The latest Economist has a good summary of views within the US ruling class 
regarding Trump. While it says US capital fears a second Trump term because it 
brings with it the likelihood of greater instability and uncertainty at home 
and abroad - both bad for business - the evidence it musters suggests the 
relationship is more complex and ambivalent. 

While it's true many corporate CEO’s privately fret about Trump’s “populist” 
pandering to his base and campaign promises to further raise tariffs, restrict 
immigration, increase public spending and borrowing, and roll back the 
Democrats' clean energy and other regulatory initiatives, others note Trump's 
tax cuts and the restraints imposed on his administration by Wall Street during 
his first term and expect the same business-friendly policies to prevail if he 
is returned to office, notwithstanding that he is now surrounded by “true 
believers” rather than “sensible conservatives” drawn from the US political, 
military, and economic establishment.

-------------------------------------------------
Many CEOs fear a second Trump term would be worse than the first
Though they will only say so in private
The Economist
Jan 16th 2024

When Donald Trump left office three years ago, still huffing, puffing and 
plotting to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election, the leaders 
of most of America’s biggest corporations were only too happy to see the back 
of him. They wore their moral outrage like a badge of honour. True, they had 
conveniently put aside their earlier scruples about Mr Trump’s suitability for 
the White House, bought off by generous corporate and personal tax cuts in 
2017. True, many had cravenly turned a blind eye to his torching of 
environmental rules in support of a broad-brush regulatory bonfire. But his 
attempts to subvert American democracy, and the storming of the Capitol by his 
supporters on January 6th 2021, were a step too far.

With unusual unity, they huffed and puffed back. Manufacturers called the riots 
a “disgusting episode”. The Business Roundtable, a lobby group for big 
companies, called on Mr Trump to “put an end to the chaos”. Some prominent 
firms pledged not to provide financial support to the 147 Republican lawmakers 
who had refused to certify Mr Trump’s defeat.

Mr Trump’s runaway victory in the first bout of the Republican primary contest 
in Iowa on January 15th cemented his status as the party’s presumptive nominee. 
The polls suggest that in a head-to-head battle with President Joe Biden, he 
would win. But if there are murmurings of alarm about what a sequel to his 
chaotic presidency might mean for corporate America, this time they remain 
behind closed doors and off the record. Recently, Larry Summers, the pro-Biden 
former treasury secretary, urged CEOs to reject Mr Trump, noting that Italy’s 
markets did well in Benito Mussolini’s first few years in power—until they 
didn’t. Yet for the moment, most advisers and leaders of business associations 
counsel bosses to keep their heads down. Forget Il Duce. The message is: duck 
and cover.

There is rationale for lying low. For a start, with ten months to go before the 
elections, anything can happen. Health issues could force either candidate out 
of the race (combined, Messrs Biden and Trump have had 158 years on Earth, 
nearly two-thirds the age of America itself). Mr Trump has not only his 
Republican rivals and Mr Biden to contend with, but 91 felony counts across two 
state courts and two federal districts, which could cause havoc.

Staking out the moral high ground from corner offices may also be 
counter-productive. It could backfire on those who attack Mr Trump in public, 
and bolster his anti-elite appeal. In office, he was quick to retaliate when 
attacked (preferred weapon, CAPITALISED TWEETS!). With trust in big companies 
on the wane in recent decades, it has become easier for populists to whip up an 
anti-business hue and cry. The head of a prominent business organisation 
ruefully admits that if he took a public stand against Mr Trump’s campaign 
proposals, “the former president would be delighted.”

In the past few years, as the relationship between big business and Mr Trump’s 
MAGA Republicans has soured, executives have learned the hard way the risks of 
sticking their necks out. A public-relations adviser to CEOs thought a year ago 
that it would be relatively easy for business to disown Mr Trump because of his 
legal travails. But then came the unofficial boycott of Bud Light, a beer, by 
right-wing culture warriors offended by its marketing campaign with a 
transgender influencer. The PR man realised the power of the mob to hurt the 
bottom line. “We are back to walking on eggshells,” he says—caught between 
progressive employees and customers demanding that firms take a stand against 
Mr Trump, and fear of the MAGA masses.

Then there is Mr Biden. When pushed to express a preference, many 
businesspeople say they see him as a steadier pair of hands in policymaking and 
geopolitics. But they are fed up with his administration’s anti-business 
rhetoric (Gina Raimondo, the commerce secretary, is an honourable exception). 
That makes them more tolerant of Mr Trump. Of the two, Mr Biden is “hands down 
a bigger threat to prosperity”, says a billionaire financier.

Even Mr Biden’s backers rail against the ”big is bad” stance of his 
trustbusters. Those trustbusters’ bite has not been as bad as their bark; many 
of their cases have failed in court. But the bark alone has chilled dealmaking, 
laments an investment banker. As for the risk that Mr Trump could “weaponise” 
administrative agencies against his corporate enemies, Neil Bradley of the US 
Chamber of Commerce counters that Mr Biden, too, has urged his administration 
to crack down on “junk fees” and price gouging in industries ranging from 
airlines to banking and health care. Mr Bradley draws few distinctions between 
either party’s economic populism.

Some business folk angrily dismiss efforts to draw parallels between the 
dangers of Mr Trump and Mr Biden. Calling it “whataboutism”, they quietly 
profess to be terrified by the prospects of a second Trump administration. In 
the first one, the former president may have pushed radical policies, but 
sensible conservatives in his administration, as well as his own predilection 
for chaos, got the better of him. Now he is surrounded bytrue believers, such 
as those at the Heritage Foundation, a pro-MAGA think-tank whose job, says one 
business leader, is “to prevent the amelioration of the Trump agenda”.

In other words, Mr Trump has plenty of people in place to advance a plan that 
could shake up the economic framework on which American business has prospered 
for generations. The pillars of that plan of most immediate concern to 
corporate America are trade, migration, the fiscal deficit and public debt, and 
clean energy.

A trade war is the most palpable worry. The self-described “Tariff Man” has 
floated the idea of imposing a baseline 10% levy on all imports. These would be 
raised, “an eye for an eye”, in retaliation against any country with a higher 
tariff. China is the main target. Businesspeople fear his goal is to terminate, 
unilaterally, trade with China, which would be a nightmare for any firm exposed 
to the country. Such a trade policy would be far more draconian than that of 
the Biden administration, which has kept Mr Trump’s tariffs but worked with 
allies such as Japan and the Netherlands to restrict export of strategic goods 
such as advanced semiconductors without cutting China off altogether.

Some hope that Mr Trump is posturing. They take solace in the fact that 
Congress, not the White House, regulates commerce and that courts adjudicate 
trade law. Yet Kent Lassman, who contributed a bold essay in support of free 
trade to the Heritage Foundation’s pro-Trump “Project 2025” road map, thinks 
the former president means it, even if it disrupts America’s existing trade 
treaties. Mr Trump “is not changing his stripes”; his sense that everything is 
a deal and that America is victimised is stronger than ever. His chief advisers 
on trade, protectionist hawks such as Robert Lighthizer and Peter Navarro, 
“know how to play off of those beliefs”, Mr Lassman says.

Mr Trump’s threat to round up and deport millions of undocumented migrants has 
also alarmed businesses—not only for humane reasons but also because of a 
chronic worker shortage afflicting many American firms. In November America had 
8.8m job openings. The number of unemployed is 6.3m.

Mr Trump’s harshest proposals would be hard to implement. He made a similar 
mass-deportation promise on the campaign trail in 2016 but was frustrated by 
court challenges and other pushback. Still, any pickup in expulsions could hurt 
industries such as farming, leisure, retail and hospitality that rely on 
low-cost labour, executives say. However important it is to maintain strong 
borders, whipping up anti-immigrant fervour for political ends jeopardises 
legal migration. That hurts businesses’ ability to recruit skilled and 
unskilled workers alike.

