[Bloomberg](
Todayâs Agenda
- G-6 leaders [must figure out]( how to [handle Trump](.
- China's the [likely winner of the Trump-Kim]( summit.
- The economyâs [not in trouble]( â¦Â yet.
- Those "gig economyâ [fears were overblown](.
ICYM
RIP [Anthony Bourdain](. The âwitch huntâ [found more witches](. The president may help speed the legalization of [weed](.
G-7-Minus-1
Parents know managing a tantrum is a choice between resisting or capitulating to the tantrum-throwerâs unreasonable demands. Give in, and you only encourage more bad behavior. Fight, and you risk ruining everybodyâs day.
The leaders of the âG-6â â Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the UK â will get a taste of this dynamic at this weekendâs Quebec meeting of the G-7 (those six, plus the U.S.). They have to figure out how to deal with a President Donald Trump who is showing zero signs of summit enthusiasm:
- Heâs not looking forward to getting together, and [plans to leave early](;
- Heâs eager to rip up trade deals that have stood for years;
- Heâs expressed regret that serial bad actor [Russia isnât joining](. (It was ejected in 2014 for annexing Crimea.)
Mohamed El-Erian writes the [G-6 leaders face parent-like choices](. Do they indulge Trumpâs trade fit in order to coax a little U.S. cooperation on other, more important global issues, including the Iran deal he broke? Or do they stand on principles, isolating Trump but making little or no progress elsewhere?Â
Bloombergâs editors suggest the G-6 hold [firm with Trump in private]( and be somewhat accommodating in public. That could help him save face, avoid completely fracturing the G-7 and buy some time for other, natural pressures to cool off Trumpâs trade anger. After all, to paraphrase Emmanuel Macron, [Trump wonât be president forever]( (right?). And just as tantrums eventually pass, the inexorable, tectonic [movement toward ever-freer global trade]( will outlast him and his tariffs, writes Tyler Cowen.
Bonus trade-war reading:
- Jonathan Bernstein on why [Congress ceded the power over trade]( policy to the president.
- Meghan OâSullivan on the trade spatâs [silver lining for Canada](.
Trump-Kim Summitâs Likely Winner: China
Trump [may not be preparing]( for next weekâs summit with Kim Jong Un â unless you believe his claim that he has been preparing [all of his life]( â but China sure is. James Stavridis writes that, while Trump and Kim play sluggish checkers, [China is playing the complex game of Go](. Its goals are very long-range â say, 200 years â and it seems to be out-strategizing Trump. Already its ZTE Corp. has [gotten off outrageously easily]( for repeatedly flouting U.S. law, notes Tim Culpan. One big risk is that Trump, in his eagerness for a deal, any deal, caves not only to North Korea but to China, too.
At least [Dennis Rodman will be there](.
Econopocalypse Not Now
Iâve written before about how the long economic expansion that began back in 2009 may be [nearing the end]( of its shelf life. Noah Smith takes a deeper dive into the indicators and sees [no signs of an imminent collapse]( â though thereâs evidence we could get a slowdown (or a [Wile E. Coyote-style cliff-plunge](?) by 2019 or 2020.Â
One typical sign a recession is coming is when the Treasury yield curve inverts â meaning short-term rates are higher than long-term rates. We're not quite there yet. But Tim Duy warns the Federal Reserve [might just keep raising short-term rates]( even if we do get there.
At the very least, Mark Whitehouse notes U.S. companies are definitely using the new tax laws to [bring cash home from overseas](. We're just not sure how much is getting pumped into the economy yet:
So Much for the Gig Economy
One perk of being at or near full employment is that itâs easier for people to get full-time jobs with benefits. That might explain why â despite gallons of ink and tears spilled about the rise of the "gigâ economy â the percentage of Americans in âalternative work arrangementsâ is [lower than it was in 2005](, points out Justin Fox:Â
Chart Attack
Connecticut could be the [next muni-market blowup](, warns Brian Chappatta.
Luxury brands are smart to put [rich millennials in charge]( of their digital operations, writes Andrea Felsted.
âPutting Deutsche [Bank] and Commerzbank together would go some way towards creating a German champion, but it's like [strapping two turkeys together]( in the hope they'll fly.â â Lionel Laurent
Weekend Reading
EPA chief Scott [Pruittâs days may really be numbered]( this time. â Ramesh Ponnuru
What if Robert [Kennedy hadnât been assassinated](? â Jonathan Bernstein
Congress could easily create new ways to [push Supreme Court justices to retire](. â Stephen Mihm
Finding new uses for old drugs could help lower drug costs, but [drugmakers are reluctant]( to fund such research. â Max Nisen
Want the risk, illiquidity and volatility of the art market but worry it doesnât have enough risk, illiquidity and volatility? [Just mix it with cryptocurrency](! â Lionel Laurent
Governments are better off supporting [carbon-capture technology]( than forcing mass electric-car adoption. â Leonid Bershidsky
Instead of [banning plastic straws](, we should put our energy into cleaning up abandoned fishing nets. â Adam Minter
Kickers
â[Donât Eat Before Reading This](â â Anthony Bourdainâs 1999 New Yorker essay going behind the scenes of the restaurant business.
Life on Earth might have started [much, much earlier]( than previously thought. (h/t [Barry Ritholtz]()
Maybe we can reverse global warming by [turning air into gasoline](.
When did reality TV become so monstrous and exploitative? [âThe Real World: Bostonâ is a good candidate](.
Hereâs why [Fred Rogers (of âMr. Rogersâ Neighborhoodâ) was so good]( at talking to children.
Note: Please send banh mi, suggestions and kicker ideas to Mark Gongloff at mgongloff1@bloomberg.net.
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