
Your Survival Guy is a big fan of Larry Kudlow, director of the White House National Economic Council. This week, the WSJโs Andy Kessler writes:
โIn the grip of the world-wide recession, we must all stick to anti-inflationary, high-productivity policies that adapt new technology, retrain workers, and increase efficiency.โ Who said that? Donald Trump? Angela Merkel? Emmanuel Macron? Nope, that was Ronald Reagan in May 1983, speaking on the eve of the Williamsburg Economic Summit of Industrialized Nations.
Now, the off-again, on-again Group of Seven meeting scheduled for June is off until September at the earliest. Too bad. Itโs needed more than ever. I spoke with Larry Kudlow, director of the White House National Economic Council and the so-called Sherpa of the meetingโs agenda, and asked what his pitch will be. โItโs the Reagan playbook,โ he says. โIn some sense, itโs very easy. The same principles apply. You want to reduce tax rates, generate incentives, reignite the animal spirits, and deregulate to remove business obstacles.โ
Hereโs my favorite part:
โOn trade,โ Mr. Kudlow goes on, โPotusโs vision has always been to go to zero tariffs. His favorite word on this has been โreciprocity.โ If Europe has a 10% tariff on cars, which they do, and we have 2.5%, they should come down to 2.5%โor zero. The playbook is going to be very similar to Reaganโs.โ
As in 1983, Mr. Kudlow says, โthe message is the same: growth, taxes, deregulation, trade.โ Heโs right, but will it resonate? โMacron cut the corporate tax in France, unfortunately phased in. Germany has a pretty deregulated labor market. Britain has relatively low tax and capital-gains rates. But thereโs no Reagan figure, no Reagan model for the EU. There never was.โ
Who gets it? โBoJo,โ he says, the U.K.โs Boris Johnson. โI have said to him, โIโm all for Brexit. Itโs Magna Carta 2.0. You can liberate Britain, but you have to make Britain a great investment haven, like Singapore or Hong Kong before the Chinese took over, and youโve got to cut your tax rates as much as possible to attract capital.โย โ It hasnโt happened yet, I point out. โSo buy America,โ Mr. Kudlow quickly adds.
But we canโt do it ourselves, I say. He disagrees: โI think we can do it ourselves. I think we always have done it ourselves. The U.S. drives the world economy; it doesnโt drive us. In the Reagan years it was the same. Everyone said the rest of the world would drag us down. Not true. Thatโs why we run trade deficits, which the president doesnโt like, but it just means weโre growing faster than theyโre growing. Weโre importing capital.โ I appreciate the eat-my-dust mentality, but weโre all better off if the rest of the worldโthe G-7 and beyondโparticipates.
โThe best scenario,โ Mr. Kudlow explains, โwould be that the U.S. and the U.K. maintain the Reagan playbook: lower tax rates, lower regulation, steady currencies, supply-side incentives for future growth, including a free-trade deal.โ
โIf you look out over the next several years,โ he continues, โthatโs when we need incentives, thatโs when we need the Reagan playbook. You signal to investors and builders and technology and entrepreneurs that Trump will stay on the supply side.โ
The stock market is up 46% off its coronavirus bottom and down only 5% for the year, confounding investors and CNBC anchors alike. Itโs obvious the market is assuming a robust recovery driven by synchronized global growth, but that doesnโt happen magically. I think the world needs the Reagan playbook again, instead of crony industrial policy or boondoggle infrastructure spending, else those market gains evaporate.
Can Mr. Kudlow transfer the 1983 Williamsburg Summit Reagan playbook to the expanded roster of countries meeting in September? โThereโs only one guy at both meetings,โ he says: โMe.โ Hope for similar results.
Originally posted on Your Survival Guy.ย



