Trump
Trade Wars Are A Perfect Smokescreen For A Market Crash
7
March, 2018
First,
I would like to say that the
timing of Donald Trump’s announcement on expansive trade tariffs is
unusual if not impeccable.
I
say this only IF Trump’s plan was to benefit establishment
globalists by giving them perfect cover for their continued
demolition of the market bubbles that they have engineered since the
crash of 2008.
f this was not his plan, then I am a bit bewildered by what he hopes to accomplish. It is certainly not the end of trade deficits and the return of American industry. But let’s explore the situation for a moment...
Trump
is in my view a modern day Herbert Hoover. One
of Hoover’s first actions as president in response to fiscal
tensions of 1929 was to support increased tax cuts, primarily for
corporations (this was then followed in 1932 by extensive tax
increases in the midst of the depression, so let’s see what Trump
does in the next couple of years). Then, he instituted tariffs
through the Smoot-Hawley Act. His hyperfocus on massive
infrastructure spending resulted in U.S. debt expansion and did
nothing to dig the U.S. out of its unemployment abyss. In fact,
infrastructure projects like the Hoover
Dam, which were launched in 1931, were not paid off for over 50
years.
Hoover oversaw the beginning of the Great Depression and ended up as
a single-term Republican president who paved the way socially for
Franklin D. Roosevelt, an essential communist and perhaps the worst
president in American history.
This
is not to say Hoover was responsible for the Great Depression. That
distinction goes to the Federal Reserve, which had artificially
lowered interest rates and then suddenly raised them going into the
economic downturn causing an aggressive bubble implosion (just like
the central bank is doing right now). But Hoover did actually
aid the Fed in their undermining of economic stability by pursuing
policies which were poorly timed.
I’m
hitting readers with all of this because I
am growing rather tired of the contingent of Trump apologists in the
liberty movement scrambling to defend every single Trump action no
matter how illogical. These
people should know better. Sorry, but Trump is not "playing
4D chess" against the globalists. His primary initiatives
have only served so far to create a useful distraction away from the
globalists.
The
disturbing key to all of this is the fact that many of Trump’s
policies are things that I and many others have argued for in the
past. The problem is, he is implementing them out of order and with
bad timing, which will only make such policies appear destructive in
the end, rather than constructive.
In
terms of the implementation of tariffs, the people who are defending
this action at this time do not seem to understand the basics of
international trade. Tariffs
can only be enacted from a position of economic strength and resource
development. This strength comes from internal self-sufficiency in
production; meaning, in order for the U.S. to force a trade balance
(which is what tariffs are supposed to do) the U.S. must have a
strong industrial base and MUST be capable of producing most if not
all necessary goods and goods in broad demand.
The
fact is, U.S. manufacturing has been utterly outsourced by the very
corporations Trump just gave a 10% tax cut to, and rebuilding that
industrial base would take decades. Why? Because there are no
incentives for corporations to bring manufacturing back.
As
I already stated, Trump is instituting potentially solid policies but
he is doing so out of order. Tax cuts for corporations should have
been enacted only as an incentive for manufacturing jobs to be
returned to America. Instead, corporations got tax cuts for
absolutely nothing. And will those tax cuts go towards more jobs or
innovation? Nope. They
will be going to pay off unprecedented corporate debts, and stock
buybacks, most of which were accrued through borrowing from the
Federal Reserve.
Will
this stock buyback bonanza even generate new highs in the Dow?
Probably not. But I’ll explain why that is later.
If
Trump had given tax incentives for corporations to bring
manufacturing back into the U.S., and then given those corporations a
few years to make the shift, only then would tariffs have been an
effective action. But as the situation stands now, we have minimal
tangible production in this country, and, historic debts held by the
same overseas competitors that Trump is now seeking to “teach a
lesson.”