Government debt also looms large in CEOs’ minds. They praised Mr Trump’s Tax 
Cuts and Jobs Act, which reduced corporate-tax rates from 35% to 21%. But they 
fear that neither Mr Trump nor Mr Biden has credible plans to stop the deficit 
from swelling. If Mr Trump pursues his most unorthodox economic ideas, there 
are fears that a loss of confidence could jolt the treasury market, pushing up 
borrowing costs and sending the dollar into a tailspin.

Greenbacks and green leafs

Some think that is going too far. “The world has insatiable demand for US 
treasuries,” notes a pro-Biden Wall Street grandee. But a few corporate 
advisers raise the possibility that an unrestrained Mr Trump could trigger an 
American version of Britain’s bond-market sell-off in 2022, when investors lost 
faith in the economic stewardship of Liz Truss, a prime minister who was 
outlasted by a lettuce. “I have parliament envy,” the leader of a lobby group 
chuckles—unlike American leaders, he observes wryly, fiscally irresponsible 
British ones such as Ms Truss can be quickly forced out of office.

America’s environmental trajectory under Mr Trump is another concern. The 
former president, like the current one, would be expected to double down on 
industrial policy. But unlike Mr Biden, whose signature effort has been the 
green-tinged Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), Mr Trump remains a climate sceptic 
who is likely to try to gut clean-energy programmes. In this case, he may face 
pushback from his own party. Many of the clean-energy projects predicated on 
funding from the IRA are in Republican-leaning states. Business, too, is likely 
to oppose a reversal of Mr Biden’s green agenda. Mr Bradley says that though 
industrial policy writ large remains “incredibly problematic”, government 
programmes that induce changes of behaviour are justified when technology is at 
an early stage, as with clean energy.

If Mr Trump’s policy proposals directly related to business do not inspire 
confidence, his efforts to undermine faith in the judiciary, rule of law, NATO 
and other alliances, including with Ukraine, raise big questions about 
America’s role in the world. Some executives shrug this off. A few weeks ago 
the head of an international asset manager met a group of American bankers and 
found them “shockingly sanguine” about the election. They told him that 
whatever the outcome, the system would hold; that stockmarkets had done well 
under both presidents; and that the American economy was in such rude health 
that it could survive even electoral shenanigans. “Maybe their point is that 
business has transcended politics in America,” he says. He adds pensively: 
“Maybe they are right.”

Or maybe they aren’t. Michael Strain of the American Enterprise Institute, a 
pro-business think-tank, says that Mr Trump’s populism makes political violence 
in America more likely this year. That would hurt business. The head of a 
global risk-advisory firm says that uncertainty over Mr Trump’s geopolitical 
agenda will haunt multinationals, making it hard for them to decide, for 
example, whether or not to allocate resources to China or perhaps even Russia. 
Any sense that he is weakening the rule of law and the sanctity of contracts 
and treaties would ripple around the world. “Things like the rule of law are 
gossamer concepts that disappear just like that,” says a New York financier.

His colleague, an expert on geopolitics, says that American businessmen rarely 
step back to consider how much the country’s global influence, including the 
hegemony of the dollar and the defence of maritime shipping routes, underpins 
their companies’ prosperity. Ron Temple, chief market strategist at Lazard, an 
investment bank, says the gap between right and left has widened in America, 
amplifying policy variability and becoming too important a factor for business 
to overlook. “There is almost a sense of complacency, married with entitlement, 
combined with presumptuousness,” he concludes. If anyone is likely to shake 
corporate America out of such numbness, it is Mr Trump. 

https://www.economist.com/business/2024/01/16/many-ceos-fear-a-second-trump-term-would-be-worse-than-the-first



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