Reading Trump
Thanks to Trump, the world is now an interesting place, no matter which
side you take.
Politicians, economists, activists, corporate institutions, US citizens and
to a varying extent citizens of the world have a new animal to deal with at a
time when there was no shortage of disruptive activity across the globe.
One thing that does stand out is the speed of his action both with his
twitter handle and executive orders to fulfil the promises he made to his core
constituencies, a benchmark that many politicians may cringe when going back to
their voters.
The lead time to action a promise has just been crashed, thanks to a man
who made millions itching to say “You are fired” to hapless apprentices; Sally
Yates acting AG became the first victim in his new role as US President.
American President for American People
Fundamentally, this narrow definition works at a time when US foreign
affairs position be it in Middle East, Russia, China, Asia, UK and the Europe
is multi-lateral and less polarized. China may throw its weight around South China
Sea and some skirmishes are expected, but China has enough domestic and
economic issues to grapple with, as its economy stabilises or evolves. Alleged Russian
hand in US elections results that favoured Trump is unlikely to evaporate the
bonhomie, from the lows of Obama-Putin standoff on Syria.
That interpretation leaves counter terrorism action, intelligence and
protection of offshore US assets as the greatest international stake.
Hence, it makes sense to be a more visible and active President for US
interests like more jobs, lower taxes, infrastructure spends and greater
safety.
Anti-establishment
The campaign to executive orders successfully harness the
sense of distrust among middle class white American workers about a failed
political establishment that doesn’t serve their interests, about a biased
media and inconsequential economic policies, through some “un-establishment action”. The political gridlock in Obama’s last
few years also created a perception of inaction and opaqueness.
The attack on media in the first weekend after
assuming office is another extrapolation of his vitriolic campaign, with
astuteness.
Clearly, policies that have “inclusive” characteristic
or, Obama-like mass appeal are being shunted in favour of more radical definitive
action, with a wedge visible to yes – his constituency.
And the beginning
of counter-intuitive measures
US Department of Labor published Dec’16 unemployment
rate stood at 4.7%; as per US Federal Reserve, the long-run normal level of unemployment
is in a 4.5-6%.
US economy operated within this range for last 2
years.
Creating more jobs is and should be an integral
objective of every Government in the world, however at a time when the economy
is operating at long-run normal levels additional creation not only has
inflationary implications, but also requires investment in skilling the new
workforce entering the job market for productive return on investment.
The targeted immigration ban, Mexico wall, and H1-B
visa new regulations put further curbs on the mobility of skilled and low cost
workforce, and have xenophobic overtones that runs counter to American and more
centrally Republican values.
It is also vital to note that America has not only
been very supportive large economy on workforce mobility, but prides in it when
compared to restrictions that one finds in UK or Europe.
While Trump has secured American jobs for American
people, the wage and skill mismatch is a reality up ahead.
I am also inclined to believe that American
corporations including those who were forced to make their investments in US
than in Mexico or, elsewhere will look at multiple options to counter the
higher wage costs from greater US employment through automation or,
outsourcing. The objective of organizations is profit, and it is a reward for
enterprise, capital, human labor and most critically to serve its customers
sustainably. If bad politics triggers an increase in input cost, then an
offsetting action will be triggered.
Automation technology that is on the rise, may just
get another round of fillip in usage and innovation; again interesting to
observe how this near term focus on jobs, performs on the long run.
Actual employment may not be in line with the action
being taken.
Summing up
The basic idea of Trump politics is based on narrow
and decisive definitions of politics, economics, media’s role and role of
President. The shock-and-awe or, the resistance since his electoral victory are
the emotions that he has successfully triumphed right through his corporate
life. He knows his base of followers, and the anti-establishment theme that
will allow him time with cynics who want this experiment to run its course.
For the rest of the world, time to be smarter than Trump.
Very well written. The jury is still out on the outcome of his actions. Corporations will find new business models. However, some core American values are being tampered with. The very things that made America great seem to be getting a big blow.
ReplyDeleteMay fredom of thoughts & speech, equality prevail over the madness we see out there. The world needs an America that takes pride in equality, dignity and espouses xenophilia, the very values that made America stand out. President Obama was a great example of the kind of leaders the world needs. I hope Trump corrects his ways....
Good analysis on Trump
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