Trump’s Des­per­a­do Mis­sion

Trump’s Desperado Mission

Trump’s Des­per­a­do Mis­sion

Has some­thing gone quite wrong or not?

Eugene_Guillaume_-_the_Gracchi

In the sec­ond cen­tu­ry before Christ, Tiberius Sem­pro­nius Grac­chus, the Roman tri­bune of the plebs, pro­posed a reac­tionary pro­gram of legal and eco­nom­ic reform to address the republic’s press­ing prob­lems, par­tic­u­lar­ly the dis­pos­ses­sion of small landown­ers by the planter class, which had sapped the army of its tra­di­tion­al recruit­ing base and giv­en birth to a large, unsta­ble, prop­erty­less urban under­class. The planter class saw these reforms as an unac­cept­able attack on their own inter­ests and, after an esca­lat­ing series of legal show­downs between Grac­chus and his fel­low aris­to­crats, even­tu­al­ly whipped up a mob and killed him.

When Eli Lake com­pared Don­ald Trump to Grac­chus in 2022, he was address­ing Trump’s vio­la­tion of long­stand­ing norms of behav­ior and the Democ­rats’ self-destruc­tive reac­tion to it. Trump’s sec­ond term invites a new com­par­i­son, this time to the actu­al con­tent of his poli­cies. The mar­kets have decid­ed that these are rad­i­cal and a mat­ter of life-or-death, going into a fren­zy after the announce­ment of Trump’s Lib­er­a­tion Day tar­iffs; the mar­kets’ spokes­men, includ­ing the hyper­ven­ti­lat­ing Bill Ack­man, have made the num­bers’ mes­sage explic­it. The tar­iffs are a frontal assault on the mon­ey power—so frontal that Trump pulled back, lest the entire thing go kaput. Mean­while, the usu­al cho­rus of con­ser­v­a­tive naysay­ers has been wring­ing hands, clutch­ing pearls, etc. about this attack on an eco­nom­ic con­fig­u­ra­tion that has, to hear them say it, been just dandy.

A basic ques­tion of our time is whether the Bush-Clin­ton-Bush-Oba­ma eco­nom­ic order is basi­cal­ly good or has in some deeply fun­da­men­tal way gone wrong. Trump’s bil­lion­aire allies of con­ve­nience, who in large part made their for­tunes under that eco­nom­ic order and have until recent­ly been the hap­py cronies of its authors, are unsur­pris­ing­ly fine with busi­ness as usu­al. A large por­tion of the pub­lic, how­ev­er, dis­agrees. (And if between a third and a half of your vot­ing pop­u­la­tion believes that some­thing is fun­da­men­tal­ly wrong, isn’t that itself a basic prob­lem with the sys­tem?) They see that there are real dis­ad­van­tages to being a mere con­sum­ing super­pow­er; they know that there is a rea­son that Chi­na has con­sis­tent­ly sac­ri­ficed finan­cial and con­sumer inter­ests to main­tain and expand its indus­tri­al base. To quote a sem­i­nal text

The same can be said for Trumpian trade poli­cies and anti-glob­al­iza­tion instincts. Who cares if pro­duc­tiv­i­ty num­bers tick down, or if our already som­nam­bu­lant GDP sinks a bit fur­ther into its pil­low? Near­ly all the gains of the last 20 years have accrued to the jun­ta any­way. It would, at this point, be bet­ter for the nation to divide up more equi­tably a slight­ly small­er pie than to add one extra slice—only to ensure that it and eight of the oth­er nine go first to the gov­ern­ment and its ren­tiers, and the rest to the same four indus­tries and 200 fam­i­lies.

Will this work? Ask a pes­simist, get a pes­simistic answer. So don’t ask. Ask instead: is it worth try­ing? Is it bet­ter than the alter­na­tive? If you can’t say, forth­right­ly, “yes,” you are either part of the jun­ta, a fool, or a con­ser­v­a­tive intel­lec­tu­al.

To be sure, I’m not keen on the exe­cu­tion. The mes­sag­ing has been quite bad, some­times lit­er­al­ly inco­her­ent; a longer phase-in peri­od would, by my lights, have helped the cause. (Although not too long—midterms aren’t far off, and the White House is hard­ly a sure bet in 2028.) But the basic ques­tion—do you think we should do some­thing or not?—remains the same. Nobody has ever tried to reverse dein­dus­tri­al­iza­tion; per­haps it can’t be done. But if you buy the “Flight 93” argu­ment quot­ed above, well, grab the sporks and tiny cans of gin­ger ale! Grab the lit­tle red and white pack­ages of weird cook­ies! It might fail, but try­ing is bet­ter than not try­ing. If it all seems impro­vised and des­per­a­do-like, well, that’s because it is. 

What’s the alter­na­tive? In my ide­al world, we’d have a care­ful­ly mea­sured pro­gram of indus­tri­al sub­si­dies, a rejig­gered inter­na­tion­al mon­e­tary sys­tem, and a set of tar­iff pro­tec­tions. (Actu­al­ly, in my ide­al world, we’d have man­aged the rel­a­tive decline of Amer­i­can eco­nom­ic suprema­cy in a some­what wis­er, more far-see­ing fash­ion.) But the facts on the ground are that the fisc is a mess; the GOP’s major­i­ty in Con­gress is razor-thin, not in step with the pres­i­dent on eco­nom­ic issues, and like­ly to be blown out in the midterms; and the lever­age to bring about a new mon­e­tary accord is lim­it­ed and could take years of nego­ti­a­tion. That leaves us with tar­iffs, which are in the president’s hands basi­cal­ly by a quirk of New Deal-era leg­is­la­tion. Are you going to try to use the means avail­able to you, those tiny cans of gin­ger ale and the weird cylin­dri­cal pieces of ice, or are you going to set­tle in for anoth­er com­fort­able year of decline?

Like Grac­chus, Trump’s rad­i­cal eco­nom­ic plat­form has fun­da­men­tal­ly con­ser­v­a­tive polit­i­cal aims. Like Grac­chus’ aris­to­crat­ic ene­mies, the mon­ey-men are apoplec­tic. Like Grac­chus’ reforms, there are par­tic­u­lar short­com­ings or things to be desired. But what is the real, viable alter­na­tive? Isn’t it bet­ter to try some­thing?

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