How Trump Happened by Joseph E. Stiglist
NEW YORK – As I have traveled around the world in recent weeks, I am repeatedly asked two questions: Is it conceivable that Donald Trump could win the US presidency? And how did his candidacy get this far in the first place?
As for the first question, though political forecasting is even more difficult than economic forecasting, the odds are strongly in favor of Hillary Clinton. Still, the closeness of the race (at least until very recently) has been a mystery: Clinton is one of the most qualified and well prepared presidential candidates that the United States has had, while Trump is one of the least qualified and worst prepared. Moreover, Trump’s campaign has survived behavior by him that would have ended a candidate’s chances in the past.
So why would Americans be playing Russian roulette (for that is what even a one-in-six chance of a Trump victory means)? Those outside the US want to know the answer, because the outcome affects them, too, though they have no influence over it.
And that brings us to the second question: why did the US Republican Party nominate a candidate that even its leaders rejected?
Obviously, many factors helped Trump beat 16 Republican primary challengers to get this far. Personalities matter, and some people do seem to warm to Trump’s reality-TV persona.
But several underlying factors also appear to have contributed to the closeness of the race. For starters, many Americans are economically worse off than they were a quarter-century ago. The median income of full-time male employees is lower than it was 42 years ago, and it is increasingly difficult for those with limited education to get a full-time job that pays decent wages.
Indeed, real (inflation-adjusted) wages at the bottom of the income distribution are roughly where they were 60 years ago. So it is no surprise that Trump finds a large, receptive audience when he says the state of the economy is rotten. But Trump is wrong both about the diagnosis and the prescription. The US economy as a whole has done well for the last six decades: GDP has increased nearly six-fold. But the fruits of that growth have gone to a relatively few at the top – people like Trump, owing partly to massive tax cuts that he would extend and deepen.
At the same time, reforms that political leaders promised would ensure prosperity for all – such as trade and financial liberalization – have not delivered. Far from it. And those whose standard of living has stagnated or declined have reached a simple conclusion: America’s political leaders either didn’t know what they were talking about or were lying (or both).
Trump wants to blame all of America’s problems on trade and immigration. He’s wrong. The US would have faced deindustrialization even without freer trade: global employment in manufacturing has been declining, with productivity gains exceeding demand growth.
Where the trade agreements failed, it was not because the US was outsmarted by its trading partners; it was because the US trade agenda was shaped by corporate interests. America’s companies have done well, and it is the Republicans who have blocked efforts to ensure that Americans made worse off by trade agreements would share the benefits.
Thus, many Americans feel buffeted by forces outside their control, leading to outcomes that are distinctly unfair. Long-standing assumptions – that America is a land of opportunity and that each generation will be better off than the last – have been called into question. The global financial crisis may have represented a turning point for many voters: their government saved the rich bankers who had brought the US to the brink of ruin, while seemingly doing almost nothing for the millions of ordinary Americans who lost their jobs and homes. The system not only produced unfair results, but seemed rigged to do so.
Support for Trump is based, at least partly, on the widespread anger stemming from that loss of trust in government. But Trump’s proposed policies would make a bad situation much worse. Surely, another dose of trickle-down economics of the kind he promises, with tax cuts aimed almost entirely at rich Americans and corporations, would produce results no better than the last time they were tried.
In fact, launching a trade war with China, Mexico, and other US trading partners, as Trump promises, would make all Americans poorer and create new impediments to the global cooperation needed to address critical global problems like the Islamic State, global terrorism, and climate change. Using money that could be invested in technology, education, or infrastructure to build a wall between the US and Mexico is a twofer in terms of wasting resources.
There are two messages US political elites should be hearing. The simplistic neo-liberal market-fundamentalist theories that have shaped so much economic policy during the last four decades are badly misleading, with GDP growth coming at the price of soaring inequality. Trickle-down economics hasn’t and won’t work. Markets don’t exist in a vacuum. The Thatcher-Reagan “revolution,” which rewrote the rules and restructured markets for the benefit of those at the top, succeeded all too well in increasing inequality, but utterly failed in its mission to increase growth.
