depends.
If they do the tax cuts that they're talking about, it will raise the deficit unless they can do some aggressive spending cuts.
My guess is they're going to get the tax cuts and the spending cuts will be harder to get, but we'll see.
The problem here is that the fundamental budget problem that the United States government has is that we are an aging society and
we spend more on older people than younger and working people. So the deficit
and the federal debt, the amount we've borrowed over time, is going to rise inexorably because
we're an aging society, we have low fertility rates, there's going to be more retirees
for every worker, and because the federal government spends a lot of money in healthcare
and healthcare spending goes up faster than everything else.
And so unless there's some attempt to restrain spending on health care or on retirement programs,
we're going to end up with a bigger deficit.
Now you ask, is it alarming?
Well, that's a good question.
There are a lot of people who predicted for the last 25 years
that we're on the verge of some fiscal crisis because
the government has borrowed so much. And that's a bit of the boy who cried wolf problem. The
US government is selling $2 trillion of bonds every year and they're not having any trouble
selling them and interest rates that they have to pay on them have not gone up very
much. So it's not clear that if we go on for another couple of years
that somehow automatically the rest of the world will say, oh my God, we're not buying
your bonds and we'll be in trouble and we'll have a crisis. We could have a crisis. I think
the crisis is more likely to be caused by political events. Like if global investors
and markets think that our government is dysfunctional, if Congress really goes crazy and they cut taxes a lot and don't cut spending,
if President Trump does some things that he sometimes says like,
we're going to not raise the debt ceiling or we're going to renegotiate our bonds or things like that.
And what we've seen in other countries, we saw it in the UK with List Trust and we're seeing it now in France, when investors think that the government is sort of out of control and unable to
manage its fiscal situation responsibly, markets can turn and that could lead to
an increase in interest rates that I'm sure the president and the rest of us
want to avoid. We don't want interest rates to go up because people no longer
think we're a safe credit.
And that's the risk.
But I think the trigger is more likely to be a political one
than somehow the debt to GDP ratio cross some threshold.
That's interesting.
So one way of measuring this is, do investors
who buy US bonds still think it's a reliable credit?
And are they willing to give you a pretty good rate
at borrowing money?
That said, I mean, interest on the national debt is something like 13% of the federal
budget now, if I recall.
Is there a point at which this just becomes unsustainable, that we're just...
Yes.
This is not sustainable, period.
It might be sustainable for another year or a presidential term, but at some point, you
can't grow your debt faster than your economy forever. We don't really know what the breaking point is.
Right now there's very little pressure to do anything about this. The markets and
global investors are willing to buy our bonds and the public, despite what you
hear from some politicians, doesn't seem to be really worried about that. I look
at members
of Congress as being pretty sensitive to what the voters really care about. And I don't
see a lot of people on the Washington Mall with signs that say, cut the deficit, raise
my taxes, cut my Social Security. There doesn't seem to be political pressure to do that.
And the Democrats have decided why should we be responsible and reduce future deficits
when we're in charge if when the Republicans take over, they just cut taxes again, so there's
kind of like a stalemate.
One of the problems is, as you point out, the more interest grows as a share of the
federal budget, the more pressure there is on the rest of the federal budget.
And that may crowd out some things that really would be good for the country, but members
of Congress may be reluctant to fund them because they're worried about how much
we're borrowing.
You know, of course, when Republicans have argued for tax cuts for businesses as they
did in 2017 and, you know, cuts which benefits wealthy Americans, what they say is this will
spur investment and economic growth, which will generate new revenue so that the debt doesn't spiral out of control.
Did those 2017 tax cuts result in growth?
So if you cut taxes on investment, you tend to get more investment.
And there was some of that after the 2017 tax cuts.
Was it anywhere near sufficient to grow the economy fast enough to spin off enough revenue
to pay for those tax cuts?
Absolutely not.
But one of the really interesting dilemmas that the administration is going to have,
and I can just hear Kevin Hassett saying this, I've heard him say it in academic settings,
is that cutting taxes on corporate investment, encouraging businesses to buy machinery, computers, software, do R&D,
you can make the case that that increases the rate of economic growth.
But those are not the tax cuts that are expiring.
The tax cuts that are expiring are the individual income tax cuts,
and there's very little evidence that cutting individual tax rates,
allowing us to spend more money on
food and cars and vacations, will lead to faster economic growth in the future. So they
kind of have a bit of an intellectual problem here. If you want to do tax cuts that you
think will increase growth in the future, those are not the ones that are expiring at
the end of 2025. I'm sure they'll find some way around that argument, but that's the
facts.
We are speaking with David Wessel.
He spent decades as a journalist covering economic issues.
He's now at EconomStat, the Brookings Institution.
He'll be back to talk more about what to expect
from Trump and his economic policy team
after this short break.
I'm Dave Davies, and this is Fresh Air.
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So let's talk about plans to cut government spending, which takes a unique form in Donald
Trump's plans.
He has enlisted Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy
to head what he's calling the Department of Government
Efficiency, which will find ways to save a lot of money,
according to its charge, and do it quickly.
What's the scale of what Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy think
they can accomplish?
Their scale is pretty big.
They think that they can reduce federal regulations in a way that save money.
They think they can reduce the headcount in federal agencies.
And they think that the White House has more power to not spend money that Congress has
appropriated than Congress and many lawyers think.
So they're very ambitious.
Of course, remember, they don't have any authority.
This is an advisory group.
We've had commissions like this before that were going to save all this money.
And mostly, you can't do it unless Congress goes along.
But they have an ally at the Office of Management and Budget in the White House, Russ Vogt,
who has taken the unusual position from time to time that when Congress appropriates money,
that's kind of a ceiling on what the president can spend and they don't have to spend it
all and this was an issue in the Nixon administration.
There's a law passed in 1974 that said no, the president can't do that.
But some of Trump's advisors think that's unconstitutional,
and I think they'll probably try and test it.
Look, there are clearly places that the government
could save money if it has the will to do so.
Most of the problems are that it's
their political obstacles to doing so.
If there was a line item in the federal budget
for waste, fraud, and abuse, it would have
been cut a long time ago.
So we'll see.
But I think that Musk and Rameswamy have the president's ear.
They're going to be aggressive on this.
They're going to look for some big scalps early on.
It may be on the regulatory side where they can withdraw some regulations.
They think there's been executive overreach and the Supreme Court has been sympathetic
to that view.
And they will say that we're saving money by cutting regulation.
And if we have fewer regulations, we can have fewer workers.
It's hard in the way the federal government's organized to have mass layoffs, but they can
certainly eliminate workers.
I mean, honestly, if the president declared that every federal employee in Washington,
D.C. had to come to work five days a week in person, I think people would quit and they wouldn't be replaced. So they will have influence.
They don't have any power but they have substantial influence until the day
which I predict will come at some point where Donald Trump decides that Elon
Musk is just taking too much of the limelight and they'll have a falling
apart because I don't think that Trump wants that much attention to somebody other
than himself.
Yeah.
Well, it's been interesting to see the relationship so far.
We'll see how that develops.
And you mentioned earlier the conflicts.
I mean, Musk has huge federal contracts.
So how is this going to work?
Right.
One of the things that they say they want to do is do away with a lot of regulations.
And there are regulations which apply to businesses, things that they have to do is do away with a lot of regulations. And there are regulations which apply to businesses, things
that they have to do, requirements they have to meet,
the environmental requirements, other ones.
But there are also regulations that govern entitlement
programs, who gets how much money.
And they get really complicated.
In a Wall Street Journal op-ed, Musk and Ramaswamy
said that most government enforcement
decisions and discretionary spending
aren't made by elected officials, but by quote, millions of unelected, unappointed civil servants
within the government, agencies who view themselves as immune from firing thanks to civil service
protections, unquote.
They say this is inherently undemocratic that these unelected people are making all these
regulations and they say they'll get rid of thousands of them.
You know, people have complained about regulations for a long time.
How easy or hard is it to change them?
Well, first of all, it is true that there are unelected people making decisions, but
they are making them with authority that has been given to them from Congress.
The Congress created the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Commodity Futures Training
Commission, the Food and Drug Administration.
And I don't think we want a bunch of amateurs making decisions about things that expertise
really matters.
Now, expertise is out of favor now.
The process for changing regulations is complicated. And what happened
in the first Trump administration, they did a lot of stuff. They didn't dot all the I's
and cross the T's and the courts undid them. I suspect they'll be more careful this time.
But the Supreme Court has said that there are agencies that have done too much and they've
reversed an old doctrine known as Chevron deference where the Supreme
Court had said that, well, when things are not quite clear, it's up to the agencies to
figure out what they mean. And the court has said, no, if Congress wants something, they
have to say it.
So there will be a lot of regulations that are vulnerable to being undone. And I suspect
some of them will be by the regulators whom Donald Trump appoints.
So that's a fact.
They act as if they can do all this stuff quickly.
And for good reason, government doesn't change rules quickly.
And there will be businesses who say like, you know, we didn't really like that rule,
but we've learned to live with it.
And it's going to really screw up our business if every time we have a new president,
they change the regulation.
So can we just stick with this one?
And there are regulations that need
to be modernized that are not right for the current times
of AI and the internet and instant communications
and trade across borders and stuff.
So there's plenty of room for that,
as long as you're not mindless and you don't break the rules
so the courts reverse you.
Getting back to where we started, this Department of Government Efficiency as long as you're not mindless and you don't break the rules so the courts reverse you.
Getting back to where we started,
this Department of Government Efficiency is not a department.
It's prospective advisory group.
It's gonna need staff, right?
I mean, is it gonna hire hundreds of people who can?
I have no idea.
I mean, maybe.
I mean, part of the thing that makes you uncomfortable here
is so it's called the Department of Government Efficiency.
Two problems with that.
One is it's not a department.
And secondly, the acronym is DOGE.
That happens to be a cryptocurrency in which Elon
Musk has an interest and the price of which went up
when this thing was named.
So that's an example of how you have to watch here.
What is the real agenda for this for this group. But you know
they will have influence and they will have influence on what the president's budget
is and they will egg on the people in the administration who want to say we don't have
to spend all the money that Congress has appropriated. So I think they will and you know a lot of
this is PR in the in the in the popular sense, like getting people
to be outraged about something
so they can claim some victories,
even if the budget won't say, you know,
that didn't really save very much money.
Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy
are supposed to meet with House Republicans,
I believe this week.
What would you expect from that meeting?
I think part of it will be a pep rally.
Like they'll say, we want to cut spending,
you want to cut spending, we're all in this together.
And part of it in private will be members of Congress
explaining to Musk and Ramaswamy how Congress works.
And by the way, guys, we got elected,
and we're the Appropriations Committee, and you're not.
So we're going to call the shots here,
and don't think that you can dictate what it'll be.
That conversation may not, certainly won't happen in public. I expect it will happen behind closed
doors at some point. We're speaking with David Wessel. He spent decades as a journalist covering
economics. He is now an economist at the Brookings Institution. We'll talk more after this break.
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So let's talk about the team that Donald Trump has picked.
I mean, two leading figures are Scott Besant,
who's going to be the Treasury Secretary, assuming
he's confirmed, and Howard
Lutnick would head the Commerce Department.
Let's talk about these two guys.
First of all, just who they are and what their policy notions are to the extent that we know
them.
First of all, Scott Besant.
So, I think the most useful way to think about Scott Bessent is he could easily have been
the Treasury Secretary in the George W. Bush administration.
Unlike some of President Trump's other nominees who are really outside the box, things that
other Republican presidents, George Bush or if Mitt Romney had been elected, would never
have picked. Scott
Besson is a safe pair of hands at the Treasury and I think that's deliberate.
We don't know much about what really constrains President Trump from
pursuing some of his more, shall we say, unusual or radical proposals, but we do
know he cares about financial markets. He cares about the stock market's verdict
on his performance
and he should care about what happens to interest rates in the bond market and the Fed and I
suspect he does. If you're in the real estate business, you understand what interest rates
are all about. So by putting Scott Besson there, he's a money manager, he's Ivy League,
he went to Yale, he got famous in his late 20s for helping George Soros make
a huge billion dollar bet against the British pound that
paid off.
He's had his own money market fund, a hedge fund.
So he's a finance guy.
He's a Wall Street guy.
He doesn't have any experience in Washington.
I'm not sure he's ever had a boss or a client
like Donald Trump. And his challenge is to convince the markets and the business community that
everything's going to be all right. Right. He was known to say in an interview in
October that Donald Trump is really a free trader at heart. I mean, I guess we
will see. Let's talk about Howard Lutnick, the other guy who runs the Commerce
Department, which the Commerce Department has significant influence
Over trade policy, right? It does but I think Howard Lutnick's influence is probably maybe greater than other Commerce Secretaries
Because of his relationship with Donald Trump, although you never know whether his lobbying for the Treasury job
Which he clearly wanted annoyed the the incoming president
Lutnick is a much more volatile figure.
He's done a lot of – I mean, he's got just an incredible heroic story.
His parents died when he was in college.
He happens to go into the same college I went to, Haverford College, and the college paid
his way after his parents died, and he's been very generous to the college paid his way after his parents died and he's been very generous
to the college.
He ran Cantor Fitzgerald.
Most of their employees, including his brother, were killed on 9-11.
He was the model for the main character in the TV show Billions, the hedge fund guy who
got in a little bit of bad press when he cut off the benefits to the families
of people who've been killed and then he set up a nonprofit to benefit them.
So he's very outspoken.
He doesn't have the same kind of moderate demeanor.
He's Trump-like and he'll say sometimes things which seem outrageous.
And we know that he is much more willing to be aggressive on tariffs than Besant.
And that's going to be the interesting tension here.
Because remember, yes, the Commerce Department has some say about tariffs, but basically
these are presidential decisions.
Congress has given the president extraordinary authority on tariffs, and the president's
trade lawyers understand the authority they have, and they are willing to push it to the limit
They don't need unlike tax cuts
They don't need Congress to approve them and I think
Lutnick will be egging the president on on this tariff stuff and best it may be trying to say
Oh, you didn't really mean that that was a negotiating tactic
We should talk a little bit about the Federal Reserve, you know the central bank
That's supposed to be independent from the White House.
But Trump, like some other presidents, have had strong opinions.
He appointed the current chairman of the Fed, Jerome Powell, Jay Powell, and has criticized
him for not keeping interest rates low enough.
What would you expect going forward between Donald Trump and the Fed?
Every president wants lower interest rates.
Some presidents say that explicitly.
Some say it only privately.
Once upon a time, Fed chairman were susceptible to this pressure, Arthur Burns in the Nixon
era was.
But in recent times, Fed chairs have been pretty
resolute that their job is to deliver on their mandate of maximum employment and
stable prices even if it annoys the politicians. What do I expect? I expect
President Trump will not keep his mouth shut. If the Fed stops cutting interest
rates, he'll complain and the Fed will not pay attention to that. I mean,
they have to hear him, but President Trump had very little support from Congress when he criticized
the Fed in his first term because members of Congress kind of understand the game here. We
give the Fed the power to do what's unpopular. We reserve the right to criticize them, but we don't really meddle.
The second thing the president will do is in 2026, he has a chance to replace one of
the seven members of the Federal Reserve Board whose term is up, and importantly, he has
a chance to appoint a new chairman. And that will be a really important signal. Does he
appoint somebody who the world expects
will have a spine and will keep interest rates higher
than Trump wants, if necessary?
Or does the world, meaning markets, business people,
global investors, do they think he's appointed someone who
will bend to his preferences?
And that's going to be the real test.
If the people think that he's appointed a Treasury Secretary, if markets and global
investors think that the President has appointed a Fed chair who has no spine, who will tend
to bend to what the President's will is, that will lead to them to build up the interest
rates they demand when they lend money to the US government, and that will ricochet
through the economy.
Trevor Burrus By that explanation, it's in Trump's interest
to appoint someone who will tell him no.
David Schiff It is definitely in Trump's interest to appoint
somebody who the markets believe will be a politically independent
Fed chairman because if he doesn't, interest rates will be higher and that's bad for the
federal government because it's a big borrower and bad for the economy and bad politically
because if he gets blamed for higher mortgage rates, that's going to really not be good
for him and his party. Looking at the big picture here, you know,
if Trump pursues all of the policies that he has advocated for, you know, high tariffs,
tax cuts, mass deportations, business deregulation, expansion of energy production, do these pieces
fit together or will they be pulling the economy in different directions?
David Schiff First of all, because we'll go back to the whole question I mentioned earlier about how much is bluff in negotiating taxes
and what do they actually do? I
think that what the what is the wise economic policy is
to do things that we think have a good chance of
increasing the rate of economic growth
and sharing that prosperity broadly over the next generation.
And there are some things we don't really know how to do that, but there's some things we know
help that. So that means being careful not to cut federal R&D spending, not to punish companies for
investing in R&D,
investing in things like early childhood education or getting lead pipes out of the ground,
having smart regulations so we get the benefits of new technologies like AI while guarding against some of the dangers,
and putting forward a plausible plan for restraining the growth of the federal debt over time,
changes to benefit programs and
taxes that will take effect slowly.
I don't see them pursuing that kind of a coherent strategy.
They do have a clear strategy of trying to protect manufacturing jobs in the United States,
and so there may be some benefits to people who are in those businesses.
But if you look across the country, and also I should add, like they don't seem to think
climate change is an urgent issue.
I think it is an urgent issue and they don't seem to see that as a high on their priority
list.
And so if you're thinking about what you think is good for the next generation and you put
that next to what the Trump agenda is, I don't think it delivers on what I personally think would be in the interests of the country.
David Wessel, thank you so much for speaking with us again.
You're welcome. I enjoyed it.
David Wessel is an economist, author, and director of the
Brookings Institution's Hutchins Center on Fiscal and Monetary Policy. We
recorded our conversation yesterday. Coming up, Maureen Corrigan reviews Time of
the Child, the latest novel from Niall Williams set in a rural village in Western Ireland.
This is Fresh Air.
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Niall Williams' popular novel Four Letters of Love is being made into a movie starring Pierce Brosnan and Helena Bonham Carter.
His new novel is called Time of the Child and our book critic Maureen Corrigan has this review.
A village on the western edge of a wet nowhere
populated by men who drink too much and women who smile too little. Throw in cows,
an addled priest, an abandoned baby, and a thick cloud cover of shame, and you have the
elements for a quintessential Irish story." So quintessential, in fact, I've held off
reading Nile Williams for a long time, despite hearing raves about his work.
My skepticism, it turns out, was misplaced.
I've just emerged from a Nile Williams binge with a belated appreciation for his writing, which invests
specificity and life in
characters and places
easily reduced to cliches.
Time of the Child is Williams' latest novel, a companion piece rather than a sequel to
his 2019 novel, This is Happiness. Both books are set in the rural village of Faha, a town
in the far west of Ireland whose inhabitants, we're told,
possess the translucent flesh that came from living in an absolute humidity. Time of the
Child takes place in the weeks leading up to Christmas 1962 and opens and closes on a set piece of mass at the parish church,
where most of the village gathers.
In between lies a story that feels at once realistic in its rough and comic everyday unfolding,
and mythic in its rifts on the grand themes of despair and spiritual redemption.
Jack Troy is the town doctor and central character here.
He's a melancholy contained man who we're told carries
himself in the manner that the townspeople of Faha
might have summarized as not like us.
Dr. Troy lost his wife and then the older woman he unexpectedly fell in love with who's
now also dead. Keeping house for him is his 29-year-old daughter Ronnie, the eldest of
three sisters, the one who remained at home. Ronnie, too, is a semi-enigma to the townspeople. Our narrator tells us that, added to her reserve was not only the screened lives of all women
in the parish at the time, but the marginal natures of all writers, for Ronnie Troy's
closest companion was her notebook. Dr. Troy has become haunted by despair and by a
particularly heart-rending question, why does no one love my daughter? The answer
he fears is his own glowering presence that may have repelled one especially
promising suitor. Inspired by what we're told is a mixed fuel of brandy
and a parent's fear of the unmade world after them, Dr. Troy uncharacteristically resolves
on a bizarre scheme to make things right. As the saying goes, man plans, God laughs.
As the saying goes, man plans, God laughs. Instead of unfolding the Troy family narrative chronologically,
Williams layers it on top of other simultaneous storylines,
all of which are graced with language as bracing, as salt spray from the chill Atlantic.
We follow, for instance, the wanderings of Jude
Quinlan, a 12-year-old on the rope bridge between man and boy. Jude's father drinks
and gambles, and his mother Mamie possesses the anxious look of one married
to an instability. Listen to how Williams moves fluidly from the mundane to the wider lens
of the numinous in these snippets from an extended passage where Jude helps to unload
a van full of Christmas toys for the town fair. There were toy soldiers, kits for flying gliders, skittles in a net, balls, bats, dolls of one expression,
but many dresses. For Jude, carrying everything from the van was as close as he would get
to handling any of these things. He had no resentment or bitterness. Rather rather from nearness to the marvelous, something rubbed off on him.
The other thing, the one that only occurred to him years later when he would recall what
happened that day, was that what he was carrying out of the van that December morning was his
childhood.
For those who believe in such phenomena,
Jude will be the instrument for bringing a miracle,
a Christmas miracle, complete with a baby
and a virginal mother no less, into this story.
The other miracle here is a literary one,
time of the child itself,
which gives readers that singular experience of nearness to the marvelous.
Maureen Corrigan is a professor of literature at Georgetown University. She reviewed Time of the
Child by Nile Williams. On Tomorrow's Show, do you ever Google your medical symptoms, give yourself
a scary diagnosis, and then start to panic? We'll talk with Caroline Crampton, author of a new book about hypochondria and illness anxiety. She
became hyper vigilant after surviving cancer and constantly checking herself
for signs of a recurrence. Her new book is A Body Made of Glass. I hope you can
join us. To keep up with what's on the show and get highlights of our
interviews, follow us on Instagram at NPR Fresh Air's executive producer is Danny Miller.
Our technical director and engineer is Audrey Bentham.
Our interviews and reviews are produced and edited by Phyllis Myers, Anne Marie Baldonado,
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Molly C.V. Nesper and Sabrina Seward. Roberta Shorrock directs the show. For
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