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Ron Paul See other Ron Paul Articles Title: Trump Has Inherited a Terrifying Problem Every president inherits something difficult. Some problems are simply out of the incoming presidents hands. Obama inherited a financial crisis. Reagan inherited double digit inflation. Kennedy, Nixon, and Ford each inherited the Vietnam War. For President Trump, its debt. Donald Trump enters the White House with a $19.9 trillion a headache. In percentage terms, thats 107% of our GDP. Sure, every president inherits some kind of debt from his predecessor. But none of them had to follow the Borrower-in-Chief, Barack Obama. Obama doubled the federal debt during his tenure in the Oval. He pushed the total debt close to $20 billion an 88% rise from when he first took the oath of office. Physical Gold & Silver in your IRA. Get the Facts. Here at the Nestmann Intelligence Unit, this figure weighs heavily on our minds. Especially as we watch the Dow fly past the 20,000 mark to its historic high. The markets are excited by Trumps promise of tax cuts, slashed regulations, and job growth. But with the debt at a record high, were worried that Trump will find himself choked by a lack of funds. What happens to the market if the president cant make good on his business policies? The Market Is Pricing the Second Coming of Ronald Reagan Reagans former budget director, David Stockman, is worried. He says the markets are anticipating a return to Reaganomics. A return to unrestricted competition and low taxes. But he says, Theres no reincarnation coming. The key difference here is that Reagan had room to move. When he entered the White House, Reagan had to wrestle with only $1 trillion of debt. A mere 30% of the GDP to President Trumps 107%. Worse, on March 16, Congress will impose a new debt ceiling. The ceiling is expected to come in at $20.1 trillion. That leaves Donald Trump slammed up against the debt wall. There will be no more room to borrow, putting Trumps ambitious plans at risk. Stockman predicts a bloodbath. The debt ceiling will act as a reality check for the markets, he says. That could mean a sharp reversal from these historic highs. Trump Has Bills to Pay
The president has ambitious plans for America, but they wont come cheap. Chief among them are a trillion-dollar infrastructure program, a border wall with Mexico, and increased defense spending. At the same time, hell treat Americans to a sizable tax break. Its a welcome policy, but it may leave a hole in the countrys piggy bank. Trump has also pledged to leave Social Security and Medicare untouched, the two biggest drains on the budget outside defense. I will do everything within my power not to touch Social Security, he said. But if Trump is to reconcile his infrastructure spending and tax cuts, hell need to find money somewhere. To make matters worse, the Fed is raising interest rates. As many as three further hikes could be in the pipeline this year. Obama was lucky enough to ride the wave of low rates. Trump will enjoy no such luxury. With higher interest rates comes higher inflation and larger debt repayments. The Good News
is that President Trump has outlined a vision for reduced spending. Hell employ a freeze on federal hiring with a view to cutting 20% on staffing costs. A further 10% will disappear on cuts to wasteful departments and programs. Meanwhile, the presidents commitment to job growth should bring tax dollars back into the pot. Whispers of a $10.5 trillion cut in federal expenditure over the next 10 years are moving through the White House corridors. However, it remains to be seen exactly where this will come from. And whether it will be enough to bring down the deficit. The big test will be the presidents inaugural budget. It will offer the first clue as to whether he can balance this knife edge. President Trump Is the King of Debt On the campaign trail, Donald Trump hailed himself the King of Debt. He said, Im great with debt
Ive made a fortune by using debt, and if things dont work out, I renegotiate the debt. Well, hes now got his hands on the biggest debt pile on the planet. And he faces a challenge to keep it in check. If the US defaults on its repayments, we may witness the greatest recession the world has ever seen. Of course, a default is unlikely. Instead, we may see the stirring of the printing press starting up again (also known as quantitative easing) as fresh new dollars are used to pay down the credit (reducing your purchasing power with every print run). Even worse, the Treasury might just borrow funds from the Federal Employee Pension Fund to avoid defaulting. If you think that sounds terrifying and unthinkable, consider this: Theyve done it before. Time to Create a Plan B Thanks to Obamas reckless attitude with the nations credit, President Trump may be choked by the debt crisis. It could limit his ability to put his ambitious policies to work. And that may cause the markets to sharply reassess their enthusiasm. Worse, Trump may be forced to take extraordinary measures to keep the debt sustainable. Measures that threaten your nest egg. While its impossible to time the markets or predict the future, it is possible to take control of your wealth. Perhaps its time to create a strategy that spreads your risk and reduces your exposure to the US debt problem. Reprinted with permission from Nestmann.com. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: Ada (#0)
Repudiate the fiat debt, abolish the fed, and begin printing our own greenbacks. Everything will be just fine in a year or so. The most dangerous man to any government is the man who is able to think things out... without regard to the prevailing superstitions and taboos. Almost inevitably he comes to the conclusion that the government he lives under is dishonest, insane, intolerable. ~ H. L. Mencken
Every country in the world is loaded with U. S. Treasury debt.
We are going to have an economic collapse and Trump will be blamed for. Then Democrats will be elected for the next 24 years. That is the reason I would not have minded if Hillary won. Then she and the Democrats would be blamed.
Berry did not increase the money problem, it was congress who passed the bills that borrowed more money
I suspect that its Congress itself that's the center of the swamp.
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