This leads to the second message: we need to rewrite the rules of the economy once again, this time to ensure that ordinary citizens benefit. Politicians in the US and elsewhere who ignore this lesson will be held accountable. Change entails risk. But the Trump phenomenon – and more than a few similar political developments in Europe – has revealed the far greater risks entailed by failing to heed this message: societies divided, democracies undermined, and economies weakened.
(Joseph E. Stiglitz was awarded the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences in 2001 and is University Professor at Columbia University. The article above was published today in Project Syndicate.)
Jim Cooke said:
It’s a thoughtful, albeit obvious, analysis. Rewriting the rules of the economy is long overdue, really since Reaganomics. The problem is supply-siders are still in power to a great extent, though their influence has waned slowly and their prospects are not good with Donald Trump. If Hillary wins with a new majority in the House and Senate, then Democrats rewrite the rules and usher in an economy that benefits the vast majority of Americans. I’m pretty jaded on the cusp of turning 60, and in the aftermath of being bankrupted by technological change during the building of an independent print advertising sales business, but I’m still holding out hope. After all, pitchers and catchers report to spring training in 130 days.
Tim Malieckal said:
Trumpism is a middle finger to both Democrats and the establishment GOP.
A bubbling morass of bigots, lifelong losers and failed boomers are nearing the end of their lives, and feel left behind. Rapture-level ‘Left Behind’.
They have a black President, a globalized economy and grandkids who see nothing wrong with having LGBTQ friends. All manner of miscegenation surrounds them, and the jobs they once did for middling wages are gone.
They face a bitter truth that the Republican Party, who took them in after LBJ’s Civil Rights Bill kicked them out, has used them. They’ve dutifully run to the polls when summoned with a dog whistle, but what did it get them?
‘People of Color’, ‘Queerness’, ‘Microaggressions’ and ‘Participation Trophies’ for everyone but ill-educated whites desperately clinging, as Obama put it, ‘To God and Guns’. America in 2016 is a world whose participation trophy they scorn. They’d hurl it to the ground, take their ball and scurry home.
Because The Game Is Rigged, and We Wuz Robbed.
With our biracial president and his funny name, the surety that white men will always run America – and the world – has capsized. As they tread water, desperately trying to keep their heads above water, it has finally dawned on them that they’ve been played for suckers. They’ve been Rush Limbaugh’s choir, they’ve swallowed Fox News’ lies hook, line and sinker, and they’ve defended the indefensible in supporting George W. Bush’s twin wars of folly.
They swore to make Democrats suffer – as they did for eight long years – with this Muslim President and his uppity wife. He’d be a one-termer . . .
Until he wasn’t. And now, a black man might be followed by a woman.
The final humiliation of white male privilege, in the form of Hillary Clinton, the super succubus they’ve been trained to hate for a generation. They can’t possibly repudiate all they’ve repeated for over twenty years, even if Her policies are those which are best suited to their situation. What to do?
They look to the GOP and they see Romney. They hate men like Mitt, with their square jaws, underbite and Poppy Bush Patrician air. They are the rich, privileged elite who made empty promises, who they voted for, and who laugh at them behind closed doors in wood paneled, cigar-scented rooms.
So they say to hell with it, Burn It All Down. Donald Trump is their perfect arsonist. He’s tall, white, unapologetic and hides his baldness well. Like Rumpelstiltskin, he’ll spin America’s debt into gold. And he will say out loud the things they desperately want to hear. He’ll put Crooked Hillary in jail! He’ll send the Mexicans home! He’ll build a wall, and they’ll pay for it!
He’ll Make America White Again!
The Donald is their Hail Mary, their Great White Hope, and their Trump Card.
They know the future will not return the past, and are happy to overlook any transgression – including sexual predation – to make their feelings known.
