The 6 Ways Trump Tried To Control the Economy Last Week
From defense contracting and mortgage finance to credit, housing, and monetary policy, Trump is leaning heavily on command-and-control economics.
In just the past week, President Donald Trump has ordered defense companies to halt dividends and stock buybacks, and limited executive compensation to $5 million a year; ordered Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to buy $200 billion of mortgage-backed securities; ordered an array of energy firms to invest in Venezuelan oil infrastructure, called for a 10 percent cap on credit card interest rates; announced steps to ban institutional purchases of single-family homes; and opened a criminal investigation into Jerome Powell's handling of Federal Reserve building renovations in an attempt to influence monetary policy.
The pace of pronouncements and diktats coming out of the White House is dizzying. Many of the president's actions are explicitly designed to direct private investment, in stark opposition to free market principles. Let's examine these moves one by one.
Defense contractors have notoriously abused the taxpayer for years through waste and cost overruns, but imposing restrictions on dividends and buybacks is simply telling a corporation how to dispose of private property. One could argue that firms doing roughly 70 percent of their business with the U.S. government must accept certain restrictions as a condition of that business. But this is no different from the government dictating the composition of a company's board or executive team. If defense companies can't reward their shareholders, investors will simply take their capital elsewhere. The limits on executive compensation are draconian—if executive compensation is held below its market equilibrium, the result will be a shortage of qualified people willing to take the job.
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are currently under the U.S. government's conservatorship and have been since 2008, so Trump can technically tell them what to do. And this isn't the first time that the government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs) have been used for political ends. Trump wants the GSEs to buy mortgage-backed securities to push mortgage rates lower, betting that even a modest decline would ease the affordability crisis and help Republicans in the midterms. This strategy forces the GSEs to assume greater risk in their mortgage portfolios—the same dynamic that led to their collapse during the 2008 financial crisis.
Venezuela is often reported to have the world's largest oil reserves, though many experts doubt how much is actually recoverable. Trump wants lower gasoline prices, so he is interested in exploring and producing Venezuela's oil alongside U.S. energy firms. Oil executives expressed doubt about the reserves, and more importantly, working with the Venezuelan government, which has been untrustworthy. Businesses exist to make money, yet Trump wants the industry to plunge into a likely money-losing venture to serve political goals.
The 10 percent cap on credit card interest rates will lead to a shortage of credit, especially for lower-income consumers, who will be pushed toward payday lenders, title lenders, and black-market loan sharks. It will have the added effect of practically eliminating points and rewards programs at the credit card companies, since most of those rewards are subsidized by consumers running loan balances with high interest rates. The policy would fundamentally reshape the credit card industry, and not for the better. Most consumers are happy with their credit cards, especially the rewards programs.
It's widely known that some institutional investors, such as Blackstone, have been buying single-family homes en masse and acting as landlords. Most people are ideologically opposed to the idea of a corporate landlord, even if there are benefits to scale. The internet has made a mountain out of a molehill over Blackstone's residential real estate purchases, which represent only a tiny fraction of the housing stock. The fear is that institutional ownership will drive prices and rents even higher, though historically, scale has often enabled efficiencies and lowered costs.
Lastly, President Trump strongly dislikes Fed Chair Jerome Powell, believing that the Federal Reserve cut interest rates before the 2024 election to influence the outcome. Plus, Trump has divergent views about monetary policy, to say the least, wanting interest rates close to 1 percent. Powell's term ends in four months, but Trump wants him forcibly removed from the chairmanship now. But even if the president succeeds in ousting him, Powell still can remain on the Board of Governors and influence monetary policy decisions.
And this is just one week. Let's just say that laissez faire isn't in Trump's vocabulary.
In his second term as president, Trump is assuming autocratic powers, ordering around the private sector to do his bidding. There are no contemporary parallels in American history, and Trump is setting a precedent that will shape presidential power long after he leaves office.
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I suppose ... if you walk around all terrified of ghosts and other things that can't hurt you
I hope you're not attempting to conflate these things to something that "can't hurt you". Anytime any president attempts to stretch the scope of their power the intent is to hurt you...
again with the what's real and what is not though.
Just for the record:
https://thefederalist.com/2026/01/13/2025-inflation-was-lowest-since-last-time-trump-was-president/
Better than Biden, but still bad, isn’t good.
Most of these ideas are pretty dumb but mostly bully pulpit not dictate.
Bully pulpit is coercion. Always has been, always will be, and Trumpies certainly believed that when Biden used it.
Any President who thinks it moral, wise, and legal to unilaterally cap interest rates on credit cards and change hundreds of tariffs daily, isn't using the bully pulpit just to make suggestions.
Bully pulpit is coercion. Always has been, always will be, and Trumpies certainly believed that when Biden used it.
Except when they were pointing out how conspicuously absent from the pulpit, literally or figuratively, he was.
Which many of us have held in greater concern since HRC lost her turn and Reason seems to have recently discovered concern for, after assuring us it wasn't a thing, in Venezuela during Maduro's absence.
"Bully pulpit is coercion..."
SGT.
Is.
Full.
Of.
Shit.
