I am Perplexed by strong thinking by some, that you are strongly convinced, that he will be very pro-labour....
Why do you believe, that "the living symbol" of a "rough American capitalism" originating from a capitalist family, would go pro-labour?
To be clear, I do not judge what is right or correct, I just observe and judge based on past action and ones "social sircle" not on some (pre-election) promises... Before and durong the first mandate, there had been a lot promises, but besides tax-cuts not much has been implemented, "not even the wall", which for me shows a strong pro-capital bias....
The premise that not much was implemented aside from tax cuts seems incorrect to me. Other key initiatives included deregulation of the energy sector to prioritize American energy dominance, the establishment of Opportunity Zones, the Right to Try Act combined with efforts to increase drug price transparency, and, most notably, the trade war.
As for why I believe U.S. politics is shifting toward a pro-labor stance, Trump has shown little interest in allowing capital to be allocated purely for economic efficiency. Instead, his policies often redirect capital through constraints, such as attempting to devalue the dollar or erecting trade barriers to re-shore jobs—actions that would have occurred naturally if they were capital-efficient. Granted, some objectives, like dollar devaluation alongside maintaining its status as the global reserve currency, appear contradictory. However, the pro-labor trend reflects a deeper shift in Western economic policy. The political class has increasingly moved to avoid recessions by using fiscal stimulus to delay or soften economic downturns’ effects on labor and consumers. I expect Trump to continue in this tradition.
I am Perplexed by strong thinking by some, that you are strongly convinced, that he will be very pro-labour....
Why do you believe, that "the living symbol" of a "rough American capitalism" originating from a capitalist family, would go pro-labour?
To be clear, I do not judge what is right or correct, I just observe and judge based on past action and ones "social sircle" not on some (pre-election) promises... Before and durong the first mandate, there had been a lot promises, but besides tax-cuts not much has been implemented, "not even the wall", which for me shows a strong pro-capital bias....
What do you think?
The premise that not much was implemented aside from tax cuts seems incorrect to me. Other key initiatives included deregulation of the energy sector to prioritize American energy dominance, the establishment of Opportunity Zones, the Right to Try Act combined with efforts to increase drug price transparency, and, most notably, the trade war.
As for why I believe U.S. politics is shifting toward a pro-labor stance, Trump has shown little interest in allowing capital to be allocated purely for economic efficiency. Instead, his policies often redirect capital through constraints, such as attempting to devalue the dollar or erecting trade barriers to re-shore jobs—actions that would have occurred naturally if they were capital-efficient. Granted, some objectives, like dollar devaluation alongside maintaining its status as the global reserve currency, appear contradictory. However, the pro-labor trend reflects a deeper shift in Western economic policy. The political class has increasingly moved to avoid recessions by using fiscal stimulus to delay or soften economic downturns’ effects on labor and consumers. I expect Trump to continue in this tradition.