After all, it doesn’t really matter – because Jesus is just around the corner, to lift them to Heaven and wash away their sins.
™
Anon-2 said:
You know what? I try to fight confirmation bias…..although I read this piece, I usually avoid lefties like Stiglitz when he’s denigrating a republican. If he’s denigrating a liberal (which never happens), I’ll read him. Same for right wing columnists….I don’t need to see Larry Kudlow or Charles Kruthammer put down lefties…..not worth my time. If they are criticizing someone on the right, it’s worth my time.
Here is the bottom line: Clinton is NOT qualified to be president…she’s DISQUALIFIED as someone who clearly can’t handle classified info, and gave 20% of our uranium to Russia in exchange for millions to the Clinton foundation. Trump is of COURSE not qualified either. They are both horrible people. Therefore, as a conservative, I have to go with the platform.
How did Trump happen? It’s really simple. HRC is a terrible candidate, and the only one she stands a chance against is Trump. Trump has is solid 25% populist support, and the divided field of 16 others couldn’t beat him in the polls. The media (which we all know is an extension of the DNC…..we didn’t need Wikileaks to prove that, did we? but now we have proof)……..SAT on the repulsive videos until he was the nominee…they could have release those tapes during the primary, but instead they boosted Trump with free air time.
Ironically, she’d such a terrible candidate, she had to cheat to beat an old burnout socialist (although I don’t really think she had to….but it’s her nature)……and although I think she’s going to run away with the election, it’s a reflection on how terrible she is that she was ever really close to trump.
That’s it….you can spout your theories about white men all you want……..however, Peggy Noonan gives us these lovely words today:
“The big fact of the week, however, has to do with these words: They don’t like us. The Democrats, progressives and left-liberals who have been embarrassed by the latest WikiLeaks dump really hate conservatives, or nonleftists. They don’t like half the people of the country they seek to control! They look at that half with disdain and disrespect. Their disdain is not new—“bitter clingers,” “basket of deplorables.” But here it’s so unashamed and eager to express itself.
A stupid man from a leftist think tank claimed the most “powerful elements” in the conservative movement are Catholic. “They must be attracted to the systematic thought and severely backwards gender relations,” he wrote. Mrs. Clinton’s press aide Jennifer Palmieri responded: “I imagine they think it is the most socially acceptable politically conservative religion. Their rich friends wouldn’t understand if they become evangelicals.”
When I read that I imagined a conversation with my grandmother, an immigrant who was a bathroom attendant at the Abraham & Straus department store in Brooklyn. Me: “Grandma, being Catholic is now a step up. It means you’re an aristocrat! A stupid one, but still.” Grandma, blinking: “America truly is a country of miracles.”
Here’s what you see in the emails: the writers are the worst kind of snobs, snobs with nothing to recommend them. In their expression and thoughts they are common, banal, dumb, uninformed, parochial.
I don’t know about you but when people look down on me I want them to be distinguished or outstanding in some way—towering minds, people of exquisite sensibility or learning. Not these grubbly poseurs, these people who’ve never had a thought but only a sensation: Christians are backward, I saw it in a movie!
It’s the big fact of American life now, isn’t it? That we are patronized by our inferiors.”
That’s what I see in many leftists: common, banal, dumb, uninformed, parochial…….but oh so educated. Stiglitz comes to mind…..
Anon-2 said:
so….therefore…..vote Trump, and pray for a stroke….
Lisa Kile said:
When you come to Ohio to campaign, Rick, you will be amazed to see how much support Trump has here. Almost every yard in the city of Ashland boasts a “Trump/ Pence” sign. Last week I was surprised to see one small, timid Clinton sign in a yard, but it has been taken down. The middle school students I am teaching like to say Trump’s name all the time, and write it on the white board, and doodle it on their test papers. He represents something cool, I guess, and outrageous. And they can use his name to harass and bully other students of immigrant backgrounds.
