The NPR Politics Podcast - So What Will Trump's Policies Mean For The Cost Of Living?
Episode Date: November 11, 2024Suffice it to say the economy is quite complicated and making sense of the specific impact of any one policy is quite difficult. But a number of the priorities President-elect Trump has championed, in...cluding mass deportations and steep tariffs, could all lead to yet another spike in the cost of living.This episode: White House correspondent Deepa Shivaram, senior national political correspondent Mara Liasson, and chief economics correspondent Scott Horsley.The podcast is produced by Jeongyoon Han, Casey Morell and Kelli Wessinger. Our editor is Eric McDaniel. Our executive producer is Muthoni Muturi.Listen to every episode of the NPR Politics Podcast sponsor-free, unlock access to bonus episodes with more from the NPR Politics team, and support public media when you sign up for The NPR Politics Podcast+ at plus.npr.org/politics.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This message comes from Indiana University.
Indiana University is committed to moving the world forward,
working to tackle some of society's biggest challenges,
nine campuses, one purpose, creating tomorrow today.
More at iu.edu.
A quick word before the show, the 2024 election is over
and as a new administration prepares to assume power,
it's our job across the entire
NPR network to report on what they do with that power. That's why we're here, because
information is power too. Your support makes it possible for us to break down big stories,
to fact check, and to make sure you understand what's going on. When you donate, you make
a difference in our ability to do this work tomorrow. If you're already a supporter, we're taking this moment to say thank you. And if you're not, go to donate.npr.org to give.
Donate.npr.org. All right, here's the show.
Hi, this is Ted Arthur at the Winter Garden Theater in New York City about to conduct
another performance of Back to the Future on Broadway. This podcast was recorded at
1.39 PM on Monday, November 11th, 2024.
Things may have changed by the time you hear this,
but we'll still be going back in time
thanks to our Flux Capacitor,
an incredible cast, musicians, and crew.
Here's the show.
["Flex Capacitor Theme"]
I'm thrilled. Must see.
I'd like to go back in time with the flex capacitor.
Hey there, it's the NPR Politics Podcast.
I'm Deepa Sivaram.
I cover the White House.
I'm Mara Lyason, Senior National Political Correspondent.
And NPR's Scott Horsley is here to talk about the economy.
Hey, Scott.
Good to be with y'all.
Thanks for coming.
So big takeaways from this election.
Kind of hard to be an incumbent
when the last four years have been, you know, years of people struggling with the cost of
living and trying to afford basic needs like groceries, childcare, etc. How are you thinking
about how the election played out last week?
I think you can think of lots of different reasons people had to vote the way they did.
But one clear takeaway is that people really,
really hate it when the cost of living goes up.
When they have to pay more for rent or groceries
or insurance, they really don't like that.
And they tend to take it out on whichever person
or party is in charge at the moment.
We've seen that through the decades and we've
seen it across national boundaries.
Governments have been toppled from Pakistan We've seen that through the decades and we've seen it across national boundaries.
Governments have been toppled from Pakistan to the UK to Brazil and Italy because of the
inflationary spike we saw all over the world in the wake of the pandemic.
And that was a very difficult environment for Democrats and Kamala Harris.
So Scott, obviously we know that inflation defeats presidents.
Inflation is the most important political economic indicator.
And we know that if Biden could have reversed prices
and gotten them down, he would have.
What can presidents do to lower prices?
I mean, Donald Trump told people he would get this fixed
as soon as he won.
That's right.
He hasn't really offered a prescription to get prices down.
He has talked about increased oil production.
Uh, but of course we're already producing oil at record levels.
And, and actually gasoline prices have come down quite a bit from their
peak in the summer of 2022.
Lots of other prices have stayed high, even though they're not
still going up really fast.
You are seeing a lot of democratic economists questioning the decisions
that were made early in 2021 to really go big with the American rescue plan.
Now, of course, the government also went very big with economic stimulus
under the Trump administration back in 2020 to counter the effects of the
pandemic, but those aggressive efforts to cushion the blow from the pandemic continued into 2021. And that may have put some further upward pressure on prices.
The main causes of inflation were the aftershocks, the pandemic itself, and all the resulting supply
chain snarls. And then of course, the war in Ukraine, which supercharged energy prices and food
prices. But the $1.9 trillion American rescue
plan may have also, uh, put upward pressure on
prices at the margins.
And you know, the reason Democrats did that was
they were burned by the experience coming out of
the great financial crisis, uh, when they didn't
think the government had done enough.
You might remember, uh, treasury secretary, Janet
Yellen saying it's better to do too much than to do too little. And in fact, doing perhaps too
much did really help to boost job growth and made for a very tight labor market
where wages went up pretty rapidly, but it also maybe affected prices and people
really, really hate those high prices. So it sounds like you're saying that there are
things presidents can do that will exacerbate
inflation, but there isn't anything they can do to
bring prices down.
Is that what you're saying?
It's pretty tough.
I've not seen any, uh, any magic wand that's,
that's, that's going to work.
What they can do is try to boost wages.
So they, they keep pace with inflation and
eventually overtake it.
And over time we have seen wages start to catch
up with these high prices and they will presumably
overtake it and people will see real increases
in their buying power.
We've seen wage growth outpacing price growth
for well over a year now, but people are still
really unhappy with those cumulative price
increases of the last few years.
And Scott, part of this is also that people,
you know, consumers, voters, etc. were looking
maybe for a faster fix here, right?
There was a lot that the Biden administration tried to do.
Obviously, we know there's no magic lever that the president can pull to fix the economy
overnight.
But a lot of these efforts and initiatives took time and will will have continued to
take a lot of time.
We'll see what President Trump does with some of these things, but is part of what you are seeing is
that voters wanted a faster solution here.
Yeah.
They, people, people wanted prices to come down and
we're probably not going to see prices come down for
the most part.
What we hopefully will see is prices level off or
grow up only slowly and, and eventually wages
catch up with that.
Now that's, you know, what you can really do in, in real economic terms.
There are certainly other questions about messaging.
Could the administration have done a better job of messaging what it was doing?
Could it have done a better job of explaining why prices were high?
Possibly.
But the facts are it's really tough in an inflationary environment for
incumbents to hold on to their jobs.
And we've seen that whether the incumbent party
is left, right, or center all over the world,
inflation is just a killer of incumbent politicians.
And Kamala Harris had that incumbent label
wrapped around her neck.
Yeah, definitely.
All right, we're going to take a quick break
and more in a moment.
This message comes from WISE, the app for doing things in other currencies.
Send, spend or receive money internationally and always get the real-time mid-market exchange
rate with no hidden fees.
Download the WISE app today or visit wise.com, tease and seize apply.
Support for NPR comes from NPR member stations and Eric and Wendy Schmidt through the Schmidt
Family Foundation,
working together to create a just world
where all people have access to renewable energy,
clean air and water, and healthy food.
The Schmidt Family Foundation
is part of the philanthropic organizations
and initiatives created and funded by Eric and Wendy Schmidt
to work toward a healthy, resilient, secure world for all on the web
at theschmidt.org.
Support for this podcast and the following message come from Autograph Collection Hotels
with over 300 independent hotels around the world, each exactly like nothing else.
Autograph Collection is part of the Marriott Bonvoy portfolio of hotel brands.
Find the unforgettable at autografecollection.com.
Okay, so does this sound like you?
You love NPR's podcasts,
you wish you could get more of all your favorite shows,
and you wanna support NPR's mission
to create a more informed public.
If all that sounds appealing,
then it is time to sign up for the NPR Plus bundle.
Learn more at plus.npr.org.
And we're back.
And I want to turn to what's coming next, President-elect Trump's policy plans when
it comes to the economy on his end, starting off with his plans on tariffs.
He's talked a lot about this.
Scott, how will that impact the economy,
both in the short term, like the coming months after he's sworn in in January, but also,
you know, potentially years down the line? Well, I think we're going to have to wait and see
exactly what form the tariffs take. You know, the President-elect talked about universal tariffs on
all imports of 10 to 20 percent and then a much higher tariff, maybe 60% on imports from China.
If he actually did that, it would have a huge
inflationary impact in this country.
But there's some thinking that, you know, maybe
that's all talk and he's going to use this as a
bargaining chip and that the actual tariffs that
take place won't be that, that large or that costly.
In general, when you slap a tariff on, on, on a
product, it's a tax on imports.
It, it drives up the price.
Uh, Trump likes to say that the, the foreign
suppliers pay that price, but in general, it's the
US importer that pays the price.
And in many cases then pass that cost on to the ultimate
consumer.
Now, when we had tariffs, we had a lot of tariffs imposed during the first Trump administration
that did raise costs for consumers.
It certainly raised costs for businesses.
Some of those costs were passed on to ultimate consumers.
The Trump administration, the first time around, didn't slap tariffs on a lot of consumer goods
from China.
They stopped short of doing that. So we didn't necessarily see the full brunt of tariffs on
consumer prices. But if he actually went through with a 10 or 20 percent tariff on all imports,
that would sharply raise costs for consumers.
Yeah.
One of the things about covering Donald Trump is there's often a very big difference between
what he says he wants to do or what he says he is doing and what he actually does when he starts to decide how he's
going to put tariffs on things. Maybe these tariffs will not be as broad, sweeping and draconian as he
has described them during the campaign. And if he does go through with tariffs, you can certainly
expect our trading partners will retaliate with tariffs of their own on US exports. That's not good
for US companies that try to sell products overseas. It's not good for our
farmers who tend to rely heavily on export markets. We have very productive
farmers who make a lot more food than we can eat in this country, so they sell a
lot of it overseas. We saw farmers lose a lot of market share the first time
around when other countries retaliated against US tariffs.
Another thing that the president elect has campaigned on, talked about a lot is this
concept of mass deportations, carrying these out in areas all over the country. There are
a lot of people, Scott, who have echoed a lot of concern about this, of course, and
the impacts on groups like agriculture and things like that. How does something like that, a plan like that
potentially play out for how that would also
impact consumers?
Yeah, I mean, if you're worried about the high cost
of groceries, deporting the people who pick and process
our food is probably not the best response.
Here again, we don't really know what the reality
of policy under a Trump administration will be in comparison
the way he's talked about it, but mass deportation is potentially inflationary.
Now Trump and his running mate, JD Vance, have said, well, if you deport a bunch of
people who are living in the country illegally, that will free up housing and lower rents.
And I suppose there are pockets of the country
with high concentrations of undocumented
immigrants where, you know, a mass deportation
might actually put some downward pressure on
rents, but for the most part, mass deportations
would drive up the cost of living and it would
certainly make it hard.
Uh, it would, it would, it would hurt the
agricultural industry.
It would hurt the construction industry,
which, you know, we need to build more housing. It would certainly hurt hospitality,
any industry that depends heavily on immigrant labor. The other thing is that the large number
of immigrants we've seen in the last few years certainly have caused strains on schools and
hospitals and all sorts of government infrastructure, but they have
also allowed the United States to add a whole lot more jobs than it otherwise would have been. You
know, our native-born population is aging, many baby boomers are retiring. If it weren't for the
high levels of immigration that we've seen in the recent years, we would not have been able to add nearly as many jobs and we would be facing
a worse labor shortage, which would also be inflationary.
And the other thing Trump has talked about, of course, is, and this came up on both sides
between Democrats and Republicans in this presidential race, tax cuts. Who's getting
them? Who isn't getting them? How does that impact what's coming down the line
in a Trump administration? Right. Well, of course, the big part of the tax cuts that have been talked
about is the extension of the 2017 tax cuts that were passed during the first Trump administration.
