Both parties float bad ideas to combat cost
ANOTHER VIEW|
Politicians all along the ideological spectrum are in agreement on the big issue now animating Americans: Stuff is too expensive.
President
In
Fine and dandy. But where things start giving us pause is when these politicians get specific.
From Trump, we have his recent pronouncement that he backs a one-year cap on credit card interest rates of 10%. Current rates are roughly double that level.
Of course, that sounds on its face like a relief to those who pay interest on their credit card purchases. But if banks and other lenders are forced to slash their interest rates, they will sharply restrict what sorts of consumers they'll finance.
The only thing that will make a consumer angrier than the nosebleed interest rate is not being able to get one at all.
Sadly, Trump doesn't have a monopoly on this bad idea. Sen.
In
But
Where the politicians can improve our economic lives is by reining in their own impulses that contribute to making daily life more expensive.
For Trump, of course, the most obvious example is his insistence on imposing stiff tariff s on imported goods.
In the case of Welch and the
So whether you're a Republican or a Democrat, when you hear a politician talk about how much they feel your pain and how they're going to put the hammer down on (name your greedy industry or company of choice), we'd advise you to contemplate instead how your representative, senator, governor or president can change matters directly in their control to make your situation better.



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