Populism Takes a Wrong Turn

Guest Post by Bill Gross

Bill Gross October 2016 - Doubling Down

The Trumpian Fox has entered the Populist Henhouse, not so much by stealth but as a result of Middle America’s misinterpretation of what will make America great again. Not having voted for either establishment party’s candidate, I write in amazed, almost amused bewilderment at what American voters have done to themselves. A Reuters/Ipsos Election Day Survey of 10,000 voters revealed the extraordinary fury of the American populist movement. Almost 72% agreed that “the American economy is rigged to the advantage of the rich and powerful”.

Count me among them, yet in voting to deny Hillary Clinton the Henhouse, they “unwittingly” (lack of wit), let Donald Trump sneak in the side door. His tenure will be a short four years but is likely to be a damaging one for jobless and low-wage American voters. They were the force for Trump’s flipping the Midwest into a Republican Electoral College victory. But while the Fox promised jobs and to make America great again, his policies of greater defense and infrastructure spending combined with lower corporate taxes to invigorate the private sector continue to favor capital versus labor, markets versus wages, and is a continuation of the status quo.

For example, Republican pleas for tax reform are centered around the argument that America has one of the highest corporate tax rates in the world at 35%. Not so. Of the S&P 500’s largest 50 corporations, the average tax rate (including state, local and foreign regulations) is 24%. U.S. corporations rank among the world’s most lightly, as opposed to heavily, taxed. Trump policies also appear to favor the repatriation of trillions of dollars of foreign profits at extremely low cost under the logic that the money will be spent for investment here in the U.S. Doubtful.

The last time such a “pardon” was put into law in 2004, no noticeable pickup in investment took place. Of the $362 billion that earned a “tax holiday”, most went to dividends, corporate bonuses, and stock buybacks. Apple or any other large U.S. corporation can borrow the money they need here in the U.S. at historically low interest rates to fund investment. A few have, but over $500 billion annually in recent years has gone to the repurchase of corporate stock and the increase of earnings per share, instead of earnings and GDP growth. Why would they need to repatriate anything for investment in the real economy?

To my mind, there are better solutions than either party’s election platform, such as a Keynesian/FDR job corps or a Kennedyesque AmeriCorps that puts people to work helping other people.

But could a Clinton Administration have done much better? Probably not. Both the Clinton Democrats and almost all Republicans represent the corporate status quo that favors markets versus wages; Wall Street versus Main Street. That’s why the American public and indeed global citizens will continually take a wrong turn in their efforts to neuter the establishment and to regain several decades’ lost momentum in real wages versus real profits. Neither party as they now stand has bold policies beyond the reach of K Street Lobbyists.

To my mind, there are better solutions than either party’s election platform, such as a Keynesian/FDR job corps or a Kennedyesque AmeriCorps that puts people to work helping other people. Such programs were never emphasized by either candidate. Let’s supplement welfare with a patriotic “Help America” jobs program, even if government organized. Would it be as efficient as a corporate-led effort? Of course not, but corporations are fighting structural headwinds, such as demographic aging, technological displacement of jobs (robotization), deglobalization, and overleveraged balance sheets. They focus on the bottom line as opposed to the public welfare. Government must step in, not by reducing taxes, which will only increase profits at the expense of labor, but by being the employer of last resort in hopefully a productive way.

Populism is on the march and a Trump victory will do little to halt its advance in future decades. If anything, it is demographically baked in the cake. Investors, as The Economist astutely pointed out, face a possible no-win situation. Unless the worker’s share of GDP reverses its downward trend, and capital’s share peaks, then populists worldwide will reject establishment parties in almost every future election – initiating in some cases growth-negative policies revolving around trade, immigration, and yes, in Trump’s case, lower taxation that may lower GDP growth, not raise it. Global populism is the wave of the future, but it has taken a wrong turn in America. Investors must drive with caution, understanding that higher deficits resulting from lower taxes raise interest rates and inflation, which in turn have the potential to produce lower earnings and P/E ratios. There is no new Trump bull market in the offing. Be satisfied with 3-5% globally diversified returns. The Wall Street, finance-led hegemon is fading. The Populist sunrise has barely broken the horizon.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
24 Comments
Anonymous
Anonymous
November 16, 2016 9:38 am

All kinds of negative articles about Trump’s Presidency lately, mostly complaining about the effect of those things he hasn’t done as President since he isn’t President yet.

Dutchman
Dutchman
  Anonymous
November 16, 2016 11:38 am

This guy is fucked up!

Suzanna
Suzanna
November 16, 2016 9:45 am

Mr. Gross,
All well and good, and in a sense you are correct. Nonetheless,
I may resent, “What American voters have done to themselves.”