Of course, Vice President Harris had also talked about extending most of those individual cuts for
everyone making up to $400,000. So there what we're really talking about is avoiding a tax increase when those tax cuts were set to expire next year. Trump has also
talked about cutting the corporate tax further, which is one reason we've seen lots of celebration
on Wall Street of his election. And then he has talked about some other targeted tax cuts for specific constituencies, like
making tips exempt from taxation.
That was, of course, very popular with a lot of tipped workers in Nevada and elsewhere.
He's talked about exempting Social Security benefits from taxation.
That would be certainly popular with a lot of seniors.
He's also talked about exempting overtime income from taxation. Now,
all of those things would be complicated and would probably invite some gamesmanship in the
tax business. People, you know, trying to get more of their income classified as tips. You might see
teachers asking to have some of their income classified as tips so that it would be tax-free.
Lots of gamesmanship going on there. So that would be tax free, lots of
gamesmanship going on there.
But if in fact, that came to be, it would, uh,
save some people some money.
It would take money away from the government.
It would worsen our, our federal deficit,
which is already large.
Uh, it could drive up long-term interest rates
and mortgage rates as the government has to
borrow more money and that, that makes it more
expensive for everyone else to borrow money.
And the extra money circulating in the economy as a result of those tax cuts could make it
harder to get inflation under control.
Scott, I have kind of like a loosey goosey question that I wonder if we end on here,
which is like, we were talking about all of Trump's potential plans and policy ideas with
the context of knowing that we don't actually know if he's going to enact any or all of these things and in the exact way that they
shake out. And I'm curious how much that volatility or relative volatility, like how chaotic does
that kind of make the ground that we stand on not exactly knowing what might happen in
January, February, March, etc.
Well, the economy is not crazy about uncertainty.
And certainly, there will be lots of uncertainty
in the Trump administration.
We learned that the first time around.
But the US business community is pretty resilient.
They'll find ways to work with it.
We've talked about a lot of the ways
that if Trump's policies were carried out,
it could actually make inflation worse rather than better.
I don't think, by and and large voters were going over a checklist
of Trump policies and Harris policies and really nickel and diming and saying which
of these is going to be better for my pocketbook. I think they were just very frustrated with
the high cost of living as it is now and they just said I'm going to vote with my gut and
my gut doesn't like the cost of living the way it is now.
And I want to try something different.
People were voting for change and they got that with a president elect Donald Trump to kind of close the loop on what we were saying in the beginning, choosing the person who isn't the incumbent.
There were a lot of factors that motivated voters behavior in this race.
voters behavior in this race. I think the economy is always number one, but in this case, prices were what drove people and they remembered that during Trump prices were lower and they were. There were
also other things. I think that this was a clear defeat for the cultural left, but what's not clear
is what else was motivating this. And we're going to be picking through the entrails of this election for a long time and one of the things that i'm interested in going forward is how much donald trump will be held responsible for the economy people in retrospect pretty much gave me a pass on how we handle covid they didn't give me a pass in twenty twenty that's one of the main reasons that he lost people thought he had bungled the response to the pandemic.
That's one of the main reasons that he lost. People thought he had bungled the response to the pandemic. But then they kind of gave him a pass. And I wonder if prices stay high. Will he be able
to get away with saying, hey, that's Joe Biden's fault, not mine. We'll see.
All right. We're going to leave it there for today. Scott Horsley, thanks so much for joining us.
Great to be with you.
I'm Deepa Sivaram. I cover the White House.
I'm Mara Eliason, Senior National Political Correspondent.
And thank you for listening to the NPR Politics Podcast.
Support for this podcast and the following message come from Dignity Memorial.
When your celebration of life is prepaid today, your family is protected tomorrow.
Planning ahead is truly one of the best gifts you can give your family.
For additional information, visit DignityMemorial.com.
Support for this podcast and the following message come from Dignity Memorial.
When your celebration of life is prepaid today, your family is protected tomorrow.
Planning ahead is truly one of the best gifts you can give your family. For additional information visit dignitymemorial.ca