Feeds:
Posts
Comments

For succinct commentary and predictions on key developments in the US and global economy during the recent months of April-May, check out my following tweets. (Join me at @drjackrasmus to receive my future tweets as posted)

May 29
#yieldcurve The 10 mo. Treasury bond is now priced below that of the 3 mo. Treasury bill, a degree of inversion not seen since 2007; and an inversion that has predicted every recession since 1955. My prediction of US recession by late 2019 comes closer.

May 28
#Japan While Europe’s economy is now slowing rapidly approaching stagnation, and US weakening noticeably, don’t forget 3rd largest economy, Japan, where both consumer spending & Bus. investment contracted 1Q19. As $US declines, Yen will rise, deepening Japan recession’s recession

May 25
#USWages Mckinsey Consultants report on the decline of US Labor’s share of income (e.g. income inequality) shows in 2000 Labor’s share national income=63.3%. In 2016=56.7%. That’s -6.6% and $1.3 trillion/yr. less every year (2017 national income=$19.9T). Capital incomes up $1.3T)

May 25
#Trumptaxcuts Institute on Taxation & Economic Policy’s just issued report shows following companies not only paid NO TAXES last year but got refund checks from the IRS: Amazon, Delta, Chevron, GM, Duke, IBM, Prudential, Jetblue, Gannett, & others. Rebate total $79 billion

May 24
#Fed Fed’s annual household financial survey yesterday showed 40% (130m + households) don’t have $400 for emergencies (i.e neither cash, savings or credit cards). That’s >50 million. (27% have to borrow from friends or sell personal assets; 13% can’t even do that).

May 23
#TaxReform New report released by Bloomberg Business Week (latest issue) shows the richest 0.1% have stuffed $7.6 trillion offshore to avoid taxes. Meanwhile, F500 corps gave US shareholders in 2018 another $1.4 trillion in buybacks & dividends. 2019 running at $1.5T.

May 21
#USeconomy My prior posts showed US GDP basics very weak in 1Q: consumer spending up only 1.2%. Then April ’19 retail sales -0.5%. Now 1Q capital spending data in: only up 3% (vs. 20% year ago). Fixed investment only 2.7% vs. 4Q18 5.4%. All this before China trade breakdown.

May 21
#Fed Chicago Fed index of national econ April activity turns negative more than analysts’ worst forecast. Prior months also revised down & neg. 3 mo. ave. Feb-March also neg. All this before Trump trade war escalation. My forecast: no China trade deal at June G20 mtg either.

May 5
#Chinatrade China-US trade ‘make or break’ this week. Trump follows hardline anti-China advisers & threatens higher tariffs before final mtg this week. Hardliners raise impossible demand China share tech with US to scuttle deal. US Neocons now running US trade & foreign policy

May 4
#USjobsReport For my deeper analysis of the april 2019 just released US jobs report, and why the labor market is much weaker than the unemployment and jobs creation numbers suggest, go to my blog at (link: http://jackrasmus.com) jackrasmus.com and to my April 3 radio show link at the end of the blog

May 1
#Negativerates ECB neg. rate now -0.4%; ECB to lower further to follow Fed. Total Neg. EU debt rose from$6.2 trillion to$10.1 in just last 12 months. ECB neg. rates supposed to = more bank lending; Instead, lending falling & money flowing to US. EU banks are locus of next crisis?

May 1
#Fed meets today. Trump & Kudlow call for 1% point rate cut in Fed funds rate, as global economy slows driving capital flows from EU, EMEs, JP to US & driving up US$. Argentine Peso, Turkey Lira & Euro down 10%-20% so far 2019. US MNCs offshore profits (GM,GE,etc) taking big hits

Apr 26
#GDP 1st Qtr US GDP driven by temporary excess inventories & import effects. 80% of economy–bus. investment + consumption–grow only at 2.7% (structures & equipment flat) and 1.2%. With Trump tax cut effects now over, Trump to bet on China trade deal & Fed rate cuts for 2019-20

Apr 20
#Fed As a sign of more Fed capitulation to political pressure by Trump & investors, Fed district presidents & vice-chair (Evans, Kaplan, Clarida) now preparing markets for rate cuts later this year. All now say inflation rate of 1.5% justify cuts even if US economy keeps growing

Apr 14
#TaxDay Tomorrow is ‘taxday’. For an analysis of how much businesses, corporations, investors and the 1% are getting from the Trump 2018 tax cuts–and how the middle class is paying for it all–read my latest blog piece ‘Trump Whacks the Middle Class’

Apr 12
#USdeficit Latest govt data show US budget deficit widening in first half (Oct-Mar) of current fiscal year: $691 billion. Annual run rate projects deficit of more than $1.3 trillion for current 2018-19 year; watch for even more in next 2019-20 budget when recession hits late 2019

Apr 9
#Democracy means the people are sovereign & may delegate that to elected representatives. But Trump’s attorney general, Barr, says no. Congress won’t get to see actual Mueller rept. Where does the US Constitution say anything about grand juries, or Congress has no right to know?

Apr 8
#Fed Trump nominates 2 political sycophants to Fed board. For why the Fed is NOT independent, read my 2 latest articles (“Trump v. Powell” & “The Capitulation of Powell & the Fed”) at (link: http://jackrasmus.com) jackrasmus.com (also Counterpunch blog & European Financial Review magazine, Feb. 19)

Apr 3
#globaltrade Data for slowing global trade show possible accelerating downtrend. After 4.6% growth in 2017, down to 3% in 2018. Most ominous, fourth quarter 2018 actually declined by -0.3%

The following is my commentary on special counsel, Mueller’s, public nine minute statement before the cameras today on the Trump investigation. Why no indictment. Why no impeachment yet. Despite massive evidence of obstruction of justice and the investigation, which continues still almost daily.

“Today special counsel Mueller went before the cameras and in nine minutes essentially said his report was all he had to say and he wouldn’t go before Congress, even if subpoenaed, to say anything else.

Mueller summarized his recent report in the nine minutes. Here’s what he concluded were its main points:

First, there was insufficient evidence to conclude Trump colluded to a criminal extent. Insufficient evidence. Not no evidence. Insufficient. And much of that was destroyed by Trump (erased emails). Or Mueller couldn’t get it because the Trump administration wouldn’t release it. Or key witnesses refused to testify to the Muller commission, including Donald Trump Jr. who had direct conversations with the Russians but was prevented talking to Mueller by Trump from speaking. Which raises the question: why didn’t Mueller subpoena Trump Jr.? Or even Trump himself? After all, special prosecutor Starr subpoenaed and questioned Bill Clinton in his impeachment. Why were the Trumps let off the hook by Mueller?

In short, the first conclusion was that some kind of collusion between Trump and the Russians was likely, according to the Mueller Report, but not enough evidence was provided to prove the more demanding charge of criminal intent.

Second, in contrast, the Report concluded there was an abundance of evidence that Trump obstructed the investigation. In fact, multiple times and in various ways. Take a look at the summary of evidence on Trump’s obstruction of justice in vol. 2 of the Mueller Report. It’s overwhelming.

Nixon was impeached in 1974 in large part based on his obstruction of the Watergate investigation. And if obstruction is a criminal act, why then did Mueller not also indict Trump on that evidence, as Nixon had been?

In the Nixon case, impeachment was actually based on three findings: Nixon was found to have engaged in obstruction of the investigation of the “Watergate” burglary inquiry, of misuse of law enforcement and intelligence agencies for political purposes, and of refusal to comply with the House Judiciary Committee’s subpoenas.

The Mueller report substantiates without a doubt that Trump obstructed the investigation many times and in many ways. But History here is repeating itself, as they say. Trump’s recent order to have his Justice Dept. start investigating the origins of the Mueller investigation, using law enforcement and intelligence agencies, is an act for which Nixon was also impeached. It’s using government agencies to go after political adversaries. And then there’s Trump’s recent additional order in recent weeks, that no one in his executive branch should respond to Congressional subpoenas if called on to testify before the House (which includes Mueller, by the way, who technically works for Trump as a member of the Justice Dept. Maybe that’s why Mueller stood before the cameras and won’t stand before Congress). As in the case of Nixon, refusing to cooperate with Congress in an investigation is also an impeachable act.

