This Great
Graphic is a 90-day history of the
"betting" at PredictIt that
Trump becomes the new US President. With Cruz suspending his
campaign, the odds of Trump have risen just above 40%.
The US national interests and challenges to those interests do not change
much from year-to-year, and this may help
explain the continuity in US foreign policy (including foreign economic
policy). Trump's campaign style emphasized a break
from the conventional approach. There is already a faction that concludes
that the US is shouldering a greater burden for globalization than it ought to
as a question of will and resources. This faction mocks the United Nations and
dragged their feet about accepting the new quotas at the IMF, which were a precondition of
reforms.
Also given Trump's style (temporally inconsistency) it is difficult to anticipate a coherent set of policies. The foreign economic policy thrust seems to be one of unilateralism that could scare foreign investors. The US is a net debtor in that foreign investors own more US assets (portfolio and direct investment) than US investors own foreign assets.
Since the Great Financial Crisis, global trade,
and capital flows have not recovered fully. Part of the populist
appeal that is evident in many countries, including the US, is the view of that
the globalization is undermining living standards. In Europe, integration
may be understood as a subset of globalization. In an event, the
multilateral institutions and the post-WWII order seem fragile this moment in time.
The thrust of Trump's foreign economic policy would seem to weaken that fragile
order.
Perhaps Trump is embracing the idea of the G-Zero world that has been
suggested by some political scientists. The US no longer has the
power to provide hegemonic leadership to make and enforce the rules of
engagement that some scholars argue is necessary.
What follows is that the US does not have to sacrifice
occasionally is short-term interests for strategic goals. Therefore, the US is free to pursue its narrow
national interests.
When considering the dollar impact of a new administration, it has often
been helpful to think about the likely policy mix. The best policy
mix for a currency is the loose fiscal policy and a tight monetary
policy. This was the policy mix of
the Reagan dollar rally. It was also the policy mix in Germany after the
Berlin Wall fell which led to the German mark overshoot and ERM crisis (that
led to the Maastricht Treaty and EMU).
If, despite Trumps allusions
(illusions?) of firing Yellen, the Fed does continue to gradually normalize monetary policy, the key moving piece will
be fiscal policy. One of the reasons
why some conservatives don't support
Trump is that amid the conflicting signals, it sounds as if fiscal policy may be relaxed in a Trump government.
Global investors, like US investors,
are talking about Trump, but so far investors have not reacted. The focus
will shift to Trumps vice presidential candidate and the Republican Party
platform. On the Democrat side,
Sanders' win in Indiana keeps the race alive, on paper at least, and California
is the last big prize. How Clinton
reaches out to Sanders supporter is an important part of the process in the
coming weeks. Lastly, the controversial nature of Trump's
candidates has spurred talk that the Democrats could take both houses of
Congress, on ideas that many Republicans will not turn out to vote.
Disclaimer
Great Graphic: Odds of President Trump Rise (Predictit)
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
May 04, 2016
Rating: