Economist and returning guest Darren Brady Nelson shares insights from his time as the top door-knocker for the Trump campaign in the battleground state of Wisconsin. He explains why Trump’s messages on inflation, immigration, and cultural issues resonated with voters. He breaks down Trump’s economic vision for the second term, including plans for Elon Musk to lead a government reorganisation. Show host Gene Tunny and Darren discuss the prospects for repairing the US budget and the possible economic implications of Trump’s fiscal and trade policies.
If you have any questions, comments, or suggestions for Gene, please email him at contact@economicsexplored.com or send a voice message via https://www.speakpipe.com/economicsexplored.
You can listen to the episode via the embedded player below or via podcasting apps including Apple Podcast and Spotify.
Here is a clip from the video recording on Elon Musk Reimagining Government:
Timestamps for EP261
- Introduction (0:00)
- Darren’s experience as Trump’s top doorknocker in Wisconsin (3:00)
- Why Trump won (11:40)
- Illegal immigration (15:05)
- Trump and monetary policy (27:30)
- Elon Musk and government efficiency (33:00)
- Trump and trade (48:15)
- Final Thoughts (57:00)
Links relevant to the conversation
Bio for Darren Brady Nelson available here:
https://economicsexplored.com/regular-guests/
Statistics on illegal immigration in the US:
https://cmsny.org/us-undocumented-population-increased-in-july-2023-warren-090624/
https://lamborn.house.gov/issues/illegal-immigration
Stanford University briefing on China’s Use of Unofficial Trade Barriers in the U.S.-China Trade War:
https://sccei.fsi.stanford.edu/china-briefs/chinas-use-unofficial-trade-barriers-us-china-trade-war
Relevant previous episodes:
Is Uncle Sam Running a Ponzi Scheme with the National Debt? w/ Dr Dan Mitchell – EP235 – https://economicsexplored.com/2024/04/17/is-uncle-sam-running-a-ponzi-scheme-with-the-national-debt-w-dr-dan-mitchell-ep235/
US infrastructure: lessons from Australia, with Darren Brady Nelson – https://dashboard.simplecast.com/accounts/a4c530a8-52a1-4290-95a3-19c00e80602c/shows/a3789cf6-a26b-464a-ab7f-551db331ee09/episodes/6134a946-eab5-4a0c-bbe3-dfae5a6bf200/
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Transcript: Trump 2.0 w/ Top Wisconsin Door Knocker & Economist Darren Brady Nelson – EP261
N.B. This is a lightly edited version of a transcript originally created using the AI application otter.ai. It may not be 100 percent accurate, but should be pretty close. If you’d like to quote from it, please check the quoted segment in the recording.
Gene Tunny 00:05
Welcome to the economics explored podcast, a frank and fearless exploration of important economic issues. I’m your host, Gene, Tunny, I’m a professional economist and former Australian Treasury official. The aim of this show is to help you better understand the big economic issues affecting all our lives. We do this by considering the theory evidence and by hearing a wide range of views. I’m delighted that you can join me for this episode. Please check out the show notes for relevant information. Now on to the show. Darren Brady Nelson, welcome back to the program.
Darren Brady Nelson 00:38
Thank you. Good to see you again.
Gene Tunny 00:39
Good to see you again, Darren, you’ve been busy these these last few weeks, so you’ve been campaigning in Wisconsin and keen to chat with you about the result, obviously, the Trump victory. And yeah, there’s been a lot of commentary about it. Lots of people surprised. I mean, you’re someone who probably isn’t surprised. But to begin with, I’d like to ask, yeah, what
Darren Brady Nelson 01:07
was your How did you guess that I wasn’t surprised? Yeah,
Gene Tunny 01:11
with your Make America Great Again. Cab, very good. So what was the experience like for you? What was it like working for the campaign? Can you tell us about that place.
Darren Brady Nelson 01:22
Yeah, well, as as you know, you know, and I guess anybody who’s watched this show before and seen me, I’m an economist like you, so, you know, the past couple of months, though, I’ve just been, you know, just a grassroots door knocker, you know, I can tell you more about how that happened, but so that’s what I’ve been doing in Milwaukee behind me. That’s kind of what the the little sort of setting in the background is, is a view of Milwaukee. I am actually in Milwaukee. It’s not just a computer hologram in the back. And, yeah, that’s, you know, what I’ve been doing for the past two months, you know, trying to do my part and help Trump win Wisconsin. As you may or may not know, you know, whoever actually gets one more vote in the state of Wisconsin wins all the electoral votes for Wisconsin. And that’s the way it works for most states, except for, you know, I think Maine and Nebraska are almost that, but not quite that they have, you know, kind of they split up the state, their states a little bit. So, you know, no one, you know, sometimes you see this commentary where, you know, be it CNN or Fox, and they’ll, they’ll break it down by like, county or something like that. You know, that’s interesting, and that’s kind of useful information, but it’s not actually no one wins Milwaukee County or anything like that as such. So, but you know, you know, the more obviously votes you can get out for Trump in Milwaukee County, the better. Helps the state total. And that’s what I’ve been doing. And interesting enough, you know, I actually finished as the number one door knocker in Wisconsin. I knocked on more doors than anybody else in the state on behalf of Trump. I don’t, can’t speak for Kamala side, but for Trump’s side anyway. Okay,
Gene Tunny 03:01
did you have an unfair advantage because you’re in downtown Milwaukee, you’re in a high density area?
Darren Brady Nelson 03:08
No, actually, I had the opposite. I had the disadvantage because everywhere that was actually within walking distance from me was was secured apartment blocks I couldn’t get into, right? Yeah, so full of, you know, sort of high rise hipsters. So look, I got to thank, you know, some of my colleagues who, and actually some church friends too, who actually would drive me out to what they call walkbooks. And both sides kind of do a very similar approach. We have an app. We have, like, you know, 100 or 100, 150 doors to knock on that day, and the app just leads us to those doors. So both sides are trying to target our voters. We’re trying to target mainly low propensity voters. So like, you know, someone who is a republic, who’s voted at some stage right, for president or something as a Republican, but they don’t do it all the time, right? So they’re not necessarily lazy, although sometimes they can be. So we just try to get out, you know, our party’s voters, but the databases aren’t great for either parties. And you get, you get a lot from the other side. You get a lot of under, you know, at least some undecided people. So it certainly makes for an interesting, you know, time when you get out there and you you think, or you hope, you’re knocking on a Republicans door, but you get a dirt Democrat, or you get it undecided, which is kind of interesting, yeah, yeah,
Gene Tunny 04:31
okay. Like to Yeah. Before we go on to how, I’m interested in how some of those conversations when, but first we you, were you employed by a Super PAC? Was it a super PAC that employed you? I mean, I, I’m not fully familiar with the system over there. Could you tell us about that, please?
Darren Brady Nelson 04:48
Yeah, both, both parties really rely on these packs, the political action committees, so they’re under the tax law. You know they’re different from, say, a c3 which is a three. Think Tank, you know, where you get a tax exemption all that there are c4 so C threes can’t be political. I mean, there’s some wiggle room. But, you know, you don’t see the Heritage Foundation or or Cato saying, you know, vote for candidate A, you know, sort of thing c4 is, can literally do that. So, so I was working for kind of an unusual arrangement. I was working jointly for 2c fours at the same time, which was turning point action, which is ultimately run by Charlie Kirk and America pack, which is ultimately run by Elon Musk,
Gene Tunny 05:36
right. Okay, so, I mean, you know, clearly Elon Musk has had a huge influence on the campaign, and will have a huge influence on the administration, it appears, at this stage, unless he has some falling out with Trump, which isn’t beyond the realms of possibility. This is the mood, just hypothesis. We can talk about that a bit later, and what Musk has role in the administration could be but so what
Darren Brady Nelson 06:01
was, to be honest, though, the people who fell out where Trump were kind of like backstabbers and people who weren’t really Trump’s in the first place, there might have been the odd exception, but, you know, and I think there was, you know, like, Well, that’s true. I’d say 8020 was people that shouldn’t even been this administration in the first
Gene Tunny 06:20
place. Yeah, yeah, that’s probably right, if you think about what Trump’s views are, and where he comes from, and the types of like he got sort of traditional repub people you’d see in, say, the Bush administration, like, either the Bucha administrations, right? And that probably didn’t suit Trump, whereas, yeah, Musk is, yeah.
Darren Brady Nelson 06:40
Well, to be honest, people in the Bush administration, one cert, the when, you know, wouldn’t actually be go, well, in a Reagan Administration either. So put that context in there. So it wasn’t just Trump, you know, the Neo cons, those sort of, Oh yeah,
Gene Tunny 06:53
yeah, yeah, very, yeah. Good point. Okay. And what would, how did the conversations on the ground go. I mean, you mentioned that where you were in Milwaukee, or parts of Milwaukee there, you know, it’s more for one of a better term, hipster, more like inner city, you know, new farm here in Brisbane, or, yep, so how did it or fortitude Valley? How did it go? How did you how did those conversations go? Were people generally receptive? Like we get the impression over here that there’s a, you know, there’s huge conflict over politics in the States, and people are just aggressive. No one wants to talk with people from the other side. How did it how did you feel on the ground? How did it all go?
Darren Brady Nelson 07:37
Look, that’s actually largely correct, sadly. But put it into other contexts. I was going throughout Milwaukee County, which is, you know, more than just walkie city. And even within Milwaukee city, the hipster areas don’t account for most of the city. So there’s, there’s heaps of, you know, working class and middle class sort of areas where you’re, you know, the more working class it got, the more trumpet got, right, and the more middle class, but then starting to get away from the city, also, the more trumpet got. But what surprise, you know, that wasn’t obviously surprising, although it’s still kind of to some extent surprised me, particularly amongst migrant groups. Boy, they were just like, even, on average, more Trumpy, you know, than than you know, like a white suburbanite would be, or, you know, I didn’t really go in the rural areas, so you know, that would probably be even more sort of Trump again. But what all you know, what surprised me was, you know, even some of these hipster neighborhoods, or these, you know, quite avant garde sort of suburbs, you know, you mentioned, kind of like fortitude Valley. But I guess you could have mentioned a new farm, but you could have mentioned, oh, what’s the place we went to dinner in? What’s that, you know, in South Yeah, West End. You know, there’s kind of West End type suburbs here, obviously, in Milwaukee as well. So there you wouldn’t, obviously get a lot of Trump, but then you would, but there would be some, you know, like there was, you know, to me, I went in thinking, I’m not going to meet one person, you know, that’s going to be going for Trump in a suburb like that. And you’d actually see the huge Trump signs here and there, and those sort of sub suburbs, which surprised me. And so the conversations, you know, there was certainly, you know, look, overall, the Democrats I came across, you know, were at least somewhat polite, which to say that there was somewhat polite. So my stick was basically, you know, we were getting out the vote for Trump. So we weren’t even getting out the vote for Republican Senate, Senate candidates or Congress candidates, much less state level stuff, right? So we were very laser focused on Trump. That was all our mandate was. There are other groups who are doing something broader. Sure. So my shtick was basically, you know, I knock on a door. Someone answers, you know, I smile. I politely say, Hello, I’m getting out the vote for Trump. Are you considering voting for Trump? That’s it. That was my whole shtick. And usually, even before I got to the end of that, I could almost see in their eyes. They were like, you know, kind of light up, like happy, or whether, you know, sort of staying, or anger was it was in their eyes, I usually got from the Democrats, kind of, at least a kind of semi polite disdain. They would often say, Absolutely not. They make they may have some pleasantries at the end, like goodbye, or they might just simply slam the door, right, yeah. But sadly, I got some, like, really mean Democrats who just would basically swear at me, yell at me, tell me getting off their property just in the wake of my point stick right? And I had like, a little badge, you know, with Trump, blah, blah, blah, and, you know, speaking to, you know, people out there who are Trump supporters in Milwaukee, it doesn’t actually go both ways. It doesn’t actually go both ways. You know, like at least 8020 when a Democrat comes up to Trump’s house, they don’t get that sort of level of hate and vitriol and return, they might kind of laugh at them, like, really? Kamala, you serious? You think? You know, there might be maybe an impolite sort of, like ribbing of them, or something like that, but it doesn’t actually go both ways. So the division shouldn’t be portrayed as though it’s equal 5050, it’s not rod
Gene Tunny 11:39
Okay, okay, I’d like to ask you about why you think Trump won, because it’s come as a great Well, I mean, it wasn’t a surprise to you, a surprise to me, and I think to many around the world, because, I mean, we got the impression that he’s upset so many constituencies as concerns about reproductive rights or access to abortion there. There are concerns about what he means for, you know, various different different groups in the community. There are concerns about just his, you know, perceived, you know, instability, I suppose, concerns he’s the fact he’s been convicted, the fact that he allegedly launched a insurgency on January 6. So you know, all of these concerns about about Trump. And so a lot of people are thinking, how on earth could he get reelected? But he was. And so the the hypotheses that have been advanced, that I’ve seen are the major issues are inflation, incumbency, the fact that the Democrats have been in and things haven’t been you know, people perceive that things haven’t been going well. I mean, there’s, there’s clearly a lot of signs of that, and then also concerns over cultural issues, about this concern about wokeness and dei What’s your take on what were the issues that really changed the situation and really meant that Trump had quite an emphatic victory after all?
Darren Brady Nelson 13:11
Look, yeah, those concerns have been basically trumped up on one side. Basically, there’s plenty of evidence to suggest all those issues you mentioned are at best, exaggerated and exaggerated, obviously for political purposes. As you know, the media is not neutral. You know, you know, be something different if there this was a world of neutral truth seeking media. And then, you know, if those, if the media was talking about those as, Oh, these are my concerns, that would probably have more weight. But as we saw it, over the course of the, you know, the the first Trump administration, I think the whole sort of, you know, the whole elitist Industrial Complex has been exposed. I think for what they are, they’re not neutral, they’re not truth seekers. They have an agenda. This guy is a big threat to them. So to get back to your kind of more tangible points, yeah, I think, you know, look, a lot of you know, sort of Trump supporters don’t buy any of that stuff you just mentioned, right? And the people in the middle are focusing on those kind of, like, bread and butter issues, you know, like, yeah, inflation has been terrible under the Biden administration, and Harris has been there the entire time, so she’s in a comment, so I’m, you know, running on as though, like, you’re going to be some change. How do you how do you do that? Like, she goes, like, you know, as you know, that famous, you know, line of hers where, you know, what would you change? And she couldn’t think of anything. So what? Okay, so you support everything Biden did, but then you’re a change so that, you know, that doesn’t add up, obviously, for people who are kind of on the fence, and interesting enough, I was surprised how many people were on the fence. You know, it just in my campaigning. It’s like, I kind of figured there’d be next to no one on the fence, either you kind of loved Trump or you hated him. And sure that. That was also my experience as well. So you’re right, cost of living, you didn’t mention illegal immigration.
Gene Tunny 15:08
That’s right, yeah, yeah, yeah, that’s the one I forgot it correct, yep,
Darren Brady Nelson 15:12
big, big issue, just for law and order, but also for things like housing prices and all that sort of stuff, too, and jobs and, you know, sort of coming in and undercutting what Americans could actually legally do, you know, like they can’t even work for those the rates that some of the legals were working for so and, you know, law and order more broadly, and the whole sort of cultural issues, but, but also how the cultural issues actually tangibly impact, you know, the people’s ability to have jobs, you know, the DEI stuff, you know you’re not meritocracy flies out the window sort of thing. And you know, so that those are all but huge issues. And the wars you know, like, you know under the Democrats, that you know, there’s just they’re either fueling the Ukraine, Russia war, which I think, or at best, they’re just not, they’re very incompetent at doing anything to, you know, what’s resolved this somehow, you know. And you know, the Hamas stuff and Hezbollah stuff took took off under their regime, in part because, you know, Iran was on its knees, you know, at the end of the Trump administration. And they just basically threw a bunch of money at them to revival, you know. So revive them for, you know, around the you know, cause trouble, not just in Israel, but, you know, as you probably well know, the Arab states are not very happy with with that, either. So you know, which is, you know, why, obviously, at the end of the end of the Trump administration was able to get the Abraham accords. You know, even if the Arabs are in love with Israel, they were, at least, you know, realizing, if nothing else, there’s a bigger threat from Iran, and from their perspective, yeah,
Gene Tunny 16:54
gotcha Okay. On immigration, I’ve heard some, some incredible numbers. I don’t know whether they’re even plausible, but are they saying there’s something like here, Trump was claiming this up to 20 million illegal immigrants in the US and and there’s going to be he’s aiming to deport a lot of the illegal immigrants. Do you think that’s even plausible, that sort of level of immigrants? Do you know, I mean, how, like, you’re mentioning that that was an issue. How do you see it on the ground? What are the impacts of it? Do you what sort of level of illegal immigration do you think is, is credible?
Darren Brady Nelson 17:31
Um, look, you know, I don’t, I don’t know for sure, the numbers, they are big though, you know, they’re that. They’re, you know, it’s not like on a level that hasn’t been seen in the US ever, you know, and it was intentional. It’s not as simple, like, oh, Kamala just dropped the ball. So anyway, putting, you know, they’ve lost their out, whether it was intentional or unintentional, the numbers are huge and they has tangible effects. I mean, our friend Tim one off has seen it personally in Denver, because that’s one of the places where, you know, if you like, sanctuary cities, where they’ve, you know, and it’s caused all sorts of law and order, sort of chaos, you know, also the drugs that come come in with it, as well, heaps of child trafficking, and then again, just the tangible stuff, like, Well, you know, you know. So we have all the these governments that make it very difficult, you know, for new housing to be built, just like in Australia. Yeah, they know. You have new people, okay, let’s say they were all fine citizens. We still have, we’re going to stick them all right. So you have all sorts of problems. And, you know, look, I, you know, from what I heard, like, I went to Trump’s rally in Milwaukee, you know, I think it was, yeah, last Friday or Saturday, I can’t remember. And the focus for deportations is going to first and foremost be the people who’ve been committing crimes in the country. And that’s very tangible to do something about that. Yeah, the numbers are big. But, you know, ice is actually quite big. They just haven’t been allowed to do their job, right? So and so they have a lot of intelligence on who these people are, where they are. I think Trump will soften his stance on the law abiding people the company. I don’t think they’re gonna give them immunity and just let them stay. But they might be come up with some arrangement, you know, that’s not like actual full on deportation, you know, they might be able to get, you know, you know, maybe there is some solution where they can maybe physically stay in the country, but, you know, but they’ll have to be a process, you know, behind it, you know, before they can actually be allowed to legally stay, maybe they could do a deal with Mexico. Because, you know, Mexico has been, you know, basically part of the problem. They’re not Mexicans coming in, but they’re the ones who’ve actually allowed them to all kind of come into the southern border. So, you know, Mexico has really got to, they’ll be under pressure to at least come up with an arrangement. You know, be it Australian Christmas Island type of arrangement or whatnot. So I think there’ll be a, certainly, a softer stance on, you know, basically law abiding illegal immigrants, but with the ones who’ve committed crimes, it’s going to be harsh, and it should be, yes, yeah,
Gene Tunny 20:18
I’ve just looked up some some stats. And yeah, it looks like it is a large number. So there’s a a report or a on the the web page of Congressman Doug lamborn from Fifth Congressional District. He’s quite quieting a figure of 17 million illegal immigrants in the US. There was a something from the Center for migration studies of New York, that it had 11.7 so a lower figure. But I mean, yeah, it’s clearly, yeah, it’s over. Looks like it’s over 10,000,010 to 20 million is probably a reasonable estimate. So yeah, really, yeah, obviously, very significant. And what does that mean for the the economic impact of it? Is it the case that the American economy does rely to a significant extent on, I mean, immigrants and illegal immigrants, people working in in agriculture or in domestic service? Do you have any thoughts on that? Darren,
Darren Brady Nelson 21:19
look, well, that, you know, that’s kind of the allegation, if you like, that, that, you know, one of the reasons, you know, the corporates, if you like, go woke, is to cover their their love of having as cheap a labor as they can kind of get a hold of, you know, inside the country, or through deals with China, where, you know, obviously in China, There’s some people who are literally slave labor there. So look, you know, that’s kind of not my area of expertise as such. But, yeah, I mean, you have those sort of numbers coming in, you know, and that’s going to sort of like, certainly put some downward pressure on at least certain categories of wages that may have not been pushed down if they didn’t come in. And, you know, which is obviously, of concern, obviously, if there’s jobs that could have been had, because the Biden administration is not, has not been a, you know, if you like, a pro market sort of government, right? So, you know, sure they’re happy to help their their corporate buddies out, but they’re not so sort of people like open up the economy to more competition and economic growth in general. So, you know, so there’s, you know, people are competing for, you know, less jobs than there would be, I suppose, if then we saw, for instance, you know, under the Trump administration, where things really did take off and people didn’t have jobs before. You know, who you know, for instance, like African Americans, who may have normally had, you know, been on welfare also, and had these jobs, you know. So I think that’s going to return as well. You know, you mentioned some of these concerns, as though, like, you know that just, it’s just completely false, as though, like, you know, Trump supporters are just a whole bunch of angry white men. That’s not at all. And I see the statistics now make it blatantly clear, you know, he really, unlike the Democrats, he really did have, if you like, a multi racial, multi cultural, multi background, multi income coalition, more, far more than the Democrats. The Democrats taking out Joe Biden is like a party on the decline. You know, they’re increasingly, you know, just some rich white ladies and and some welfare blacks, basically, and even. And they’re losing the welfare blacks, thankfully. You know, as we we’ve saw, you know, Hispanics are totally moving in the direction of Trump, as are all you know, most migrant groups, be it Indians and and Muslims too. You know, we saw that. Obviously, you know, Trump went to Michigan and spoke to Muslims. You know, the Harris campaign didn’t, and I saw that in my travels around Milwaukee when I went into these, you know, migrant neighborhoods of you know, particularly Hispanics, Indians and Muslims. Also throw in the Eastern Europeans to as you would guess, if they came from former communist countries, they were like the most rabid Trump supporters that I met along my sort of campaign trail. So it was interesting to see, you know, what kind of what I thought, you know, as an economist and a policy person, you know, dovetailing pretty well with what I saw on the ground, and actually on the ground, actually reinforcing things, if you like, even more so than I thought,
Gene Tunny 24:36
just on I want to get to Trump’s economic policies. You mentioned that you didn’t think the Biden administration was doing enough on competition policy or something along those lines. But what about Lena Khan at the FTC? Isn’t there a concern about is there a concern about her future under under the Trump administration? Because if anyone’s do it seems to be. Doing positive things in the Biden administration as her, she seems to be going after big tech. She seems to have an agenda to promote competition. Do you have any thoughts on that? Darren,
Darren Brady Nelson 25:11
none her specifically, I must admit, I haven’t really been following her. I guess I mentioned competition in the context of, you know, like the discussions we’ve had in the past on national competition policy Australia. So not like, you know, using, using the sort of, like the American equivalent of the ACCC with a big stick. I personally don’t think that’s a you know, that really makes no great difference in terms of actual, you know, like, broad sense competition in the economy. It’s basically getting government out of the way. And I think, you know, Trump doesn’t have like, a, like a, literally, a policy on competition, you know, look, I would love to, obviously, you know, get a job administration and maybe do something on that front, because I think there’s a lot of stuff, but, but it’s, it’s, it’s mainly like, you know, back in the 1990s to the early 2000s it’s government getting out of the way. It’s not government going in with a big stick to target this company or that company. I mean, okay, fine, I guess you got those laws. What’s at least use them in a more because in the US, they tend to be just politically driven. You know, they tend to go after a company that’s kind of lost political favor more so than under some legitimate, you know, sort of like anti trust reasons. So look, I don’t have any particular strong feelings on that person, and you know what should happen under the Trump administration. So I think brought more broadly, as you know, Trump may not have as an explicit a policy to get government out of the way, as like Reagan did, for instance, or even, you know, maybe even Bill Clinton eventually, you know, with his sort of joint partnership at times with Newt Gingrich, were doing that sort of stuff, even if, you know, Bill maybe wasn’t necessarily fully on board with the philosophy he certainly, you know, helped put in place those sort of policies in the in the 90s, as Reagan did in the 80s. But there’ll be some quite good people with Trump, I think, who will be looking to do that? Obviously, you know, trying to cut government spending, hopefully with Elon Musk, and, you know, an efficiency commission or efficiency department, certainly lowering taxes of various sorts. And they certainly recognize, you know, sometimes, you know, Trump’s kind of like, not as clear sometimes on, you know what monetary policy is, but, but I think you know, certainly he recognizes, you know, the Feds printed a lot of money, you know, since, in particular, since 2020, and actually, unlike, say, some of the other central banks haven’t ratcheted back as much as some of the other Western countries have. You know, they’ve done it some, but not as you know, you know, particularly m zero, for instance, they, you know, they’ve, you know, ratchet that back some, to some extent. You mean the money, do you Yeah, sorry, sorry, yeah, money supply, m zero in particular, which is kind of the, you know, the more very central bank oriented calculation, as you know, you know, whereas you start bringing in, yet, the banks and stuff, you start going to, you know, M, 123, so, you know. But if you look at what they’ve unwound compared to, like what Volcker had to do in the 80s, it’s, you know. Whoa, you know, you know. So in the meantime, they better get some pretty growth, pro growth, greater private sector policies, which can, you know, that can also offset a lot of that. And thus, you know, I guess there might be less reason or need to unwind some that money supply, although they will have to deal with to some extent. And you know, there’ll be a fight, I think, you know, because Trump definitely wants a new head of the Federal Reserve, and the current person said he’s not going to resign. So, yeah, that should be an interesting battle. I don’t really, don’t know how that’s going to play out exactly. I mean, that’s not very good. I mean, you know, if the new president because that the chairman is definitely a political appointee, everybody knows that. So, you know that’s, that’s, it’s not good, you know, it’s pretty bad form, or worse. You know, for the chairman to say, blatantly, I’m not gonna, I’m not gonna leave, even though the new president doesn’t want me.
Gene Tunny 29:30
So it’s interesting what you’re saying. I mean, yeah, clearly they have to unwind. I mean, you know, keep shrinking the the Fed balance sheet. Now that is a quantitative tightening, so to speak. That’s what I think, how they’re describing it. Now, I thought the impression I got is that the concerns are that Trump would want to interfere. He’d want to interfere with the Federal Reserve and and more likely. And then under Trump, we would have easier monetary policy, wouldn’t we, because Trump would want to keep interest rates low, to keep the you know, to promote economic growth. So isn’t the concern under Trump that we would end up with higher inflation and hence higher interest rates?
Darren Brady Nelson 30:18
Um, but look, that concern, to some extent, is, I think, legitimate, because, you know, Trump hasn’t been, you know, he’s not Ron Paul, right? He’s taking, like, a pretty clear stance on on money printing and sound money and all that. He’s sometimes kind of been there, and other times he’s kind of easy money. But look, you know, it depends on what the demand for money is. So if the economy takes off, you can kind of, to some extent, not have to unwind the money supply to the same extent or tighten things up. You know, I would dismiss every President has a big influence on on money, a bigger influence on monetary policy then, you know, people really quite realize all the you know, they’re like I said they’re the chairs are political appointees. Yellen was not going to be doing something vastly different from what the presidents that she were was under wanted, right? I mean, you know, they’re nominally independent, but they’re, it’s semi independent, right? So I don’t think Trump’s any different from from Biden or Obama or anybody else. He’s not going to come in and be something, oh, wow. That’s different. You know, he’s going to try to influence the Federal Reserve they all have, right? They’ve all had done that wrong. But I think with, you know, I think you know the big difference, you know whether he’s kind of not going to be, if he’s going to be not that different on monetary policy from from the Biden administration, he’s going to be vastly different on, on his his pro growth policy, he’s going to, he’s, obviously, he’s gonna be expecting the private sector to be the one who drives growth, where the Biden administration explains the government to grow, and okay, you can kind of get away with that in the GDP statistics, because government’s such a huge chunk of those statistics. But it’s smoke and mirrors. You know, government doesn’t create its own wealth. You know. So, whereas, you know, and also, if you want to say, inflation, will see what happened in the first administration with Trump, you know, CPI didn’t grow very much at all. So I expect that to be the case under Trump as well. Yeah,
Gene Tunny 32:36
look, I agree with you that if, if the economy is, if your measured GDP is only growing because you’re, you’re undertaking activities in the public sector that are, you know, are inefficient or really of low value, then that’s not good for your living standards. I agree with that, and not good for your the productivity or economy. I think that’s a that’s a fair point. Can I ask about fiscal policy. I’d like to move on to that, because you made the good point about how you know Elon Musk is going to be involved in some sort of efficiency commission. I mean, I think this is one of the, this is one of the positive things that could come out of the Trump administration, if Elon Musk can reimagine what government looks like, right? I mean, this is quite incredible, right? Like to have someone who’s who doesn’t have that sort of standard model of what government does, or what the political constraints are that say I have because of an ex Treasury man in Australia, so I’ve got an idea of what’s achievable, what’s not how the government works. He’s just gonna, he could come in and just completely, you know, reimagine things. I mean, it could be the biggest reorganization of the US government since FDR, I mean, in the other direction. But so what are your thoughts on what Musk could do and what he should do?
Darren Brady Nelson 33:55
Yeah, look, I totally agree with you. You know, basically, you know, the way you set this up, you know, like, that’s, that’s, you know, in some ways, that is the most exciting prospect, you know, to bring in, you know, I guess a guy who’s considered a business genius. We know, business and government are not exactly the same thing, but there’s, there’s overlaps, there’s things that can be learned, obviously. I mean, Trump’s a business person, obviously. And, you know, I think overall, his first first term, except for, you know, when COVID and BLM and all that hit, it was a great success, you know, up until then, certainly economically, you know, putting aside, you know, you know, the other stuff. So that is very exciting. I would love to, you know, be a part of that, if I can somehow be a part of that. You know, obviously you work to me on, you know, when we first did that CPI minus x for the state of Maine, and then I kind of took that idea and applied it to the federal government on behalf of the Heartland Institute. So, you know, there’s a report or a plan, there’s really something. You know, if, if I can somehow get that in front of an Elon Musk or Trump’s people, doesn’t mean that’s the way you have to do it. But, you know, that’s just, you know, at least part of the toolbox. You know, I’m happy if, like, you know, Elon’s got an even better idea, or if he’s maybe comes in, like the president of Argentina almost, although, you know, maybe even maybe that’s a bit, you know, sort of a bridge too far, perhaps for a Western country, if you like, or for the US. But I think you know if anything big is going to happen, as you said, you know, like something huge, like, sadly, FDR, did in the opposite direction, because most of the federal government of right now, was set up under FDR, yeah. And, you know, including all the agencies that even the federal government doesn’t know exist, you know, because that was the big surprise when I did my Heartland reports. Like the Treasury, the US Treasury, doesn’t know all the agencies. Like, how can they not know how many agencies there are? Yeah, and who they I mean, we obviously know the big ones, like the top 20 or something like that, yes, but there’s all these. And when was facing that’s most of the the budget, obviously, is, is the ones they do know, obviously. But there are all these other little ones too, you know, which is just a little bit of a worry. Now, you know they’re not going to be, for the most part material. It’s not like you’re going to find, well, 50% of the federal government’s in this agency I’ve never heard of. You know that? You know, it’s not that bad, but, yeah, but you know, at least the Australian Government knows the agencies they have, you know. So that’s kind of a good start. So Elon, you know, someone like me or whoever can at least be a help to Elon going like, you know, I’m not going to slow you down. I want to cut the government like you do, but be aware that even the Treasury doesn’t necessarily know all the agencies are there. So you kind of know you need to know that as part of the process. So, you know, there’s going to be some hurdles putting aside, you know, all the weird sort of processes and protocols in the Senate and stuff, you know, on budget but, but now they control, you know, the Republicans control the House, they’re on board with the Trump agenda. They control the Senate. They’re going to have to push out Mitch McConnell, basically, and then get someone in the Senate who’s going to also facilitate what, you know, Elon might want to do, yeah. I mean, there’s obviously, you know, in the US, you know, there’s obviously, there literally, is a separation of powers, you know, obviously, you know, in Australia, the Prime Minister is the head of the executive. He’s also the head of the legislature at the exact same time. Yeah. So things, whereas you know that, you know, the Congress is in charge of the purse strings.
Gene Tunny 37:36
So the G the GOP has got control of the Congress, has it? Is that correct?
Darren Brady Nelson 37:40
Yeah, you know. And they got, they really got, not just in charge of the Senate, they, you know, they really did way better than I guess a lot of people expected. So they’ve, they’re totally in control of the Senate. They’re still in control. I think they’ve that. I could be wrong, but I think they increase their lead in the house as well. So they’re, yeah, it’s definitely in control of both houses, you know, they’ll need to, you know, push McConnell out the door gracefully, or not so gracefully, and then, you know, Congress needs to work, obviously, very closely with the Trump administration. Hopefully, you know, Elon Musk will be in charge of, you know, I think he wants to call it the Department of government efficiency for whatever reason, because he had that doggy. I’m not sure if it’s doggy or Doge, but so look, I’m sure he’s not gonna, like literally be running stuff on a day, but although maybe I could be wrong, maybe he will take time off to literally, you know, put his energy into this, you know, whether you know, I end up working for him or not. I hope he gets a good team, you know, can help him out. And certainly no one who’s going to try to get in the way and constantly say, You can’t do this. I can’t do that.
Gene Tunny 38:58
Yeah, well, you can send him a note and say that you’re is you were his number one door knocker in Wisconsin, weren’t you?
39:06
Yeah? Well, yeah, I was absolutely
Gene Tunny 39:08
and you got a lot of good, well, you got some, yeah, you got, you got some good ideas in terms of forcing them to make efficiency gains each year. So I mean that we can have a discussion. We had another discussion, another time about exactly how you’d make that work. I mean, there’s a, and you mentioned that, you know not, you don’t necessarily. I mean, your models one, there are other models that the idea is to have some type of, yeah, it gets some type of mechanism. Or that just works against the general tendency of government to keep expanding, right? To just keep growing with population and inflation. So I think that’s a that’s worth considering. I want to ask about before we wrap up, there are a couple of things I want to ask you about the deficit, and then we should just chat about trade and what Trump means for trade. How likely is it that Trump’s going to get the budget under control? Because. A the budget, the US budget, is currently in a structural deficit. Is it? I mean, is it a trillion dollar deficit? I don’t know the exact figure, but it’s massive. And you know, one of the figures Niall Ferguson is talking about. Now, I saw him at the ARC conference here in Sydney, and he was talking about how interest expenses on US debt are projected to exceed defense spending, right? And Trump’s want to he’s going to have a big tax cut. How? What are the prospects for him actually getting this under control the budget and limiting the growth of debt? Do you have any thoughts
Darren Brady Nelson 40:35
on that? I mean, you know, besides breaking my CPI minus x, which actually eventually takes debt down to zero and and gives, you know, over, this is over the course of 12 years, by the way, so that was like, it’s be assuming that Trump’s in for four years, and then Vance can actually be in for eight, you know. You know, obviously, that’s maybe stretching things a bit, but, but, you know, and then allows people, you know, he could get the just using my CPI minus x, and I think Elon Scott probably, I’m guessing, something even more heroic than what you know, I was doing with a CPI minus x, but simply under CPI minus x, which is focused on spending. Obviously, you know, I’m going to circle back eventually, but that would get rid of all debt. And, you know, some economists obviously go, Look, you should have some debt, and that’s fine, but you just like, theoretically, you could get rid of all the debt and also get back every average taxpayer every year, 19 grand. So that’s not bad. So you could do both at the same time. And I think so whatever happens on that front again, I’ll come back to really, you know what your question was, but you’ll need to, as you go along, not be obsessed with just getting debt and like, give no relief to taxpayers. You need to combine the two together somehow. But of course, now to get back to your question, it’s going to be what say Elon Musk or someone could do, because spending is the problem. Spending no problem. So if you can get spending under control in a big way, not just kind of play around at the edges, like they have often done over the years, like, Oh, we’ve slightly reduced the growth of spending. No, no, you got to. Can’t just reduce the growth of spending. You got to reduce the actual spending, right? And defense isn’t the problem. Really. Defense is like 10% of the budget, right? You know, we start adding up. You know, both social and corporate welfare. That’s where the biggest problems are. And then you throw in as as Trump called it many times, the green scam. That’s also a huge pile of money as well. So that’s, that’s where the work needs to be done. And and then just throwing the fact that, you know governments, in particular, it seems federal or national governments tends towards a lot of waste, right? Just a lot of a lot of fat, a lot of unnecessary, even if they’re doing something that you think is a core thing they should do, they often do it really badly and inefficiently, right? So there’s that too. So, so it’s basically spending, spending, spending, spending, and then also, you know, particularly in the 2020s but maybe also, to some extent, since 2008 that’s, that’s really what the Central Banks has been printing a lot more money for, really, is to for government at the end of the day, going through the the kind of, I think, somewhat pretend process of, you know, bond markets and whatever else fine, but ultimately, they’re just printing money for government, right? So, and particularly, you know, since 2020, onwards, and like I said, the the US Federal Government hasn’t ratcheted back that that kind of printing as much as some of the other Western governments have, right.
Gene Tunny 43:44
So just on the I think you make a good point about spending being the issue. And I’ve chatted with Dan Mitchell, who you know we both know. You know Dan. Well, you introduced me to Dan, I think, and Dan worked on that thing for me, you had
Darren Brady Nelson 44:00
actually introduce me to Dan, to the economic society that
Gene Tunny 44:04
may be the case. Oh, when John Humphries brought Dan over for the Oh, Wow, incredible. Oh, very good. Well, anyhow, what I remember Dan telling me once on one of the interviews I did, that there was a situation where, if you look in Europe, they increase, they brought in the value added taxes. And you’d think that having the all this additional tax would improve their fiscal situation, but 20 years after they introduced it, they’ve actually got more debt or something like that. Or maybe, you know, decades after they’ve introduced it, it didn’t improve their fiscal situation one bit. So I thought that was a fair point. So yeah, it’s definitely, you’ve got to keep the spending under control. I mean, you make the point about the social security, corporate welfare, etc. Now, the issue with the the entitlement program, so to speak, is that, I mean, they’re, they’re legislated, okay, people have entitlements. So it’s, I’m struggling to see how you apply. Your CP, CPI minus x, whereas you’re essentially saying government agencies have to apply this percentage reduction in in spending each year, which would be great if they could do it however, that it comes up against the issue that a lot of this stuff is legislated, so you need to have Congress make changes, don’t you to achieve what you’re after?
Darren Brady Nelson 45:21
Yeah, you’re right. And I think, like, Social Security in particular will just have to be tackled separately, right? And I’m not sure if we ever talked about this, but I think, I think Australia has got a great model, you know, like, what, what they did in the night. I mean, it’s not perfect, the superannuation system, but it’s like, light years better than the US Social Security system, right? So, yeah, I think there’s, you know, I think Australia is, like, an ideal model, at least, you know, a jumping off point to where you could reform Social Security and maybe that. I think that might have to be something different, you know, that might have to work hand in hand with, you know, Elon Musk’s outfit, but it should be something separate. And there’s some, I can’t remember the fellow’s name, but there’s a guy at the American Enterprise Institute in the US who’s also a big fan the Australian superannuation system. And by the way, Dan Mitchell, who you mentioned, yeah, did his PhD on Australian superannuation and how that could be, yeah, you know. So, you know, be awesome to bring Dan, you know, and maybe the guy from AI to kind of tackle superannuation separately, tackle social security separately. There’s a lot of other entitlements too in the US federal government system, but Social Security will have to be tackled separately, and obviously in a more sensitive manner, and in a way where you obviously grandfather people in who you know you can’t, it’s too late for them to you got to make it so no one’s worse off. You know, whatever there is, over time, it’ll probably take, you know, a more gradual reform than than you know you could with sort of other government related expenditures. So that had to be just tackled separately, I think. But I think Australia offers a great model for that, as I think it also does. It wasn’t much of a campaign thing for either side. But, you know, infrastructure, I think Australia also, particularly, you know, under national competition policy was a great model as well. And I wrote a Heartland paper on that in 2020 you know how that could work in the US? You know us being a federal system as well, you could put something similar as Australia did,
Gene Tunny 47:32
yeah, yeah. I’ll put a link in the show notes to that chat. We had a chat on infrastructure, but also spoke with Dan about his book, The Greatest Ponzi scheme on Earth, where we had a chat about superannuation as well. And you’re right, our system in Australia is not perfect. There are lots of debates over how we can improve it, and whether tax concessions for Super are too generous, whether people should be allowed to access their super for housing. I think they should. But there are other people who think that, Oh no, it’s the best thing is to leave it into it, let people leave their like, lock it up until they retire. I’m not sure about that. So there’s a big debate about some of the parameters of it. Right before we go, Darren, I should ask you about trade, because this is one area where there could be some big changes. I mean, Trump’s been threatening. Is it a 60% tariff on China, 10% increase in tariffs across the board, or something like that? Was it 20% what’s the potential for, I mean, this to be to have an adverse impact on us consumers. What’s the potential for a global trade war. How do you think about what Trump’s impact on the economy via trade policy is going to be?
Darren Brady Nelson 48:48
Yeah, look, that’s, that’s gonna be, that’s gonna be a tricky one, you know? So I’ll start out with, I’m not sure if you ended up having him on your show. Did you have Mark Calabria on your show? Not
Gene Tunny 48:57
yet. I haven’t managed to line him up. Yep, yep, yeah. Okay. Well, look,
Darren Brady Nelson 49:02
you know, if you do, I’m just going to kind of, hopefully I’m not giving away trade secrets. Hopefully he’ll talk about this too, if you can get him on. Is he, you know, he was the chief economist for Mike Pence during the first Trump administration. Then it towards the end, you know, he was appointed as, you know, headed, I can’t remember, because there’s multiple financial regulators of various sort. He’s one of the financial regulators, but, but the point was, he had been a number of meetings in the oval of office over the course of the four years. And, you know, unlike, say, Dan Mitchell, who, you know he he thinks Trump is, like, you know, philosophically a protectionist, right Mark, who also was a colleague from Cato with Dan, had the opposite view. He goes, Look, Trump’s not philosophically a protectionist. And I think bears it out like when that one time when he challenged when the g7 were upset with him about his tariffs. He goes. Right? Let’s all get together. Let’s lower, or even get rid of all our tariffs, you know, between us. You know, the in the g7 um, because there’s lots of terrorists that are, you know, allies are putting on each other, right? So it’s not just China, places like that. So I think for I understand Trump, it’s a strategic sort of approach to eventually get, if you like, less tariffs, but also not just tariffs, but, you know, just kind of overall, if you like, you know, trade agreements that aren’t slanted and massively so towards one partner, like, you know, like the ones that seem to be slanted towards China, and that would include all regulatory barriers and all the other stuff. And you know, the Chinese, even more so than the Japanese, once upon a time, are like masters of non tariff barriers to trade, right? So, you know, to sort of attack that sort of stuff. And I think if you kind of take, like a cost benefit or discounted cash flow approach, it can make sense, because it’s not like we’re in a world where there’s no tariffs, and also Trump throws these tariffs on, right? Not in that world. You know, we’re, sadly, in a world with with, not only plenty of tariffs, way too many sort of, if you like, non tariff barriers, as well. So I think, you know, I understand Trump. It’s a strategic way of getting a better deal out of a China or Europe or even Canada, you know, like I, you know, as a free market oriented economist, yeah, my natural instinct is, obviously, I don’t love tariffs or other barriers to trade, but at the same time, you know, I’m kind of skeptical of, you know, you need to at least take, you know, Ricardo model of comparative advantage with a grain of salt in a sense of the logic is sound, except for the fact that nations are not equivalent to individuals or businesses or even industries. You know, they’re not exact. They’re political entities. That what? That’s what makes them very different from comparing them to these other entities. So the model has a certain amount of usefulness, but you can take it too far if you forget that nation states are political entities, and they’re not they’re not like you know, businesses are humans freely trading with each other. They’re just different. They’re just different. They have different incentive structures. And you can take the traction a bit too far. So I’m very given, you know, how badly I think the WTO etc has performed compared to maybe their earlier years under, you know, GATT and all that sort of stuff there. I’m very open to bilateral trade agreements, because I think a lot of these trade agreements were terrible, you know, I’ve looked at the the Trans Pacific Partnership. It’s, you know, 8000 pages of, not so great, right? You know, first of all, why is it 8000 pages, you know, like, that’s just, yeah, yeah. That’s what a free trade agreement, you know, used to look like once upon a time. You know, they used to, it’s too much given favors your buddies, basically. So that, to me, they’re just putting in place a lot of, you know, barriers to trade. I mean, for every one they take out, they may be putting in two new ones. So, so look, I’m kind of, you know, more optimistic. I suppose you know, I’m wary of tariffs. But you know, if ultimately, we can then get, you know, to a point where we get China, or whoever, even Canada at the trading table, to like, hey, all right, let’s, let’s, let’s start to sensibly and in a more equitable way, lower tariffs, lower non tariff barriers to trade over whatever sort of time frame, then I think you might have to use that because, you know, China does not play fair at all. When you’re dealing with with businesses in China, you’re always dealing with the government. Yeah,
Gene Tunny 53:53
yeah. I’ve chatted with some people on my show about that, that enterprise China model, or China Inc, yeah, absolutely, with the non tariff barriers, you’re talking about things like, uh, quotas or inspections or, you know, just require, difficult requirements, difficult regulatory hurdles to get over to, to get into the market. There’s a, I found a briefing on Stanford Center on China’s economy institutions that I’ll, I’ll put a link to in the show notes, just for listeners who are interested in learning more about
Darren Brady Nelson 54:23
dei and climate stuff alone. The West, you know, China’s not doing it. China’s not doing it. Brazil’s not going to do it. Obviously, we’re not really having a whole lot of trade with Russia at the moment, but they wouldn’t be doing it. India. The BRICS, obviously, the BRICS nations, you know, having all these onerous regulations that you know only kind of you know, certain corporate elites in the West can meet, but no one else can. You know that you know, particularly small and medium sized businesses who aren’t benefiting from this stuff are often hurt by these things. So I think you know that’s going to. Of massively changed too, in the US is, you know, the DEI stuff is going to be it, you know, if it doesn’t like, literally, be go away completely. It’s, it’s going to be hugely de emphasized as our, you know, climate things as well. All right,
Gene Tunny 55:15
okay. Tara, this has been a fascinating conversation. Yeah, it’s good to catch up and, yeah, get your perspectives. I mean, again, like I said, I was, I was surprised. I mean, I guess I always thought there could be a possibility of Trump winning, but I didn’t think that was the most likely scenario, and now that he has won, yeah, we have to think about what those implications are for us. Economy, global economy. There are some pessimistic projections, forecasts out there from various economists like Warwick, McKibben. Warwick’s done some modeling of what the adverse impacts are on US consumers, on the US economy, on global growth. But then, at the moment, it looks like the markets aren’t seeing that. The markets have responded rather favorably to Trump with increases in the various stock market indices. And, I mean, we’ve got Bitcoin going up, I think I saw so I think actually, crypto is one thing we didn’t chat about. But I think there are a lot of people are excited about what Trump could mean for crypto. I don’t know. I’ll have to talk to I’ll have to try and cover that on another episode. So yeah, it looks like the market is is relatively positive. And one theory I heard is that might have been on Bloomberg or or CNBC, that Goldman Sachs has a view that, like it is just a negotiating position that the whole threat of the 60% tariff will it won’t quite be that at the most it end up being 20% or something, so would have a lesser, a smaller impact. So I think that’s their their view there. They seem less concerned about what the the possibility of a trade war than than others might be.
Darren Brady Nelson 57:03
But anyway, I would, before you finish, I would add, you know, let’s not forget, everybody’s got a world view. So, you know, Mckibben has got a very strong worldview, which is like, in the opposite direction from Trump. And you know, economists are never value free. Never had been. Sadly, they’re just, you know, they’re even further away from value free nowadays. So it’s easy to put together, you know, a paper with 100 you know, economists and Nobel Prize winners who say Trump is horrible and he’ll destroy the world, you know, I think that’s just, you know, it’s just nonsense. You know, he’s going to be the economy is going to be far stronger under Trump than you know, would have been, you know, under Harris, by far. And I think that’ll be good for Australia too, because, you know, Australia, obviously, a lot of times, just writes the coattails of the US, whether even if labor is in power and not being all that business friendly in the first place. So I think things can be, you know, happy days are here again.
Gene Tunny 58:05
Okay. Well, you’ve made a strong prediction there. Darren Brady Nelson, so I’ll have you back on at the end of the extra administration. See how the prediction, yeah, see how it goes. Yeah. Well, I think yeah, absolutely right. Everybody. Nelson, thanks so much for your time. I’ve really enjoyed the conversation and learning your perspectives. It’s Yeah, huge week of news, and you’re someone who’s been on the ground, and you’ve had some you’ve got some valuable insights for us. So thanks so much.
58:37
Thank you. Bye.
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