MAGAnomics

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MAGAnomics is the economic program of President Donald Trump.

In less than two years, President Trump doubled the rate of growth America suffered in the eight years of Obamanomics and stagnation.

By 2018, the IMF projected the U.S. growth rate at 3.7% for a $22 Trillion economy. That amounts to expanding the U.S. econony by $700 Billion a year for the next several years. $700 Billion a year added to the U.S. evonony is larger than the entire economy of Saudi Arabia (19th largest in the world), half of Canada's entire economy (10th largest) and two-thirds of Mexico (15th largest).

Background

MAGAnomics essentially undoes nearly forty years of trade agreements, primarily with NAFTA and China. It resembles the trade positions of Ross Perot, Pat Buchanan, Walter Mondale, and Richard Gephardt, all past major party presidential candidates. These candidates all opposed the destruction of manufacturing jobs in the United States and full scale conversion of America into a service sector, consumer driven economy.

While Buchanan and Perot are usually called paleoconservatives, Gephardt and Mondale are often referred to as socialists with nationalist tendencies. All opposed globalist trade agreements and the movement toward a loss of sovereignty.

It would be a mistake to call MAGAnomics paleoconservative, a term of derision invented by progressives to apply to their enemies who oppose global governance. And the progressive climate change agenda is essentially a war on consumerism[1] - the very heart and soul of the service driven economy that globalists in the EU and United States have striven to create since the end of World War II.

As manufacturing jobs were relocated to the low wage, developing world in an effort to "level the playing field" and address income inequality with the Third World, the greedy global progressive elites became more powerful at the expense of workers. Workers were compensated for job loss with the deregulation and mass marketing of opiods.

Healthcare

President Trump completely gutted the progressive Obamacare program and remade it into the Healthcare Marketplace. Open enrollments began November 1, 2018.

Health insurance rates fell for the first in history.[2] The average premiums of $124 per month dramatically contrasted with Obamacare plans whose monthly premiums averaged $393.[3] Even the liberal think tank, the Urban Institute proclaimed that what Trump did allowed 1.7 million previously uninsured Americans to receive insurance coverage, while enabling 2.5 million more to benefit from much lower premiums.[4]

Medicare and Medicaid

As of 2018 Medicare and Medicaid increase in cost is $1.50.[5]

Prescription drugs

Trump ordered US pharmaceutical companies that advertise drugs in television commercials to start showing the price. The same law that requires car companies to state the price in ads, applies to Big Pharma, too.

USMCA

Trump replaced NAFTA with the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement.

Jobs

Overall, more than 4 million jobs were created before the 2018 Midterm elections under MAGAnomics, with the biggest increases seen in manufacturing jobs.[6]

Manufacturing jobs

President Trump created ten times as many manufacturing jobs in 21 months than the socialist leader Barack Obama did over 8 years.[7] Each manufacturing job can in turn create as many as an additional 2.5 service sector jobs.[8]

This is important because manufacturing - jobs were value is added to the workproduct greater than the cost of labor in producing the product - spawn service sector jobs. Marxists object to this concept, yet have never produced a workable alternative theory to feed and clothe whole nations and societies. Each new manufacturing job spawns 1.5 to 2.5 new services sector jobs (so-called "multiplier effect") - jobs were the workproduct vanishes in the instant it is performed and leaves nothing behind to be traded for equal value.

Trade deficit

Free trade with non-democratic regimes only serves to strengthen human rights violators. China and Iran are two of the most shining examples. The widespread notion that democracy and free trade go hand-in-hand, which took root in the Cold War and its immediate aftermath, has been discredited by experience.

NATO spending in 2018.

Donald Trump has been a lone voice of realism against globalists, who initially pitched the democratizing influence of free trade, and now are content with the status quo of their failure and the impoverishment of Western nations.

Globalists have made the United States a service economy with 70% of all employment in service industries. American services are traded for foreign manufactured goods, leaving huge trade deficits, and bankrupting the nation. Reversing these trends, and President Trump's insistence that NATO partners carry their fair share of the cost burden, are the primary reasons why globalists have such intense hatred and opposition to Donald Trump.

Chinese tariffs

Tariffs on Chinese imports stemmed the capital outflow to China, sparked creation of manufacturing and service sector jobs in the U.S., and slowed the Chinese military build-up which previously was being funded by American consumers.[9]

Tax reform

A 14% cut in the corporate tax rate spurred (1) job creation by American corporations; and (2) job creation in the United States by foreign corporations relocating to take advantage of the new globally competitive corporate tax rate.

Free trade as a Cold War weapon

The modern Free trade movement grew up as a weapon in the ideological confrontation between capitalism and communism of the Cold War era. The capitalist nations favored free trade as a way to promote economic integration, reduce international tensions, and raise living standards; the communist nations - who rejected personal freedom and profit, rejected the very idea of trade, unless trade is managed by and for the public treasury of communist regimes, who in turn dole out any gains from trade, if and when gains occur, to communist party members and friends.

Theoretically, the advocates of free trade argued, reduction of tariffs would encourage non-democratic and corrupt developing world regimes to become more democratic. Alternatively, in the communist bloc of nations, all the contradictions of Marxism prohibited individuals from making any choices to improve their own economic wellbeing or engage in trade with a profit motive.

By 2014, when improvement of the human rights record in countries such as Russia, China, Saudi Arabia, Mexico or Turkey, to name only a few, failed to materialize, the belief that shipping U.S. and EU manufacturing jobs to less developed countries would encourage them to become more democratic was exposed as seriously flawed. The Iran nuke deal - reducing trade restrictions against Iran, and the Magnitsky Act or Russia sanctions bill are testaments of the false premise - that free trade leads to democratization and improved human rights. The free trade movement in America was built on this false premise beginning in the 1980s.

The post-World War II free trade movement really dates from the mid 1950s and creation of the European Common Market, which evolved into the European Union with its own parliament by the 1980s. To compete with the burgeoning economic power of the European Union, reducing North American trade barriers was finalized in the NAFTA agreement by 1996. Cold War politics cannot be overlooked in understanding how the modern free trade movement was built on a house of cards.

The artificial Europesn Union superstate was built without a defense budget - the U.S. taxpayer picking up the tab. Meantime, the violent worldwide Marxist revolution aimed at exporting Soviet weapons from Russia to Cuba, to Nicaragua, to El Salvador and all Central America, and eventually Mexico and the United States to overthrow the capitalist international order, liberate the oppressed masses, and establish Socialism. Raising living standards in Mexico via free trade and NAFTA was seen as a way to counter Marxist revolutionary ideology, Soviet foreign policy, and compete with the Euro zone.

See also

References