Trump’s MAGA Policies of Wealth Destruction

“Practical men who believe themselves to be quite exempt from any intellectual influence, are usually the slaves of some defunct economist. Madmen in authority, who hear voices in the air, are distilling their frenzy from some academic scribbler of a few years back.”

– John Maynard Keynes, The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money (1936)

Practical Objectives

Is President Donald J. Trump a practical man? Is he a madman?

Does he hear voices in the air?

We’ll leave the answers to these questions to you. Certainly, Trump’s the slave of destructive decisions from the past. Many of these decisions were guided by dead economists.

For example, decisions made a century ago, such as the passage of the Federal Reserve Act of 1913 and FDR’s seizure of the private gold holdings of American citizens in 1933, are forcing Trump’s plans. Today, for fun and for free, we seek to better understand the great calamity he’s dealing with.

To begin, Trump’s tariff policies are intended to reroute the origins of production and the flows of global trade. Specifically, he wants to relocate the production of imported goods from foreign factories to domestic factories. The purpose is to revitalize American manufacturing and create new blue-collar jobs. Continue reading

Posted in MN Gordon, Politics | Tagged , , , , | 7 Comments

Truth Shall Prevail

Economic Prism Articles | Insights on Gold, Stocks, Inflation & FOMCYear-to-date the S&P 500 is down 5.9 percent. Over this same time, the NASDAQ is down over 10 percent.

Should you buy the dip? Should you sell the bounce?

The answers to these questions are dependent on whether you trust the stock market’s technical indicators or its fundamentals. Regardless, panic and uncertainty are spreading across America.

There’s the recognition that economic growth is retreating, consumer prices are rising, and jobs are disappearing. There’s also the observation that President Trump’s policies are making things worse.

Most people agree that the federal government is too big and too controlling. They are well aware that there’s rampant fraud and waste. They understand that $2 trillion annual deficits are not sustainable. And that the runaway growth of government debt is a complete disaster.

They also want these failings corrected without any trouble. On the day Trump took office, there was an unwarranted belief that he could magically clean up all the waste, reduce the size of government, and balance the budget without painful consequences. That perception is being shattered. Continue reading

Posted in Economy, MN Gordon | Tagged , , , , | 2 Comments

Social Insecurity and the Fate of All Ponzi Schemes

Elon Musk – the richest man in the world – is doing a fine job shaking up Washington’s political establishment. He recently took to the Joe Rogan podcast where he said, “Social Security is the biggest Ponzi scheme of all time.”

This small dose of reality was enough to elicit excitement from big government statists. Rex Huppke, in an opinion piece in USA Today, provided the following counterpoint:

“Social Security is one of the country’s most popular and successful federal programs, and its pay-as-you-go arrangement is not a deceptive scam – it’s how the system was built to work.”

Without question Social Security is a popular program. Who doesn’t relish the prospect of getting something for nothing? But that doesn’t mean it isn’t a Ponzi scheme.

Charles Ponzi, if you didn’t know, gained notoriety in 1920 offering a tempting investment ploy. He promised a 50 percent return on investment in 45 days and a 100 percent return in 90 days. Trusting investors, dizzy with visions of easy riches, painfully discovered the returns were paid by the money of subsequent investors. Continue reading

Posted in Economy, MN Gordon | Tagged , , , , | 6 Comments

Federal Workers Sing the Blues

No little boy or girl says they want to be a stiff at a government agency when they grow up.

Suppose you were an average student in high school without any real academic focus. Your guidance counselor told you that college graduates earn more over their working lives than their peers who only graduated high school.

So, you took the logical step and enrolled at your local state university. There you majored in history, or sociology, or psychology and social behavior.

You didn’t really know what you wanted to do with your life. But your uncle told you that government jobs are more stable than the private sector, and that they have better benefits and guaranteed retirement plans.

Upon graduation you went to work for the Bureau of Land Management, the Department of Education, the Internal Revenue Service, the Environmental Protection Agency, or some other federal agency that administers some obscure law that was passed over 60 years ago. You learned the ropes and it felt good to have a purpose and to be part of something bigger than yourself. Continue reading

Posted in Business, MN Gordon | Tagged , , , , | 2 Comments