
"The initial market response speaks for itself," Daniel Skelly of Morgan Stanley told The New York Times, "but for now, this is just a step in the right direction."
The president's actions appear to be a response to the market bloodbath — a discomfiting development for many Trump supporters who depend on union pension funds or 401(k) retirement accounts. Trump admitted that "people were getting a little queasy" as investors began dumping U.S. government bonds, an unusual occurrence, The Washington Post reported.
But the markets took immediate notice when Trump posted on Truth Social on Wednesday morning, "More than 75 Countries have called to negotiate a solution … and have not, at my strong suggestion, retaliated in any way, shape, or form." As a consequence, "I have authorized a 90 day PAUSE, and a substantially lowered Reciprocal Tariff during this period, of 10%, also effective immediately."
It remains to be seen whether the administration is simply delaying any potential economic shock or whether Trump and his team use the next three months to aggressively negotiate trade deals with the dozens of nations that the White House insists are eager to come to the table. The latter would be the smartest course, calming jittery investors and giving U.S. companies more certainty over how to plan for the months and years ahead.
Trump should also consider a proposal offered by economists Arthur Laffer and Stephen Moore in The Wall Street Journal: Call the bluff of Western nations that protect many of their own producers but expect virtually unfettered access to the American market.
"Trump should give a globally televised address announcing to the world that the U.S. is ready to drop its tariffs and industry subsidies to zero tomorrow on any nation that does the same," the men wrote in a Tuesday op-ed for the Journal. "This would be the ultimate reciprocal tariff policy. President Trump and the U.S. would regain the moral high ground in trade disputes. It would be enlightening to see which supposedly ‘free trade' nations accept Trump's challenge."
Trump took a prudent step on Wednesday. He and advisers should now come to terms with willing nations on trade deals or they risk a repeat of serious economic disruption three months down the road.
(COMMENT, BELOW)
Previously:
• Trump ruffles feathers on elections
• Chuck Schumer wants more of your hard-earned money
• GOP must rediscover importance of judicial review
• And about those Medicaid 'cuts'
• White House transparency should extend to records
• Credit card bill will hurt those it's supposed to help
• Socialism surprise? Universal basic income fails yet another test
• The irony of the push for 'media literacy' in schools
• Revealing True Trump
• Biden Billions for virtually nothing
• Federal court puts an end to 'net neutrality' nonsense
• Dems still remain in deep denial over election defeat
• Syria's dictator falls victim to Hamas' grave miscalculation
• Gerrymandering for me, but not for thee
• Many seeds sowed Trump's return to the White House
• Harris-Biden again embolden Iran's proxy terrorists
• Kam can't run from Biden's many messes
• Courts rebuke Biden's Title IX rewrite
• Biden cover-up mirrors previous Dem efforts to deceive
• Irony alert: Biden warns Trump
• Stop hiding the Hur tapes
• The rich pay more than their 'fair share' of taxes
• 'Most predictable crisis' in history continuing as predicted
•
Don't feed the pander-bear
•
'Grading for equity' leads to less learning
•
Report again highlights need for entitlement reform
•
Wage law is good news for . .. the robots
•
Joe Biden should commit to presidential debates
•
Biden tax plan would pummel average Americans
•
Iran's brazen attack on Israel was 'utterly unsuccessful'
•
More free stuff
•
Biden proposes another massive spending spree
•
Dems increasingly desperate over No Labels
•
Biden hams it up during stemwinder
•
Economies roar in red states
•
To establish 'absolute tyranny over these States'
•
Biden condemns himself in attack on shrinkflation
•
If only Taylor Swift were dating the national debt
•
Biden bows to Putin, environmentalists
•
Defenders of 'democracy' want Voter ID off ballot
•
'No one is safe if they had any hand in' Oct. 7
•
Biden infrastructure bill: A failure to launch
•
US government revenues hit record highs
•
Why Biden can't convince voters he's beat inflation
•
Why Biden can't convince voters he's beat inflation
•
Biden needs to stop the mixed messages
•
The hating class as brave defenders
•
Blinken only emboldens Hamas terrorists
•
White House green Slush fund throwing around cash
•
Biden immigration policies souring even Dems
•
Dems fret as the bad news mounts for Biden
•
Billions in coronavirus money still sitting around
•
Senate delegation reassures Israel; where's the House?
•
Senate delegation reassures Israel; where's the House?
•
Chicago takes victim blaming to an absurd new low
•
The utter failure of money to improve education
•
Group identity drives American division
•
The downside of Biden's drug price control scheme
•
WARNING: Here's why top insurers are fleeing
•
'They even laughed in my face'
•
Red states power Biden's economy
•
'If you have private insurance, you can' … OOPS!
•
Ignoring the Bill of Rights when its convenient
•
Hunter cops a plea --- but the Biden probes continue
• Will we every truly know the depth of pandemic fraud?
• Hello there, Big Brother! Please, come right in
• Its not perfect, but it's a start on immigration reform
• IRS wants to branch out
• Gas stove ban conspiracy theory comes true
• Biden's busy bureaucrats beef up regulatory state
• Don't even dare think of emulamating New Yawk!
• Where have all the nation's college students gone?
• Soft-on-crime policies hit hard wall of political reality
• Joe Biden and Monty Python is no comedy
• Global warming was supposed to wreak havoc on polar bears. Looks like someone forgot to tell the polar bears