So Trump is not only impeachable based on his actions and events that preceded the Mueller Report release. He’s impeachable based on his repeated follow up acts since the Report. In other words, the obstruction continues.

So why is Trump not being impeached? Do you hear that Nancy Pelosi? (Not that Nancy doesn’t already know, of course). Pelosi’s excuse is that impeachment might cause the Democrats to lose the House in 2020 and the presidency. She should tell that to the Republicans who, after their failed impeachment of Bill Clinton, actuallyl gained House seats in 2000 and won the election that year as well! So much for false historical analogies.

This leads to the third essential, and most important, point made by Mueller today in his brief appearance before the cameras: Mueller said he couldn’t indict Trump, based on the rules of the Justice Department no matter what were Trump’s criminal acts. What? Trump engages in criminal acts but is above the law simply based on a rule his own Justice Dept. created to protect presidents while in office?

Mueller apparently places his obligation to abide by a rule created by the bureaucracy above his obligation to recommend action due to obvious criminal activity! Maybe that’s the new modus operandi of the FBI, of which he is a former director.

Mueller was supposed to be the paragon of right and justice, according to the eastern elite establishment media that elevated him to a rank just short of secular saint during his investigation. He was the incorruptible, a straight shooter. So how does one explain Mueller’s decision to place bureaucratic rules above the prosecution of criminals then?

Is it because he’s always been a Republican and Republican pols always cover each other’s ass? Or maybe he just preferred to toss the hornet’s nest into the lap of Congress and retreat to the sidelines to personally avoid being engulfed by the firestorm that might result if he indicted Trump. Or maybe he just didn’t want to go ‘head to head’ with Justice Secretary, Barr, who happens to be an old buddy of Mueller. Their families have reportedly socialized together for years. Of course, I would not think of suggesting that had any effect on Mueller’s decisions in his report.

Regardless the his motive, before the cameras today Mueller made it clear he agrees with the Executive-Justice Dept. rule preventing him from indicting Trump for criminal obstruction of justice—examples of which abound in the report. That’s the real take-away from Mueller’s Report and his 9 minute historical contribution to the further demise of Democracy in America.

Just consider that carefully folks. It’s worth repeating. That interpretation, that rule, means a president can engage in any kind of criminal act. He could launch world war III on a whim. He could order the incarceration of protestors en masse. He could strangle his grandmother on the white house lawn, but nevertheless he can’t be indicted because it, the Justice Dept., issued a rule that said he can’t while in office!

You know what that is? That’s Tyranny. Which is the definition of someone in power who is ‘above the law’.

We now have a tyrant in the oval office and the Justice Dept., the highest government office responsible for upholding law and prosecuting criminals, simply says it’s not allowed. What bureaucrat assumed the authority to make that rule?

Barr and Mueller agree that the Justice Dept. rules preventing indictment of a sitting president for criminal activity is based on the US Constitution. Oh Yeah. So where does the Constitution say that? I couldn’t find it anywhere in Article II of the US Constitution on the Presidency. Nor in Article I on the legislative powers of Congress. Nowhere does it say a rule created by a department of the executive branch of government negates criminal law. Or can stop an investigation of the president relevant to impeachment proceedings.

What I did find is that the Constitution doesn’t even require a criminal act to justify impeachment. (Hear that Nancy?). Criminality certainly strengthens the case for impeachment. And we have now three clear cases of criminal activity by Trump that a former crook, Richard Nixon, was impeached on: obstruction of justice, using law enforcement and intelligence agencies to investigate his political opponents, and refusing to respond to Congressional subpoenas.