It isn’t as though the election was much of a competition. There
were 2 candidates. One, an entrenched Democrat with a trunk full
of negative political baggage, being investigated for fraud, and with some
mysterious neurological disorder. That candidate was calling for actions
to promote war with the East. The other candidate, albeit a “private citizen,”
(no political experience) spoke truth to the people. He educated some people.
He said he would avoid war and work to eliminate corruption, (open corruption
at least) and close our borders/our OPEN borders. That is why Americans voted
for him. The alternative was just too gruesome.

America great again? No, America will not retain hegemony. Maybe the “greatness”
will turn out to be what America doesn’t do. Maybe America can be cooperative with
emerging powers and seek foreign investment (whether we like it or not) because
corruption has permeated every crevice in our system. And our system is BROKE
financially. We have been in terminal looting mode.

We have to start somewhere. And we didn’t see anyone but Trump on our horizon.
American greatness will be found in cooperation with, and sharing financial power with,
emerging economies around the world. So solly “investors” as we are sick of you.

Constman54
Constman54
November 16, 2016 9:49 am

Are you kidding me!!!??? Yes, bring it on, more big Guubbermint and more big business. That’s what the USSA needs

kokoda - A VERY PROUD Deplorable
kokoda - A VERY PROUD Deplorable
  Constman54
November 16, 2016 10:43 am

“Government must step in, …….. by being the employer of last resort in hopefully a productive way.”

But, Big Gubbermint has been getting bigger and bigger for decades and now exceeds the private labor force.

Well Mr. Gross, it appears that if gov’t taking up the slack in hiring would put the country back in the pink, it would have already accomplished that outcome (and it hasn’t).

Musket
Musket
November 16, 2016 10:12 am

All this from a clown who was turned out of his own company? The establishment is squealing like a stuck pig on all fronts……Media lies and sniveling that is worse than before the election and now the rest of the establishment icons all falling into place. BTW Trump has 60 some odd days to go before he takes command. Can you imagine the whining, sniveling and carping then?

Shinmen Takezo
Shinmen Takezo
November 16, 2016 10:23 am

Gross is completely insane.
Trump hasn’t even entered the White House yet, and he is complaining.

If somone is for “status quo” is must be this mutt Gross.
If he has a better idea–why didn’t he run for president?
Answer: he doesn’t have a fucking clue that’s why

Alter Boyz
Alter Boyz
November 16, 2016 10:25 am

“Can you imagine the whining, sniveling and carping then?”

It’s what keeps me going.

That and snot gobbling, shit eating greedsters who wouldn’t know the business-end of any implement you put in their hands, knowing their time is just about upon them.

Talk about useless eaters.

Rdawg
Rdawg
  Administrator
November 16, 2016 11:05 am

At least we’ll have a First Lady rather than a First Tranny.

lmorris
lmorris
  Administrator
November 16, 2016 1:15 pm

good, sorry ass bitch

BUCKHED
BUCKHED
November 16, 2016 11:08 am

Hey Bill…you had ne going for a while there then you said” such as a Keynesian/FDR job corps or a Kennedyesque AmeriCorps that puts people to work helping other people” .

Yep those Keynesian ideas are great . Let’s take it up a notch . Your pal Krugman said the gooberment hasn’t spent enough money . Hell write everyone a check for a million bucks and “Stimulate” the economy. I love to watch hyperinflation as people burn their million bucks to stay warm .

Peaknic
Peaknic
  BUCKHED
November 16, 2016 12:53 pm

Well, he could start that type of program by requiring all those on welfare to work community service projects for their benefits. Would have to seriously investigate and move those scamming the disability rolls back to the welfare side, though.

Freed debt slave
Freed debt slave
November 16, 2016 11:08 am

The “making America great again” plan that Trump should put in to effect:
1. build the wall (of course)
2. Rule of law – clean up the scum from the inner cities that is out breaking things now. If you have a beef, go through the system. Caveat to this – Law “enforcement” must have the same rules applied to them – black, white, brown – all under the SAME law.
3. Kill the FED – DEAD. Austrian economics. No work program or any other “program” necessary if real capitalism returned to the US.
4. Energy comes from Thorium reactors – we created it in the 60’s, we can do it again. Use this to power the Fischer – Tropsch synfuel process to create petroleum products and tell the middle east to F&$% Off. If you muzzies want to kill each other, fine. WE DON’T CARE.
5. Kill all trade agreements and subsidies for business. If business can’t make it in a real capitalist system without Fed help, they die, go through bankruptcy and are bought by people / organizations that have cash and can make them work. Period. no special snowflakes or TBTF industries.
6. Welfare is handled through church organizations and charities. REAL charities, not these faux charities (Clinton Foundation comes to mind) that exist only as tax shelters and shells for people trying to give themselves an income. See rule of law above.
7. Use Sherman – Clayton to break up ALL of the medical monopolies. Full business competition back to medical care – see point 2. and 5. above. Health insurance becomes nothing more than affordable catastrophic care insurance, and due to competition even those costs go down over the years like technology (and virtually everything else that competes in a marketplace). This will also have the bonus of solving the national debt problem, and inflation issues along with point 3.
8. Enact Karl Denninger’s – One dollar of Capital monetary plan. Banks can no longer control business, they become utilities, and are not allowed to just print money from ledger entries. If they don’t have collateral, they can’t make “money”. This point along with point 3 above means that you don’t have to constantly worry about your money “keeping up with inflation” as there would be little depreciation of your money in the first place.

I am sure there are other basic points, but these are the big ones I though of this morning. What is amazing about a lot of this, is that it could be done in the executive branch, without a lot of congressional approval. Simply enforce the laws already on the books. The big ones though, are the banking ones – especially killing the fed. The fed is a creature of congress, so congress would have to kill it. All Trump would have to do is hold a national speech, and describe in short detail how the fed has F#$%ed every American for over 100 years, and the pressure on congress would be so great that they would have to cave.

Ah, one can dream can’t they….

Diogenes
Diogenes
November 16, 2016 11:28 am

“such as a Keynesian/FDR job corps or a Kennedyesque AmeriCorps that puts people to work helping other people” – FUCK OFF you statist thug.

starfcker
starfcker
November 16, 2016 12:12 pm

Bill Gross thinks corporate taxes aren’t too high because the fifty biggest companies don’t pay that much. Ooooookay. Pimpco really was the vampire squid.

james the deplorable wanderer
james the deplorable wanderer
November 16, 2016 12:31 pm

There is no virtue in having the government eat up fifty percent of the real growth, lose half of it to waste, fraud and abuse; use up more buying expensive war toys that frequently don’t work or work very well; pay out chunks of it on interest on previous spending; and throw away the rest giving it to people who do not, will not work for a living.
Making government the employer of last resort will result in exactly what we have now: a bureaucratic, inefficient, wasteful behemoth that serves no functions well because it serves too many, all poorly. Gross needs to look at why the Soviet Union failed, and apply that learning to OUR USSA. But that would take some insight, which he is apparently short of today.

TC
TC
November 16, 2016 12:37 pm

I used to think Bill Gross was really smart. Then I looked at the 30 year secular bull market trend of bonds. Maybe he was just in the right place at the right time? Pimco didn’t seem to have much use for him after bonds flatlined at the 0% yield line.

Southern Sage
Southern Sage
November 16, 2016 12:59 pm

The basic problem with Mr. Gross and his article is that he fails to understand that, while fixing the economy is important and financial issues are certainly critical, this election was really about keeping the United States of America from turning into a Third World cesspool. I usually try to avoid mentoning the “Jewish Problem” but in this particular case I will. Jews like Mr. Gross (and he is either a Jew or thinks like one) are perfectly happy to see our country flooded with millions of non-whites if they believe it adds to the bottom line. White Americans are not prepared to accept this and, in fact, are prepared to accept lower economic growth if it means we will hand over to our descendants a country that is recognizably America. Demographics is destiny and money is not everything. The idea that economics “trumps” all is bullshit.

lmorris
lmorris
November 16, 2016 1:16 pm

I will be short and this is it go hang your selfs

Westcoaster
Westcoaster
November 16, 2016 6:28 pm

Gross doesn’t get it. Many of us voted for Trump to avoid WWIII, which is surely what we would have endured had Hitlery won. Now, let’s see if Trump can keep the other neocons out of his cabinet.

Rainman
Rainman
November 16, 2016 9:43 pm

Mr. Gross spouts off dozens of statistics, that most likely came from the same people who predicted a Hillary landslide. Your fake numbers mean nothing to us in fly over country. If you’re so smart, go move to Paris or Venezuela or Detroit and see the end result of your mindset. And don’t come back.
Rainman….

FaF
FaF
November 16, 2016 10:52 pm

I always want someone who has a chance to ask these Keynesian dimwits a single question : Is there any debt/GDP ratio that is too high?
Because if you follow their advice, at some point you’ll be reaching stratospheric numbers.
But then again, Krugman has no kids, so why would he care about what happens to the future generations. And he doesn’t.

Slayer of Sacred Cows
Slayer of Sacred Cows
November 17, 2016 9:48 am

This article is nothing but socialist nonsense.