America’s rising ‘moron premium’ - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
观点 美国经济

America’s rising ‘moron premium’

Trump’s mercurial war on economic orthodoxy is making markets jittery
00:00

{"text":[[{"start":null,"text":"

"}],[{"start":5.38,"text":"The name’s bond. Treasury bond. The only force that has so far been able to stop Donald Trump, or at least make him rethink, is the US Treasury market. Republicans are supine; Democrats are in disarray; chief executives have taken cover; and America’s foreign partners tiptoe around Trump like he’s a minefield. Some judges are throwing sand into the gears. But they have not reversed Trump’s direction. Aside from Russia’s Vladimir Putin, what Trump fears most is the rising price of money."}],[{"start":44.17,"text":"But his fear is episodic. Twice now, US Treasury bond prices have dropped sharply in tandem with a weakening dollar. Foreign investors want to be better compensated for the risk of owning US debt. Since lower bond prices mean higher yields, the dollar and Treasuries usually go opposite ways. On the first occasion in April, Trump paused his global tariff war for 90 days. Bond prices recovered. On the second, last week, Trump resumed economic war with the EU, vowing a 50 per cent tariff. He also threatened Apple’s iPhone with 25 per cent duties. A US bond market conniption plus a “very nice call” from the president of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, have on cue persuaded Trump to declare another pause."}],[{"start":95.32,"text":"Trump is by no means the only culprit for America’s mounting public debt, which at 123 per cent of GDP is at its second highest since the second world war. Since Bill Clinton balanced the budget, successive US administrations have added to the deficit. With the exception of Barack Obama, who tried to strike a grand bargain with Republicans, every other president has ignored America’s deteriorating finances. The worst offenders were George W Bush and Trump, who made large unfunded tax cuts. A close third is Joe Biden, who made little effort to raise taxes to pay for higher spending."}],[{"start":139.85999999999999,"text":"Until now, the bond markets were unfazed. What has changed? Two things. The first is Covid. The pandemic marked the end of the age of low inflation and easy money. Zero bound interest rates made everyone look good. However badly they managed the budget, US administrations could generally bet that growth would outstrip debt interest costs. That has now flipped. Trump’s “big, beautiful bill” that passed the House of Representatives last week will add more than $3tn to the US public debt over the next decade. Debt servicing costs will eat up a growing share of the pie. The bill’s spending cuts are both socially cruel and fiscally inadequate."}],[{"start":188.5,"text":"The second is Trump’s second term psychology, which is considerably more wayward than in his first. The writing on the wall is Liz Truss, Britain’s former prime minister whose short tenure was ended by the bond markets. The UK gilts market deemed the growth promises on which Truss based her unfunded tax cuts to be magical thinking. Much of the timidity of Labour’s chancellor of the exchequer, Rachel Reeves, can be attributed to fear of the Truss effect. Truss’s foolishness added a moron risk to UK government bonds."}],[{"start":226.48,"text":"Truss conveyed in the Washington Post last week that she had learnt nothing and forgotten nothing. “What I learned from my experience is the sheer power of the globalist economic establishment,” she wrote in an advice column for Trump. Bond prices are determined by countless actors including central banks, pension and insurance funds, non-western sovereign wealth funds and millions of individuals. Truss’s globalist establishment thus seems a bit unwieldy to hatch conspiracies. Its dastardly goal is to invest in a safe asset. That Truss-like doubt is now creeping into US Treasury bonds."}],[{"start":268.21999999999997,"text":"The Ernest Hemingway cliché — that America has been going bankrupt gradually and now suddenly — is doing the rounds. That is off the mark. The US would only default by choice not force. This could happen if Congress refuses to lift the US debt ceiling later this year. But that form of suicide would be eccentric even by today’s Washington standards. Or Trump could levy a charge on foreign owners of US Treasury bonds, which would be the same as default. Some of his advisers see this as a tool to drive down the dollar to make US exports cheaper. Again, though, even Trump might balk at cutting off America’s nose to spite its face. Mugging America’s lenders would be an instant way of crashing the market."}],[{"start":319.26,"text":"Which leaves Trump’s mercurial on-again off-again war on economic orthodoxy as our likely future. The markets are very much in the glass half full camp. Whenever Trump pulls back from the brink — by pausing tariffs, say, or promising not to fire US Federal Reserve chair Jay Powell — he triggers a relief rally. Even impersonal market forces are biased towards treating self-harming behaviour as abnormal. You have to go back to Herbert Hoover in the early 1930s to find a US president so willing to do battle with economic reality."}],[{"start":358.6,"text":"In one respect Trump is like his recent Republican predecessors. He believes in tax cuts. What is novel is the foreboding Trump creates about faith in America’s credit. While red inks spreads from Washington, Trump is unleashing a wild west for cryptocurrency, AI, and to some extent banking. It would be melodramatic to predict the US reserve currency’s imminent dethronement. The conditions for a global financial crisis, on the other hand, should be taken seriously. "}],[{"start":399.43,"text":""}]],"url":"https://audio.ftmailbox.cn/album/a_1748401122_2792.mp3"}

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

迪拜能否继续稳坐中东金融之都的宝座?

自疫情以来,这一离岸金融中心蓬勃发展,但其正面临自家后院里新兴城市的竞争。

入学人数下降,英国大学探索合并语言课程

在学生人数急剧下降导致资金紧张的情况下,英国各院校讨论更紧密的合作和资源共享。

特朗普将在没有专家意见的情况下会见普京

联邦机构裁员已使华盛顿的专业官员队伍被掏空,传统华盛顿外交政策制定流程已崩溃。

为什么印度没有诞生英伟达或深度求索?

桑晓霓:尽管拥有优质的人力资本及IT服务优势,但印度似乎在很多技术上距最前沿都还有很长一段路要走。

奉行和平主义的日本向成为主要武器出口国迈出重要一步

澳大利亚购买三菱护卫舰的里程碑事件为日本未来军舰、导弹和雷达的销售提供了范例。

FT社评:特朗普如何在阿拉斯加州与普京的会晤中“取胜”

对普京强硬,是特朗普确保结束乌克兰战争的唯一途径。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×