Jerome Powell is an unelected agent of the party that opposes Trump, whom Trump can't fire, and who wields excessive amounts of political and financial power. Shocking that Trump would want to go after him.
I mean is the Federal Reserve now just a permanent instrument of considerable power for the Democratic party, or is there some sort of reform that could at least let the two parties take turns wielding it? Obviously I want it gone, but that isn't happening, so what next?
Of course you acknowledge that Trump only wants to go after the power of the fed because he wants it for himself so that it can be added to one of his own political powers, right?
Yes. Which is exactly how it is currently being used by Powell and the Democratic party. I want the Fed gone. Gone. Gone. Gone. But at the very least, it existing as a permanent weapon of the Democratic Party is worse than having it as a weapon of whomever happens to be President.
No. I believe him when he says that Powell is a jerk working against the economic interests of the US. If we had a Fed Chairman that was competent and honest this wouldn’t be happening.
Jerome Powell is an unelected agent of the party that opposes Trump
He was appointed by Trump.
Trump displays a pattern of https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Splitting_(psychology) in his relationships with his appointees. This pattern is associated with several personality disorders.
Walz +7
Also, pathetic and desperate. You may fuck off now.
Scientific American also notes that susceptibility to “cult‑of‑personality” politics correlates with:
- Need for belonging.
- Identity fusion with the leader.
- Psychological susceptibility to strongman narratives.
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/trumps-personality-cult-plays-a-part-in-his-political-appeal/
Oh, goody a cite from Scientific Wokeness!
You're about 25 years late, and your TDS is working overtime.
Sevo, you avoided coprolalia in your response. Its substantive content was no better than your usual exudations; nevertheless, congratulations! Did you follow my advice to substitute private hand-flapping and vocalizations for coprolalia when you feel the need for self-soothing and stimming?
is there some sort of reform that could at least let the two parties take turns wielding it?
That's . . . a terrible idea.
Pants on head retarded take. Powell was appointed to the board under Obama, then promoted to the chair under Trump, then re-appointed under Biden. And despite Trump's toddler-esque victim narrative that Powell cut interest rates to help Biden, Biden wanted them cut over the summer but Powell waited until the fall until it was too late for the effects to be felt by the election, and he cut rates because the #s suggested it was prudent. So tell me how exactly Dems control the Fed.
And none of that justifies criminal charges, ya moron. Funny how everyone inconvenient to Trump is suddenly a criminal whereas all the actual criminals chummy with Trump get pardons.
There are no criminal charges, faggot. There is an investigation because Powell has ignored multiple requests to review his $3 billion renovation budget. So an investigation is the next step.
Does that clear things up for you, faggot?
Were they:
1. Shutting down non-essential businesses
2. Closing public gathering spaces
3. Mandating everyone stand 6 ft. apart
4. Declaring a moratorium on evictions
5. Encouraging corporate vaccine mandates
6. Preventing shuttered non-essential businesses from shifting gears to producing common, OTC necessities
? No?
Okay then how about:
1. Banning plastic bags, straws, and single-use containers and utensils
2. Strangling coal production with regulation and telling coal miners to learn to code
3. Regulating vehicle emissions of all vehicles foreign and domestic
4. Banning gas stoves
5. Strangling nuclear energy production and telling energy producers to build windmills
6. Banning ICE production/sales
? No there either?
How about:
1. Banning foi gras
2. Banning farrowing crates
3. Passing $300+B in nutrition spending under the $500B farm bill
4. Federally subsidizing CA's agriculture through irrigation subsidies under the CVP, State Water Board, and SAFER programs to compete with...
5. Milk Market orders to control the production, price, and distribution of milk
6. Funding Market Facilitation and Underserved and Small Producers programs to "minimize" CA's regulator and production costs relative to China, Midwestern US, and other nations' producers
? No?
Seems an awful lot like lots of administrations have done lots of manipulations for a lot longer than a few weeks and you're overly concerned about these six, some of which are strictly internal to government spending and contracts, speculative rather than longstanding historical fact, and/or comparatively trivial compared to *massive*, both acutely and chronically, federal interventions.
"But they did it worse!"
Of course, to a cultist, opposing Trump's policies because of one's favouring a free market makes one a leftist.
How is directing something not free-market in the first place a policy against free-market?
It's only free-market when [D]s make the call or what?
If one was actually for free-markets instead of a TDS-cultist they'd blame the existence of Gov-Mortgages, Oil Regulations and The Federal Reserve.
Fuckwit, if something is not particularly a free market but your policy make it less free, then it's a policy against free market.
Of course the problem you have is that your professed love of freedom conflicts with your actual love of Dear Leader.
You either have a free market or you don’t (for any given sector of the economy). It’s kinda binary since the second the government puts its finger in the pie, it’s no longer a free market.
If you don’t have a free market, you can’t really make it “less” free.
If you don’t have a free market, you can’t really make it “less” free.
Even if you don't necessarily believe that, spitballing over millions of dollars doesn't really compare to *completely* shutting down entire sectors to the tune of billions of dollars within two weeks and collecting/disbursing hundreds of billions of dollars over decades of thumbing the scale.
Personally, a trillion-dollar estimate of the damage done by the department of education would be conservative. