Trump plans harsher trade, tax policies
Hashing out details over phone calls and intimate dinners at his
If a country like
The measures are tenets of Trump's first-term trade doctrine, defined by the confrontation he stoked with
Still, Trump's nascent second-term proposals are causing angst among many economists and the business community that largely views retaliatory or higher tariffs as a form of taxation on American consumers and businesses. Jacking up tariffs could spur inflation, hurt
"The retaliation would be massive. Other countries would not take this lying down," Murphy said. "
Trump argued in a recent letter to the
Advisers say this is a continuation of Trump's desire to negotiate at every turn, especially on goods and services entering the
"As a businessman, he understands that we are the biggest customer. Therefore, we have the most leverage if we are willing to use it," said Trump ally and former House Speaker
Along with Gingrich, Trump informally discussed his ideas with former White House National Economic Council director
Rollins heads the
One Trump campaign official said the former president has not settled on anything definitive regarding economic policy and intends to roll out more details this fall, as the campaign pivots to a general election message against Biden.
Trump may use any revenues from additional tariffs as a way to extend 2017 tax reductions like the immediate expensing of machinery and equipment and other cuts set to expire in the coming years.
Moore, an informal economic adviser to Trump, said the former president would expand the economic policies from his first term, from lower tax rates to increasing energy production, arguing that they worked.
Trump and his dinner guests did not discuss any specific numbers for potential tax cuts, or targets for tariffs. During an earlier interview with Kudlow on
"It would further push the
The American business community is not pleased that Biden continued Trump's stance toward
Apart from the policies themselves, the Trump team hopes to use its economic agenda to draw a sharp contrast with Biden who oversaw historically high levels of inflation during his first two years in office. Inflation has started to drop steeply and the unemployment rate remains at historic low levels - but
"The real way that Trump wins, he needs to basically keep asking the American people are you better off today than you were four years ago," Moore said. "That's exactly what Reagan asked when he beat Carter."
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