So here we are in 2019. A President is above the law. Bureaucratic rules absolve criminal activity. The president continues to move toward unilateral governing by the executive branch, thumbing his nose at the legislative. Trump repeatedly violates the US Constitution by arbitrarily diverting money appropriated by Congress for specific legislation to whatever he wants. He orders investigations of his opponents—i.e. McCarthyism write large. He orders employees of the Executive branch to refuse to cooperate with Congress, including subpoenas, ignoring Congress’s Constitutional right to investigate. He repeatedly invokes phony ‘national emergency’ declarations to take unilateral action, bypassing Congress. He has publicly declared he will pardon himself if convicted. And so it goes, as the US drifts into a bona fide Constitutional Crisis not seen since the 1850s.

What’s next? Could Trump refuse to leave the White House if defeated in 2020? Don’t think that’s outrageous. It’s more than just possible.

And what would the leaders of the Democratic party do in that case, when they can’t even show enough backbone to take up their Constitutional duty to confront a criminal in the White House, who almost daily abridges their Constitutional rights and marginalizes them as a governing body.”

Jack Rasmus
May 29, 2019
Dr. Jack Rasmus is author of the forthcoming book, ‘The Scourge of Neoliberalism: US Policy From Reagan to Trump’, Clarity Press, September 2019, and the recently published ‘Alexander Hamilton and the Origin of the Fed’, Lexington books, March 2019, and ‘Central Bankers at the End of Their Rope’, Clarity Press, August 2017. He blogs at jackrasmus.com, tweets at @drjackrasmus, and hosts the Alternative Visions show on the Progressive Radio Network (http:..alternativevisions.podbean.com).

Listen to my May24 Alternative Visions radio show for my initial analysis how the US-China trade war is showing signs of transforming into a general US-China economic war involving dimensions beyond just trade and goods tariffs. How US neocons prefer this development of a broader economic war with China, and how Trump may use it to mobilize his political base and resurrect his ‘economic nationalism’ theme for the 2020 elections.

    TO LISTEN GO TO:

http://alternativevisions.podbean.com

    SHOW ANNOUNCEMENT:

Dr. Rasmus reviews events of the past week by Trump and China that show increasing evidence the ‘trade war’ is now morphing into a more general ‘economic war’ after the breakdown of negotiations earlier this month. The measures beyond tariff actions taken up by the US are reviewed, including choking off money capital flows, sanctions on both US and China corporations, direct attacks on China companies expanding, US pressure on allies, going after academics participating in research with Chinese. Rasmus predicts Trump will eventually push for delisting of China corps from stock exchanges, force divestiture of US joint production with China, increase pressure on Australia, Brazil, other commodity producing countries to restrict sales to China, and even interdict shipments of Iranian and Venezuelan oil to China if need be. China’s counters to the US beyond just tariffs include slowing buying of US Treasuries now occurring, allowing its currency, Yuan, to devalue beyond 7 to the $1, mobilizing China consumers to stop buying US products, restrict export of ‘rare earth’ minerals to US producers, impose non-tariff barriers on US companies, stop buying US farm goods again, increase subsidies to China companies, step up buying of Iranian oil, exempt US companies from its 51% foreign ownership rule, etc. Trump and Neocons clearly plan to US China trade war as excuse to ramp up ‘economic nationalism’ theme in 2020 elections and blame China US slowing economy. The show concludes with commentary on 5 reports issued this past week: the Fed’s Household Survey showing 40% can’t afford $400 for emergencies; the Institute of Taxation report showing large profitable companies (Amazon, IBM, Chevron, Prudential, etc.) were written $80 billion in rebates in 2018; Mckinsey report showing Labor’s share of national income has now fallen to 56.7% from 65.4% (more than $1.3 trillion a year); and the Wall St. Journal reporting US capital spending rose only 3% in 1Q19 compared to 20% a year earlier, 1Q18, despite Trump’s multi-trillion dollar tax cuts given them.

For my analysis of the meaning of China President, Xi, declaration to China populace to prepare for a ‘Long March’ struggle with the US over trade and technology, listen to my 20 minute interview with ‘Critical Hour’ radio.

GO TO:

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1VmfkBrzLtOCxeSIXNuZq3Di7CDfcwobI/view

Listen to my 30 minute, Part I, interview with ‘Radio For All’ on the role of financial asset markets (i.e. stocks, bonds, currencies, derivatives, property values, etc.) as causes of growing income inequality in the US.

How the US central bank (Federal Reserve), private banks, and shadow banks in the 21st century have become the main drivers of accelerating US income inequality.

In the interview Dr. Rasmus summarizes the major themes of his recently published books: ‘Alexander Hamilton and the Origins of the Fed’ (March 2019) and ‘Central Bankers at the End of Their Ropes: Monetary Policy and the Coming Depression’ (August 2017), explaining how the Federal Reserve originated out of the private banking system and how capitalist banking in the US has evolved since 1781.

How income concentration among the wealthy has been bloating financial markets and creating financial driven income inequality, and why the Fed now performs a primary function of subsidization of incomes for investors, corporations, general business, and the wealthy 1%.

Rasmus explains how the prime objective of US monetary policy today is stabilizing financial asset markets and subsidizing capital incomes–not ensuring 2% inflation or any other announced ‘target’. Why the stock market fell 30% last November-December 2018 and why it recovered after the Fed stopped raising interest rates. Trump vs. the Fed and the capitalist myth of central bank independence.

    TO LISTEN TO PART I GO TO:

http://www.radio4all.net/files/cheryl@ct911truth.org/4212-1-JACK_RASMUS_PART_1.mp3

TO listen to Dr. Jack Rasmus and other panelists discuss and debate the escalating trade war between US and China (first half hour)–and the developments behind the US preparation for war with Iran (2nd half hour)–go to the following hour- long radio show of May 17, 2019.

Go To:

https://sputniknews.com/radio_the_critical_hour/201905181075106481-All-You-Need-To-Know-About-Why-the-US-and-China-Trade-Talks-Failed/

For my Alternative Visions radio show of May 17, 2019, listen to my Comparing of Watergate & Nixon Impeachment with Trump/Russiagate today; Why Mueller refused to indict Trump; and why Dem party leaders are continually out-maneuvered by Trump? In the first half of the hour long show, listen to the fallout and latest events this past week of the collapse of US-China trade talks & what may lie ahead as the US shows growing signs of US economy weakening.

To Listen GO TO:

http://prn.fm/alternative-visions-russiagate-watergate-compared-trade-war-fallout/

Or Go To:

http://alternativevisions.podbean.com

SHOW ANNOUNCEMENT:

Rasmus discusses events since the collapse of US-China trade deal a week ago. Who reneged on the deal? China or US? China & Trump responses of past week. (read jackrasmus.com blog piece: ‘US-China Trade War: Hiatus or Busted Deal?’)Review of Trump’s latest ‘job killer’ immigration proposals and US economy continuing softening per latest data on retail sales-industrial production collapse in April. Second half of today’s show addresses the Mueller Report and growing signs of Constitutional Crisis in the US. What the ‘Frontline’ TV show last week revealed re. ‘collusion’. Reading the Mueller Report re. ‘obstruction’. (p. 277- of Washington Post publication of Report). Rasmus compares the Nixon impeachment with the current foot-dragging and refusal by Pelosi-Shumer to impeach Trump. What’s different today from 1970s re. impeachment?: divided country, radical right media power, stacked Supreme Court now in favor of Trump, Trump’s personality vs. Nixon’s, the decay of both political parties, and repeated strategic and tactic errors by Dem party leadership. Why Mueller failed to indict Trump on collusion while showing overwhelming evidence of same. How Trump is outmaneuvering Dem leadership again.

My comment on declining quality & pay of US jobs, expansion of underemployed and precariate work, and even worse impact of AI and new tech on jobs 2020-2030. Why neither markets nor guaranteed income will reverse the worsening job and pay crisis. Watch the Youtube interview:

By Jack Rasmus
Copyright 2019

This past week the US and China failed to reach agreement on a new trade deal, despite high level China representative Lie He meeting in Washington on Thursday-Friday, May 9-10.

In the wake of the meeting, Trump and his administration mouthpieces attempt to put a positive spin on the collapsed talks, while placing blame on China for the break up. The ‘spin’ at first was that China had reneged on a prior agreement and changed its terms when they arrived in Washington. China had caused the breakdown, not the US. The stock markets swooned. Trump quickly jumped in and said he got a nice letter from China president, Xi, and that it wasn’t all that bad.

But make no mistake, a trade negotiations ‘rubicon’ has been reached. The real trade war may be starting. Or, it may all be theater to make it look like both sides are acting tough and that an agreement will be reached this summer. But that scenario may now be fading. Trade wars—like hot wars—have their own dynamic. Once launched, they drive their adversaries in directions they may not have initially sought.

So who’s actually responsible for last week’s trade breakdown?
To listen to Trump and his neocons running the US foreign (and trade) policy show now, it was the Chinese. They changed the agreement at the last minute. But who really did the changes? Who set off the process? And how?
If the Chinese backtracked on some terms of the deal, it was clearly in response to the Trump-Neocon trade team initiating the backtracking. Here’s what the Trump team did:

• The US publicly declared the week before that the US would keep tariffs on even after an agreement. This violated the understanding that both sides would remove the new tariffs once an agreement was reached ($100 billion China on US; $250 billion US on China)
• Trump threatened tariffs on the remaining $300 billion of China imports
• The US signaled that China would have to not only stop technology transfer from US corporations doing business in China, but that China would have to share its tech development with the US if it wanted an agreement. That included the military-sensitive nextgen technologies like 5G, AI, and cybersecurity.
• The US demanded that China stop subsidizing its state owned enterprises (SOEs) with low interest rate loans that put US multinational corporations in an uncompetitive position in China (even as the US continued to subsidize via tax cuts, trade credits, etc.)
• The US indicated it would continue its global efforts to prevent US allies from doing business with China tech companies like Huawai, ZTE, China Mobile, etc. regardless if an agreement was reached.

If one wanted to scuttle negotiations at the last minute, this was certainly a way to do it. And as this writer has been saying for the past year, scuttling is just what the neocon China hard-liners driving the US negotiations have wanted all along. They don’t want a deal to reduce the US goods trade deficit with China, and they are willing to forego China’s significant concessions already made to the US in negotiations on US company access to China markets, if they can’t also stop China’s technology development—especially in the key nextgen technologies of AI, cybersecurity and 5G.

These are not only the new industries of the next decade, they are also the new technologies with major military implications. Should China reach parity or leapfrog the US in these areas, it could upset the US empire’s military dominance.

From the very beginning of negotiations with China, back in March 2018, the tech issue was central. Neocon, China hard-liner and head of the US negotiation team, Robert Lighthizer, issued way back in August 2017 a warning report that China’s 2025 plan aimed at surpassing the US in these three tech areas. That report promised to show that China was in fact stealing US technology from US companies in those areas. Lighthizer’s March 2018 subsequent report than allegedly proved it. The US-China trade war was then launched that month.

At first it was led by Treasury Secretary, Steve Mnuchin. He led a team to Beijing and came back indicating a deal was reached with China. As part of the deal, it was later revealed publicly, China had agreed to allow US banks and businesses a 51% or more ownership of joint venture companies in China. This was the US bankers’ main demand. China also indicated, revealed later, that it would purchase $1 trillion more of new farm, natural gas, and manufacturing goods from the US over the next five years. So much for the goods trade deficit imbalance and issue. Both concessions were major wins for Mnuchin and the US. But China refused apparently to budge on the major issue of nextgen tech. It suggested concessions, but, failing a final agreement, would not agree to US demands before hand or up front.

Over the summer in 2018 the neocon faction reasserted control over the US trade negotiating team. Mnuchin’s firing of anti-China neocon, Peter Navarro, was reversed and Lighthizer put him back on the team. Over the summer Neocons deepened their influence and control of the Trump foreign policy, as Pompeo policy took charge at the State Dept., and as notorious neocon, John Bolton, took over as main Trump foreign policy adviser. His buddies (Abrams, Miller, etc.) were given enhanced roles in the administration as well. These were the guys that gave us Iraq war in 2003 and after. And they’re on the same path again.

