To Participate on Thurstonblog

email yyyyyyyyyy58@gmail.com, provide profile information and we'll email your electronic membership


Sunday, May 8, 2016

"'It seems Trump is planning to try to run the country like one of his failed business ventures, and that does not bode well ...'" Ya think?

...................................................................................................................................................................
COMMENTS: 
*  Don't know by having Trump, or Hilary Clinton as US president is good or terrible for the US considering what we see happening around the world and in the US? For Trump's, with his character people must ask if he is FIT to hold the nuclear codes of the US nuclear arsenal? Don't ever forget Bobby Knight's irresponsible comment about Trump's willingness to push the "codes" when he endorsed Trump couple weeks ago. ...
*  It never worked out for any country whose voters picked the candidate based on one certain personality trait.
*  The politicians really have us divided don't they? They like us at each other's throats because the reality is they have no idea how to fix the 21 trillion debt. United we stand, divided we fall. Whoever wins will have 49% of the people marching. Well done.
*  Trump can play let's make a deal all the live long day. However, it's Congress that spends the money. Its Congress that would have to approve or disapprove any deal made.
*  I'm sorry, but that 'economic plan' doesn't sound like something that would "Make America Great Again". More debt? THAT'S making 'America Great Again'? And, he is already talking about reneging on the debt, so who would be willing to work with us? Stand by, folks. Now that the dog and pony show is over, the clown is coming out. You are about to find out what Trump really CAN'T DO.
*  Trump's run for the office of the president has revealed that the so-called experts are not experts. They are professional guessers and when it comes to Trump their guesses have proven to be wrong time and time again. ...
...................................................................................................................................................................
Experts predict economic disaster from Trump recovery idea
By Associated Press, May 6, 2016

In the event that the U.S. economy crashed, Donald Trump has floated a recovery plan based on his own experience with corporate bankruptcy: Pay America's creditors less than full value on the U.S. Treasurys they hold.

Experts see it as a reckless idea that would send interest rates soaring, derail economic growth and undermine confidence in the world's most trusted financial asset.

The presumptive Republican presidential nominee suggested in a phone interview Thursday with CNBC that he would stimulate growth through borrowing. If trouble arose, he added, he could get investors to accept reduced payments for their Treasury holdings.

Trump later clarified that comment to say he would offer to buy the bonds back at a discount from investors in hopes of refinancing them at lower rates.

"I would borrow, knowing that if the economy crashed, you could make a deal," Trump told CNBC.

Such a move, never before attempted by the U.S. government, would likely spook investors whose trust in Treasury notes keeps global financial markets operating.

The need to refinance would likely cause interest rates to spike as investors demanded a greater return for the perceived risks of non-payment. More tax dollars would have to go toward repaying the debt. Many investors would shift their money elsewhere. And the economy could endure a traumatic blow.

"It seems Trump is planning to try to run the country like one of his failed business ventures, and that does not bode well," said Megan Greene, chief economist at Manulife.

The move would also end a policy introduced during the presidency of George Washington — and celebrated in the Pulitzer Prize-winning Broadway musical "Hamilton"— to pay full face value on the debts incurred by the country. The government's unfailing payments of its debt have long pleased investors and supported the economy because the country can borrow at lower rates than it otherwise could.

"Defaulting on our debt would cause creditors to rightly question the 'full faith' commitment we make," said Tony Fratto, a former Treasury Department official in George W. Bush's administration. "This isn't a serious idea — it's an insane idea."

Trump has touted his acumen for restructuring four of his companies under bankruptcy laws. When Trump Hotels & Casinos finished a 2004 bankruptcy reorganization, it cut $500 million off $1.8 billion in debt and reduced the interest rate to 8 percent from 15 percent.

"I don't think it's a failure' it's a success," Trump told The Associated Press at the time.

But countries function differently from businesses. Nations usually print their own money and service their debt through taxes, unlike corporations that can sell off assets and equity stakes to manage debt or close up shop. Interest rates would spike if a government refused to pay what it owed as investors priced in the risk of default and became resistant toward lending.

"It would make a bad situation worse and increase U.S. borrowing costs on its debt going forward because we would have lost our credit rating," said Chad Stone, chief economist at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.

Publicly held U.S. debt is $13.8 trillion, and taxpayers will devote likely $255 billion to interest payments this year. The market largely sets interest rates on the debt, based in part on Federal Reserve policy.

The yield on a 10-year Treasury note is about 1.8 percent, a figure that would shoot up if Trump pursued this strategy. This would cause debt payments to climb at a precarious moment for the federal budget when Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid costs will likely increase the need to borrow.

"There is no upside," said Douglas Holtz-Eakin, an economist and president of the conservative American Action Forum. "It's a false hope."

The federal government flirted with default risks in 2011 and 2013 when President Barack Obama and the Republican-led House of Representatives reached an impasse over raising the government's borrowing limit.

The government narrowly avoided defaulting on its debt payments in both instances. Still, these breakdowns did cause damage. The 2011 crisis led to a credit rating downgrade by Standard & Poor's, while the 2013 crisis produced a government shutdown.

The statements by Trump reflect his often conflicting statements on economic policy.

Just as he floated a plan that experts say would raise interest rates, Trump separately discussed the need to be cautious about higher rates during the same CNBC interview in which he bragged about being "the king of debt."

"It's a real dilemma, and we have to be very, very careful," he said. "I love debt. I love playing with it, but of course now you're talking about something very, very fragile."
...................................................................................................................................................................

No comments: