The Trump triumph portends an economic fallout

By Dave Marston

As I watched Donald Trump arrive at an astounding victory election night, I was struck by his strong turnout in both rural and urban parts of the country. But I couldn’t stop thinking: Do voters understand what Trump’s sweep means for the price of eggs, housing and cars?

As it became clear that enthusiasm for Kamala Harris was waning leading up to the election, bond markets were already going down. That’s important, because the bond market is a predictor of the future.

For contrast, the stock market went up 3% the morning after the election, as Donald Trump promised dramatic tax breaks and lenient environmental regulations for corporations. That explains why so many billionaires supported Trump.

Our bond market, perhaps not as well understood as stocks, is the biggest in the world, and though the Federal Reserve sets a “target” interest rate and regulates short-term interest rates.

The nation’s $28 trillion treasury market sets the final interest rate through an auction.

Here’s what an auction determines: When prices of bonds drop, yields for investors go up. But this also drives up mortgage rates, interest rates on car loans, credit cards and so forth. Foreign countries and investors also trade bonds based on expectations for future borrowing. If our government needs to sell more bonds, lower prices and higher rates of return to investors usually follow.

America is piling up huge annual deficits, and when buyers of our bonds grow concerned about the credit worthiness of the United States, they typically start selling. This creates a knock-on effect of higher deficits, as the nation pays higher interest rates on its massive borrowing.

Never downplay the impact a falling bond markets can have. Bond traders have toppled governments—Great Britain in 2022 is a prime example, reinforcing bond traders nickname “bond vigilantes.”

After Donald Trump was elected, the bond market, which had already declined significantly in anticipation of his win, fell 3% the next morning. That is considered a very bad day for the bond market. Investors began predicting that two of Donald Trump’s election promises would lead to higher prices for consumers.

His first promise was to deport millions of undocumented workers even though our country is at full employment.  Deporting workers will cause a labor shortage and drive up the cost of American made goods, especially the cost of vegetables, meat and housing, industries that rely heavily on manual labor.

His second promise, using presidential power to impose tariffs on goods from other countries, is another way a president can raise costs for consumers. The president-elect has talked up tariffs repeatedly, calling them “beautiful” and promising that other countries will pay for them.

That is not how tariffs work.

If we want foreign goods from China and Mexico, we must pay the going rate. If we want to substitute an American good, we should be sure it’s available and that there is labor to produce it.

During his last presidency, Trump levied tariffs on China. It retaliated by levying tariffs on our farm products, which erased profits for midwestern farmers.

Trump quickly reallocated $12 billion via the U.S. Agriculture Department to support those farmers. That is called a bailout, or welfare.

Moreover, if he raises tariffs across the board on goods from other countries, there will be widespread “revenge- tariffs”—just as happened last time. Unless we borrow even more money in the bond market for various welfare schemes, the tariffs will harm the smallest American companies, while international corporations, with operations overseas, will be less impacted.

Once again farmers will be hurt. We are mostly a nation of consumers, not producers, and 68% of our economy is buying goods. That is why so many suffered during the inflationary spike under Joe Biden, causing the necessary goods in life to become shockingly pricey.

When Donald Trump takes charge next year—and if he fulfills his promises—tariffs and labor shortages are bound to dramatically raise prices and interest rates for American consumers. Once an economy contracts, recession follows.

Somehow, we missed thoroughly debunking Donald Trump’s wrongheaded assumptions about what makes our economy work. Now, we face an uncertain future with a leader whose policies benefit the rich while harming working people.

Dave Marston is the publisher of Writers on the Range, Writersontherange.org. A nonprofit dedicated to lively discussion about the West. He worked in finance in New York City and now lives in Durango, Colorado.

This column was published in the following newspapers:

11/11/2024 Real Vail Vail CO
11/12/2024 Steamboat Pilot Steamboat Springs CO
11/13/2024 Aspen Daily News Aspen CO
11/13/2024 Sierra Vista Herald Sierra Vista AZ
11/11/2024 Glendive Ranger Review Glendive MT
11/13/2024 Grand Junction Daily Sentinel Grand Junction CO
11/14/2024 Sierra Nevada Ally Carson City NV
11/15/2024 Green RIver Star Green River WY
11/15/2024 Denver Post Denver CO
11/16/2024 Laramie Boomerang Laramie WY
11/14/2024 Durango Telegraph Durango CO
11/17/2024 Daily Interlake Kalispell MT
11/15/2024 Camus-Washougal Post Record Camus WA
11/18/2024 The Insider Escalante UT
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Philip Verleger
1 month ago

Interesting commentary. However, you miss a critical point. As Charles Kindleberger noted in his book “The World in Depression, 1929 -1932” commodity producers are almost always the big losers from trade wars. Then commodity prices dropped by more than 75 percent on average according to the League of Nations.
US farmers lost big during the first Trump Administration.
If Trump follows through with his plans US oil and gas producers will join US farmers. By 2026 you may be paying $1.50/gallon and US oil producers may be getting less than $20/bbl.
Meantime interest rates could surpass the peaks set in 1982.

Al McCaskill
29 days ago

I’ll bet you 2 to 1 in four years our economy will be in much better shape than Biden/Harris is leaving it.

David Marston
29 days ago
Reply to  Al McCaskill

I’ll take that bet. We’re at 4.1% unemployment now. Inflation is 2.6%. GDP grew at 2.8% last quarter. I’d wager $100 that all those measures will be significantly worse.

Curmudgeon
29 days ago
Reply to  Al McCaskill

And I’ll double it. Until the farmers once again control and defend the equity in their family’s land, until the workers of the land receive wages that they can truly own, until the families are free to teach what they’ve learned to their own children, and until we once again can defend our very selves this country’s promise has been stolen by tyrants and surrendered by fools.

Sandy Calwell
29 days ago

So well put!

Polly Cisneros
18 days ago

Great article, thank you for walking us through the Trump policy issues. However, you make a giant leap at the end by saying that we failed to debunk Trump’s assumptions about what makes our economy work, prior to the election. Those of us who understand the economy and keep up with the news, were fully aware of Trump’s misunderstanding of how it all works. Therein lies the issue. Despite what we knew, voters chose him anyway. Reason can only go so far in explaining where we are today.

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