In the area of trade they have clearly convinced Trump that a more aggressive stance on trade negotiations will eventually produce a bigger ‘win’ for the US. They are the originators of the ‘use national security’ as an excuse to impose sanctions and use tariffs and sanctions to intimidate and force opponents (including allies) into major concessions.

We see this aggressive, high risk brinkmanship not only in trade negotiations with China. It’s behind the collapse of negotiations with North Korea on missiles and nukes. (The North Koreans offered to dismantle a number of sites if the US removed an equal number of sanctions. But the neocons refused, saying all the sites must be dismantled before the US would even consider lifting any sanctions at all. That’s a non-starter in negotiations with anyone. If effect, it says: capitulate and then we’ll think about lifting sanctions). It’s there in the imminent attack and invasion of Venezuela. The recent US failed coup there is only the beginning. It’s there in the refusal to stop supporting Saudi Arabia in Yemen. It’s there in the escalation of military threats toward Iran. It’s even there in the current threat of sanctions on Germany if it doesn’t stop buying Russian gas and buy US gas instead. It’s everywhere in US foreign policy. And it’s there in the recent blowup of negotiations on trade with China.

The neocon, anti-China hardliners—Lighthizer, Navarro, and Bolton—don’t want an agreement with China. They want a capitulation on the tech issue. They are aligned with the US Pentagon, Military Industrial Complex, Congress right wing—faction on the US trade team.

There has been in fighting on the trade team from the beginning. The neocon faction has been contending with the US bankers-big business faction that want the 51% and the deeper control in China. China has already conceded that and in fact has begun implementing it. The farm-manufacturing-natural gas faction wants more purchases of their products. China has already agreed on that as well. But since last mid-2018 the neocon faction has Trump’s ear and they are driving the policy.

That’s why the US ‘moved the goalposts’ the week before the China delegation was to come to Washington last week to finalize a deal. They announced or leaked all the backtracking US terms well before the China team was to come: the retaining of US tariffs despite an agreement, the required sharing of tech regardless of limits on tech transfer in China, the demands that China stop subsidizing its SOEs (even as the US would continue subsidizing US corporations via massive tax cuts, export-import bank, and direct payments from the US government), and so on.

China’s reply was to send its vice-chairman and head of its negotiating team, Liu He, to Washington last week nevertheless. Their reply was they would respond in kind to US tariffs with more tariffs of their own and that China would not capitulate on matters of ‘principle’ (read technology development and its 2025 plan).

So where does it go from here? Is this a bona fide breakdown or just a hiatus, with both sides posturing to look tough?

Trump advisor, Larry Kudlow, trotted out on national syndicated talk shows on Sunday, May 12, and admitted that Trump and China president Xi would not meet until June at the next G20 meeting—maybe. No doubt some discussions will continue next in Beijing in the interim. But it is now far less likely a deal will be made this year. But that’s what the US necons prefer, short of China capitulation.

The neocons have apparently convinced Trump a deeper trade war with China would be good politics domestically. The US economy is showing signs of slowing in key areas of business investment and household consumption. The trade war with China has produced a sharp decline of imports from China. Lower imports translates into higher ‘net exports’, a category in US GDP calculations that raises GDP. So less imports from tariffs means higher GDP. That could offset some of the slowing US economy in 2019-20.

The neocons believe China’s economy is also slowing and that its stock market is fragile. China cannot conduct a deeper trade war over tariffs with the US. It will eventually capitulate and agree to US demands, including tech, they no doubt argue. And Trump buys it.

But there are potential economic consequences to wars, including trade wars, that the neocons and their obsession with US imperial power do not understand or else do not want to acknowledge. Maybe they think they’ll prevail before the economic negatives occur. The negatives mean a corresponding severe contraction of US stock values as well. This now appears emerging. The negatives include a sharp rise in US consumer inflation, as the higher tariffs on China imports get passed on in the US economy. That will reduce an already fragile US consumer spending and US business investing, as costs rise for both. Both business and consumer confidence are poised for a major contraction, and the trade war may just be enough to tip the balance. And rising inflation may force a new conflict with the central bank, the Fed, as it raises interest rates again to fund an even larger US budget deficit and debt caused by the economic slowdown.

But if the worse economically happens, the neocons no doubt are whispering in Trump’s ear that he can then blame the US stock market collapse and economic recession coming on the Chinese—as well as on the Democrats. He can resurrect his extreme ‘economic nationalism’ appeals of 2016 to his base, once again claiming it’s the ‘foreigners’ and the ‘socialists’ (e.g. everyone proposing a reversal of his war spending, tax cuts for the rich, cuts to education and social programs, etc.).

These are indeed dangerous times for the US, economically and politically. As even Democrat Party leaders are now saying, a bona fide Constitutional Crisis is brewing in the US as Trump insists on governing for his 35% supporters and to hell with the rest of the country, and as he governs increasingly at the expense of Congress’ s constitutional rights.

It is also a dangerous time for the US economy, and the global economy as well. We can thank the growing influence, and disastrous policies, of the neocons who are now again firmly in control of US policy as Trump is now aligned with them on almost every policy front.

Jack Rasmus
May 13, 2019
Dr. Rasmus is author of the forthcoming ‘The Scourge of Neoliberalism: US Policy from Reagan to Trump’, Clarity Press, September 2019; and the just published ‘Alexander Hamilton and the Origins of the Fed’, Lexington Books, March 2019. He blogs at jackrasmus.com and hosts the radio show, ‘Alternative Visions’. His twitter handle is @drjackrasmus.

A recent reader of this blog, and my debate with Doug Henwood over whether the official April Jobs number of 263,000 jobs created should be accepted as totally accurate or whether other stats show that number may not be so accurate, raised some important questions that are perhaps at the heart of the matter.

I’m reproducing his comment verbatim in what follows in this addendum, since it succinctly summarizes one of the key issues.

My reply to his point follows in turn, summarizing why I think we should not necessarily accept the 263,000 as the key indicator of the US labor market:

Commentator:

“Hi Jack, I found your article in counterpunch very interesting. just one question on the numbers: Are you saying that 263,000 jobs were created by large businesses and then a certain number were created by small businesses, 155,000 of which were part time? or are you saying that 263,000 jobs were created in total but 155,000 of these 263,000 were part-time jobs? But if one of these studies surveys only large businesses and the other surveys only small businesses, aren’t you dealing with apples and oranges and that we really don’t know how many of these 263,000 new jobs created by large businesses were full time and how many were part time? my guess is that jobs created by large businesses would more likely be full time, whereas those created by smaller businesses would more likely be part-time. Obviously I’m having a hard time putting in writing exactly what I’m getting at, but perhaps you can pick it up.”

My Reply:

Your final sentence is the most likely scenario: most of the full time were created by large businesses. But we really don’t know for certain. We do know in the CPS survey, made up mostly of smaller businesses, that 155,000 were part time and that 191,000 full time jobs were lost. It suggests that small and medium sized businesses are converting full time to part time. If that is going on in the larger business report as well, it would be interesting. But all we get is a 263,000 number in the CES, without clarification how many are full time and how many part time. This is the problem of having two separate reports—one a survey based on sampling (CPS) and another just a population (CES). But when one, the CES, simply says 263,000 jobs (with no breakdown of part time to full time) and the other, the CPS, indicates 191,000 FT lost and 155,000 part time added, there’s clearly a contradiction here. Is part (less than one tenth of the total) of the business population (CES) of 9 to 10,000,000 growing jobs while a large segment of the rest 9 million (CPS) is reducing full time and replacing them with part time, temp, etc.? We really don’t know. Furthermore, remember we’re talking about ‘jobs’ and not about people getting work in the CES, while in the CPS we’re talking about people (with or without) jobs being interviewed. I would give greater weight to the CPS as an indication of what’s really going on–i.e. with full time jobs being converted to part time and a growing number of 2nd and 3rd jobs being taken by workers already employed. (Whereas Henwood accepts the CES as ‘more important’ than the CPS, as he says, and considers CES and 263,000 as a totally accurate of the state of the labor market).
Jack Rasmus