Plus: A fiscally focused debate recap
â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â [The Fisc]( Â Â By Yuval Rosenberg and Michael Rainey Former president Donald Trump is expected to surrender at the Fulton County Jail in Atlanta this evening, where he is set to be booked on 13 charges. Less than 24 hours ago, Republican presidential candidates not named Trump faced off in their first primary debate of the 2024 campaign. Will any of what happened on stage matter? Weâve got a rundown of some key fiscal points. Non-Trump GOP candidates were center stage for a night. (Reuters) GOP Candidates Clash Over Government Spending, Entitlements
Although the opening exchanges of last nightâs Republican presidential primary debate arenât making many highlight reels and recaps, they showed the candidates trying to establish their fiscally conservative bona fides. Government spending was a common target of criticism, but the back and forth also highlighted a few areas where differences have emerged. Hereâs a look at what some of the candidates said and why it might matter. Ron DeSantis: The Fox News moderators kicked off the debate by showing a clip of President Joe Biden saying that his economic agenda is working. They then transitioned to ask why most Americans say the country is headed in the wrong direction and why the country song "Rich Men North of Richmond" by a singer from Farmville, Virginia, named Oliver Anthony has become a viral chart-topping hit. The song discusses inflation, taxes and a frustration with government and has been boosted by conservative pundits and politicians. "Our country is in decline," the Florida governor said in response to the opening question. He argued that the country must reverse Bidenomics to give middle-class families a chance to succeed. "We also cannot succeed when the Congress spends trillions and trillions of dollars," DeSantis added. "Those rich men north of Richmond have put us in this situation." Chris Christie: The former New Jersey governor also attacked government spending. "We cannot sit by any longer and allow the kind of spending thatâs going on in Washington because every dollar that they spend is a dollar that these people are not allowed to spend on their children and their grandchildren," he said, pointing to the audience. "Itâs robbing our country and itâs wrong." Asked about his record in New Jersey, Christie said he cut debt and public employee pension payments to benefit taxpayers. Tim Scott: The senator from South Carolina was asked by moderator Martha MacCallum what he has done "to rein in the increasing size of government." He talked about voting against spending packages, advocated for sending money and spending decisions back to the states and touted the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (which is expected to add some $2 trillion to deficits over 10 years). "If you donât send it to Washington, we canât spend it," he said in calling for more tax cuts. Nikki Haley: The former South Carolina governor and United Nations ambassador, said Republicans bear some blame for the nationâs fiscal challenges. "The truth is that Biden didnât do this to us. Our Republicans did this to us, too. When they passed that $2.2 trillion Covid stimulus bill, they left us with 90 million people on Medicaid, 42 million people on food stamps," she said. "They need to stop the spending. They need to stop the borrowing. They need to eliminate the earmarks that Republicans brought back in." She said Republicans have asked for $7.4 billion in earmarks for the upcoming fiscal year compared to $2.8 billion requested by Democrats. "So you tell me who are the big spenders," she said. Haley also specifically criticized former president Donald Trump and some of those on stage with her for adding to the national debt. "Donald Trump added $8 trillion to our debt and our kids are never going to forgive us for this," she said. In an appearance on [Bloomberg Television]( this morning, Haley again blamed Republicans for "spending like drunken sailors and raising the debt limit." She called for increasing the Social Security retirement age for people coming into the system, calling age 65 "way too low" without specifying a new number. (The age for full retirement benefits is now 67 for people born in 1960 or later.) "We go to people like my kids in their 20âs when theyâre coming into the system and we say the rules have changed," Haley proposed. "We change retirement age to reflect life expectancy. Instead of cost-of-living increases, we do it based on inflation. We limit the benefits on the wealthy, and we expand Medicare Advantage plans." Haley also criticized other GOP candidates who have steered clear of calling for cuts or changes to Social Security. "Youâve got multiple candidates on that stage that said they wouldnât touch entitlements," she said. "Any candidate that says theyâre not going to touch entitlements means that theyâre basically going to go into office and then leave America bankrupt." (The U.S. government canât go bankrupt.) Mike Pence: Calling himself the conservative best prepared to be president, Pence highlighted his call for reforms to Social Security and Medicare to reduce the costs of those programs. "I was the first person in this race to say that weâve got to deal with the long-term national debt issues," he said. "Youâve got