dallasiteinsa02 said:
I bleed maroon said:
While the Harris plan components are certainly inflationary, the Trump plans (principally tariffs) are potentially far more likely to lead to high inflation. Neither candidate has any serious concern about reducing our budget deficit, which has already led to an unsustainable cost for debt service. I weep for future generations.
Since Ronald Reagan or Bill Clinton (both pretty good on economic policy) are not taking over any time soon, we as investors probably need to plan for a continual drag on the economy from deficit spending and higher-than-normal inflation. That's not to mention impending implosion of entitlement programs unless changes are made (which both candidates have firmly turned their back on, repeatedly).
Harris's plan would lead to inflation and probably support countries outside of the United States at least for a portion of the costs. Trump's plan would lead to inflation, but at least this inflation comes with revenue and is only on non-US goods. The market could shift over time to address the demand. Not in love with his plan, but I can at least see the initial logic.
I'll use a simple example that I just thought of (correct me if any assumptions are invalid). As far as I know, a great majority of clothes washing machines (and dryers) are produced outside the US. Let's say the average cost to consumers is $1000 today (a little high, perhaps, but let's keep the numbers clean-ish).
Under Harris plan, no direct impact - price to consumers is still $1000.
Under Trump's "tariffs on everything imported" concept/plan: 20% tariff, and cost to consumer is $1200. The $200 tariff is not paid by a Chinese or Korean company, it's paid by the US importer (who is neutral, because they pass the cost on to the consumer). The US government gets the revenue, not Americans or consumers. If it were 100% applied to the national debt, I could warm up to it a bit. BUT, I firmly believe, in this example, that the US companies may not "step up" and produce washing machines until the economics get right for them. That may be $1500 per washer. So, Trump raises the tariff to 50%? The consumer ends up paying for all of this - 50% inflation on washing machines doesn't sound too good to me. A few Americans now have "great new manufacturing jobs", but the vast majority of Americans pay the price. This seems like corporate welfare, instead of letting the market set the price.
Granted, washing machines are not necessarily strategically important, such as semiconductors or airplanes, but pretty much every American "needs" one, and will pay the price.
I prefer not messing with the market for non-essential goods. The Haitians make fine baseballs for Americans - why would we want to onshore that production when it's not in our strategic interest? Making Little Leagues pay 20% more for baseballs is not my way to build an economy, or to halt inflation.