Richard Margolies said:
Lisa,
Could you have a discussion with your students and ask them what they like about Trump? If you could record their answers and then write it up, I think a newspaper or magazine would be interested in the article.
Richard
Anon-2 said:
Why not talk to the crux of the problem…..the parents? I’m sure you expect them to be racist bitter clingers….
Carrie said:
I have difficulty with the articles first remark that Mrs Clinton is best qualified. Her mistakes have hurt Americans . Her taking millions from nations that hate us and treat woman and many others so poorly, do not support her claims to have helped women or children. I cannot see how the military or police can ever trust her. She has used the same tax exemptions that Trump has used.
I think many of us no longer trust our representatives in both parties. They all seem more interested in making money then looking out for US citizens. Many of our current problems do not require more money but looking at our more important values. In the name of being socially correct we have given up common sense. Maybe it is time for a new kind of leader. I do not believe we have to settle for lifetime politicians. Our original leaders worked part time in government so they could really keep in touch with regular citizens
Land said:
Virtually all revolutions in history have had as a primary underlying cause the rich and privileged squeezing the poor too much, to the point where the poor finally decide that the gap between what they have and what they want is too great and they decide the current system is not working and they have very little to lose by destroying it. The rich in these countries or societies have refused to back off and kept on trying to ride their wave of wealth until it was too late to compromise. Once that kind of confrontation explodes, both sides are surprised at how much anger erupts and how much must be destroyed before it is over.
Teddy Roosevelt led the campaign to control the early American billionaires and the headlong rush to a two class society. He was rich and privileged but he read vociferously and knew his history and he tapped the anger and frustration that was fueling intense class confict at the turn of the century to get very imporant legislation passed. I hope Hillaryand her advisors also read and think as deeply and have the courage to take on the challenge. Since Democrats have traditionally been the paty of the unders but now the Republicans are espousing this angst, she should be able to develop a program that will appeal to both sides and get some serious legislation passed.
Richard Margolies said:
A clear analysis by a fine economist.
However, he stays within his discipline. He only alludes in passing to the political elements that systematically created this economic development. A political economist would tell the same economic history but include the missing political element.
The Republican party has become the political operation of the capitalist class. They have intentionally undermined unions, gerrymandered districts, funded rightist ‘think’ tanks and politicians, destroyed New Deal barriers to Finance Capital’s freedom to exploit and manipulate markets, rewriting the tax code to benefit the capitalist class, etc.
As Tom Friedman has pointed out (see his interview with Charlie Rose — recommended) the Republican Party has not been weeding its intellectual garden and has allowed an invasive species (DT) to come in and destroy the garden.
Lets look at the whole political economic reality.
Anon-2 said:
I reject your premise. Who is Wall Street backing in this election? Who are hedge funds backing? Capitalism is not the problem…it’s the solution. CHRONY capitalism is the problem. Just which candidate is the crony capitalist?
samuel clover jr said:
good morning rick..here goes..what would sam say… nats will be ok,just gotta get over big stage jitters…we have come to a point in America where our politics has become a reality show of sorts,more like a horror show…perhaps you should send them the blueprint of therapeutic community…our politicians need a Large Group on a daily basis..trump has released the evil in a lot of us instead of love and caring…everyone please vote and end this foolishness…samc
Ellen Kessler said:
I read the article and I do agree with it–but I don’t think it goes far enough. When I was in graduate school (in the last century), a politician-turned-professor told the seminar that one fact we must always remember is that if “we” push too hard, the country will push back by exposing that it is basically anti-Semetic, anti-Black (it was fashionable then to say “black”), and anti-Catholic, so we must move more slowly than we would like to to to keep those “antis” in the background. Given my experiences as a child in Hialeah, Florida, I felt that was wise if unpleasant because I knew/know that those feelings are widespread in our society.
I really worry that “we” did push too hard; that we are experiencing the push-back from push for equal rights, for rights of women, for anti-discrimination measures and support for other minorities. Of course, the increasing difference between rich and poor, as the article notes and for all the reasons it states, are other motivations. We have a divided country and the lines separating various groups seem hard to traverse. Trump appears to represent a way for the less educated, more unemployed, and blue collar workers to express their disenchantment with the new ways. But how stupid to think that a narcicistic, blow hard, unexperienced rich boy will solve that disenchantment! Trump has cheated his workmen, his shareholders, his lenders, his wives, and now the women whom he assaulted are coming forward. When he says “Crooked Hillary”, I go ballistic. Who is corrupt and morally crooked? How can people be so blind?
I am fully invested in the future. My children are 50 or near it, and i have 10 grandchildren aged between 23 years and 1 year. I fear that my investment will be a bankrupted future for the people I love the best, and I am fearful for them and my country. Living in Louisiana for 32 years has taught me that one cannot underestimate the Louisiana voters; they are worse than feared. I am concerned that 50 1/2 % of the country will behave the same way..
Anon-2 said:
Why do you go ballistic when you hear “Crooked Hillary”? Trump is awful…..and Hillary is absolutely crooked……as day by day, we are given evidence of what we already know (those who are paying attention, that is….)
Richard Miller said:
Much thanks to all who took the time to add Comments (see above) or send them to me in emails. Each of you has added something of value to the conversation and has done so in such a way that others can read and ‘listen.’
Clearly, there is unrest and unhappiness in our country. And while some are doing well, others clearly are struggling.
I am of the belief that before problems can be solved, we need to understand the underlying issues that have caused those problems so that solutions can be fashioned that deal with those underlying problems.
Name calling and derogatory language only makes understanding and finding solutions to our problems more difficult.
Anon-2 said:
Richard,
I commend you for allowing opposing voices. Focusing entirely on the article, if I could sum it up: “how Trump happened: ‘trickle down economics'”.
Well, there is no such thing as “trickle down economics” (or “Trumped Up Trickle Down Economics”, as Hillary’s legions test polled I’m sure)…..it’s a statist catch phrase.
Patience with me here folks, I found this piece being passed around….originally from, of all places, “Cracked” magazine!
It ain’t the New Yorker, but if you don’t mind the language, THIS explains “how Trump happened” better than anything I’ve read. I’ve said all along that flyover country resents the facts that Fairfax and Loudon counties are the wealthiest in the US……
http://www.cracked.com/blog/6-reasons-trumps-rise-that-no-one-talks-about/
Jim Cooke said:
To the gentleman or lady who identifies himself or herself only as Anon-2, I must say that Hillary Clinton is innocent of being labelled crooked until she is proven guilty. The charge of political corruption is so much hogwash. It has been leveled by so many inconsiderate “patriots” that it has become trite propaganda. She has stood up to conservative claptrap for 52 years, ever since she rued supporting Barry Goldwater on behalf of her father when she was a teenager in Park Ridge, IL. Until a formal and specific charge of political corruption in the form of pay to play or bribery or graft is proven, then words should be respected for the sake of honest debate. Hillary’s writing and speaking fees have garnered her economic security. Good for her. Her work for the Clinton Global Initiative was unpaid. Good for her. Her work for healthcare, children’s education, workers’ rights and national security makes her eminently qualified to be the next President of the United States. Good for her. Her stints in the statehouse in Arkansas and the White House, her work in the U.S. Senate for New Yorkers and 9-11 survivors, her diplomacy in the State Dapartment, lead me to conclude she will be a paragon of American values and a great President. Good for her. As far as ad hominem attacks and phony charges of political corruption, cronyism, conspiracy, treason, murder, etc., keep them to yourself, because that is what you have done to political dialog in this country with the spurious charge of “Crooked Hillary.”
Anon-2 said:
I suggest you pick up a newspaper from any time in the last two weeks. As I’ve said all along, it’s the double standard that has the people in fly-over country upset.