WSJ editorial warns Elon Musk’s 'blow-it-all-up' ideas will devastate U.S. economy
Alex Henderson, AlterNet
November 18, 2024 12:59PM ET
Tesla CEO and X owner Elon Musk speaks as Republican presidential nominee and former U.S. president Donald Trump looks on during a rally at the site of the July assassination attempt against Trump, in Butler, Pennsylvania, U.S., October 5, 2024. REUTERS/Carlos Barria TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY
President-elect Donald Trump ally Elon Musk is telling him that the person he nominates for U.S. Treasury secretary should not be someone who favors "business as usual."
The advice has sent shock waves through the conservative Wall Street Journal.
The newspaper’seditorial board on Sunday emphasized that "disruption" at the U.S. Treasury Department could be risky and dangerous for the country's economy.
The board argued, "Our concern isn't personalities so much as Mr. Musk's apparent belief in economic-policy disruption for its own sake. Treasury isn't the Education Department, or Defense, and financial markets don't want to trade one form of policy uncertainty for another. Steady and knowledgeable economic policy hands are needed if Mr. Trump wants to succeed."
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In the months ahead, the WSJ editorial board stressed, the U.S. economy will "require careful judgment, not blow-it-all-up rhetoric."
"One risk ahead is the tax bill that needs to pass next year to extend the 2017 tax reform," the WSJ board writes. "With narrow GOP majorities in Congress, that won't be easy. All the more so because Mr. Trump campaigned on new tax cuts, on tips, overtime, Social Security benefits, that will be impossible to afford unless Republicans want to sign up for an even larger deficit blowout than under President Biden."
The next U.S. treasury secretary, the WSJ board stressed, "needs an understanding of financial markets, which nowadays are global."
"A blowup in the foreign-exchange markets somewhere can affect the U.S. economy, and new financial investments like crypto need careful watching," the board argued.
"Mr. Trump has promised to ease political control over these markets, but no one should think they are risk-free. Blowups somewhere are inevitable, and a treasury secretary needs the experience to deal with the fallout in a way that reassures markets."
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