people on this stage that wonât even talk about issues like Social Security and Medicare." Asa Hutchinson: The former Arkansas governor and former member of the House highlighted how he shrank the size of government in his state and brought up his proposal to cut the federal non-defense workforce by 10%. Why it matters: While the on-stage sparring, individual performances and differences on subjects including abortion and Ukraine have gotten the bulk of the post-debate coverage, the portion of the debate that touched on economic and budgetary matters highlights a divide in the Republican Party between those embracing a traditional, pre-Trumpian Republican view of entitlements and candidates who are more wary of rhetoric that could alienate voters who oppose cuts to those programs. Haleyâs jabs at her fellow Republicans will provide some ammunition for President Joe Biden and Democrats. In fact, they already are, as Biden [posted]( a clip of Haleyâs remarks about Trump adding $8 trillion to the debt with the comment, "What she said." Quote of the Day
"Vivek Ramaswamy is the candidate most likely to receive a wedgie and be stuffed into his locker by his fellow 2024 contenders." â Politicoâs [Jeff Greenfield]( on takeaways from the debate. Ramaswamyâs pugnacious debate performance drew considerable attention and had some voters and pundits declaring him one winner of the evening. Chart of the Day: Wage Growth Slowing
For those economists worried that surging wages will drive inflation higher, forcing the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates once again, new data from the employment website Indeed should come as a relief. According to the firmâs Wage Tracker index, pay rates posted by employers grew by an annual rate of 4.7% in June, continuing a downward trend that began in late 2021. Posted wages were 5.8% higher at an annual rate in April, and 8% higher in July 2022. "Anyone concerned about a âwage-priceâ spiral should be relieved," said Indeed economist Nick Bunker, per [Bloomberg](. "The risk of a resilient labor market keeping wage growth, and therefore inflation, elevated is diminishing." At the current rate of deceleration, analysts at Indeed expect wage growth to return to pre-pandemic levels by the end of the year. Number of the Day: $8.5 Billion
Wildly popular concerts by Taylor Swift and Beyoncé along with and a pair of blockbuster movies could give the U.S. economy an $8.5 billion boost in the third quarter, according to Bloomberg Economics. "The nearly 50 US concerts the artists have scheduled could add $5.4 billion to gross domestic product, while the films Barbie and Oppenheimer are projected to add about $3.1 billion in consumer spending and exports from international ticket sales," Bloombergâs Augusta Saraiva [wrote]( Thursday. The boost will be short-lived, however, driven by an exceptional combination of events. Leave aside the temporary factors, and the economy appears to be running out steam, the Bloomberg analysts said. --------------------------------------------------------------- Send your feedback to yrosenberg@thefiscaltimes.com. And please encourage your friends to [sign up here]( for their own copy of this newsletter.
--------------------------------------------------------------- Fiscal News Roundup - [Republican Candidates Fight Each Other, and Mostly Line Up Behind Trump, at the First Debate]( â Associated Press
- [GOP Strategist: Haley âRan a Great General Debate,â Ramaswamy âRan a Primary Debateâ]( â The Hill
- [Vivek Ramaswamyâs Policy Proposals and How They Would Transform the U.S.]( â Washington Post
- [Nikki Haley Floats Raising Retirement Age to Curb Rising US Debt]( â Bloomberg
- [Joe Biden Drops 3 Sharp Words on GOP in a Swift Flip of Nikki Haley's Debate Jab]( â HuffPost
- [McConnell Concedes Farm Bill Will Be Late; Stabenow Eyes Year-End]( â Roll CallÂ
- [White House to Name First 10 Drugs for Medicare Negotiations Early]( â Politico
- [Hopeful Signs of an Economic âSoft Landingâ Emerge in Jackson Hole as Fed Meets With World Watching]( â Associated Press
- [âTreacherousâ Descent: Fed Debates How Far to Push Rate Hikes]( â Politico
- [Fed Officials See Rates Close to Peak, Differ on How Close]( â Bloomberg
- [T-Bill Deluge Risks Draining Bank Reserves, St. Louis Fed Warns]( â Bloomberg
- [Lyme Disease Has Exploded, and a New Vaccine Is (Almost) Here]( â Bloomberg Businessweek Views and Analysis - [Who Came Out on Top in the GOP Primary Debate? Hereâs What Experts Say]( â Kelly Garrity, Politico
- [Takeaways From the First Republican Presidential Primary Debate]( â Eric Bradner, Daniel Strauss, Arit John and Steve Contorno, CNN
- [5 Takeaways From the First Republican Primary Debate]( â Domenico Montanaro, NPR
- [Nikki Haley Burned Trump and Her Fellow Republicans for Blowing Up the Debt. She's Right]( â Eric Boehm, Reason
- [Biden Goes Positive. Can Voters Handle It?]( â Jennifer Rubin, Washington Post
- [Powell Has Already Hinted at Where He Stands on âNeutralâ]( â Jonathan Levin, Bloomberg
- [How Jackson Hole Became an Economic Obsession]( â Jeanna Smialek, New York Times
- [It's About The Supply-Side: How The Phillips Curve 'Motte-and-Bailey' Misses and Misspecifies Inflation Dynamics]( â Skanda Amarnath, Employ America Copyright © 2023 The Fiscal Times, All rights reserved.
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