Editorial: Trump must address Inflation and interest rates
As
Not the high finance part of the economy, but the retail level where most of the people who voted for him live.
Consider interest rates, which discourage people from buying motor vehicles or buying houses. Young families feel they have been shut out of buying a house and must remain in rental housing until interest rates return to a level where they can afford to borrow money. They could borrow at a high interest rate now and plan to refinance when rates fall, but who knows when that will be?
On Thursday, the
If people don't buy cars, steelmakers don't sell as much steel. This filters through several industries and affects many of the people whose votes gave Trump his victory on Tuesday.
According to the AP, when asked at his news conference Thursday about Americans who are feeling little relief from the pain of high prices and who helped fuel Trump's victory,
It appears there are competing visions of what is good for the economy. Trump must decide if he will let things run their course as they are now or if he will put his thumb on one side of the scale to benefit one group over another. He will need to decide if immediate action is needed or if his supporters can afford to wait "some time."
His decision could lead to those all-too-common unintended consequences that could affect how his party does in the 2026 and 2028 elections.
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