Debt
is the next issue which needs to be addressed before tariffs can ever
be implemented in a practical way. In
terms of national debt, rather than setting up a plan to reduce U.S.
debt expenditures, Trump is increasing debt by reducing taxes while
at the same time increasing spending. Trump
did not take a hard stand on the debt ceiling debate as he originally
claimed he would, and so, the debt train continues unabated.
Who
is going to purchase this debt, I wonder? Over
the past several years the largest buyer of U.S. treasury debt was
the Federal Reserve through fiat money creation. Now, the Fed has
tapered quantitative easing and is dumping their balance sheet at a
rate faster than anyone expected. The Fed is pulling the plug on its
artificial support of the economy.
The
next largest buyers are major foreign central banks in countries like
China, Japan and to some extent the supranational EU. If the debt
buyers of last resort are now the very same countries Trump is
seeking to enact tariffs over, how do you think this little theater
will end? Yes, with a dump of U.S. treasury bonds and perhaps the
dollar as world reserve by those nations.
But
what about the U.S. consumer? Isn’t
the consumer market in America so enticing that nations like China
would “never dare” dump U.S. debt or the dollar? No, not
really. If
we are talking about a trade “war,” then a country like China,
which has a vast manufacturing base and which has also been building
up its own domestic consumer market, would be willing to make the
sacrifice. America would be hurt far more by the threat of debt
default and the loss of the dollar’s international buying power
than China ever would be by the loss of American consumers.
With tariffs being implemented, they may lose the American consumer
anyway.
Our
retail market is hardly as appetizing as it was 10 years ago given
the decade of drudgery Americans have endured, with
the largest number ever of working age citizens no longer
participating in the jobs market, as well as real worker wages in
continued decline while the
American consumer is now more indebted than at any other time in
history.
All
of these negative effects are weighing down our economy while the
Federal Reserve is quickly deflating the fraudulent markets that the
establishment used during the Obama administration to argue that
America was “in recovery.” Of
course, alternative economists have known since the beginning that
this was a lie, and that the only thing propping up the economy and
stock markets was central bank manipulation.
The
Fed under Jerome Powell has made it crystal clear that they WILL be
raising interest rates and cutting the Fed balance sheet, perhaps
more than their dot plots had indicated in the past. Without low
rates and a steadily rising balance sheet we have already seen the
results. Stocks in particular have gone crazy compared to the past
few years, dumping nearly 10% one week, spiking about half that the
next week. One thing is certain, the supposedly endless bull market
induced by the Fed years ago is now over. Stocks are in heart attack
mode.
It
is no coincidence that the first two times the Fed reduced its
balance sheet the Dow plunged over 1,000 points. The
latest dump of $23 billion at the end of February resulted in a drop
of around 1,500 points. It is too early in this process to know what
the trend will be, but it seems to me that stocks are being steam
valved down every month. With a marked decline just after a balance
sheet dump, followed by a less impressive dead cat bounce the week
after.
In
the meantime, Trump’s “trade war” is now being blamed in the
mainstream for the decline in stocks that the Fed is actually
responsible for.
As
I have always said, Trump
is the ideal scapegoat for the inevitable economic crisis the central
bankers have staged. Trump's tariffs might exacerbate the
problem, just as Hoover's policies did in the beginning of the Great
Depression, but the blame rests squarely on the Federal Reserve and
central banks around the world.
Will the average person understand this dynamic once the dust settles
on our financial system? Probably not.
So,
to summarize, while Trump has indeed set in motion policies that
conservatives in general tend to approve of, he has done so in an
impractical way that will ultimately be blamed for a market crash the
Fed created. If conservative ideals such as limited government
and sovereign trade protection get the blame for an unprecedented
economic crisis then this could sabotage conservatism for generations
to come. If
elections are still even a factor as this crisis unfolds, the chances
of the public accepting a socialistic nightmare regime after Trump
exits the White House are high. And,
the banking elites that conjured the whole mess will escape once
again without any punishment.
The
question we must ask is this - Is
Trump aware that his policies are creating a perfect distraction for
those same banking elites? I
believe we will know for certain the answer to that before 2018 is
over.
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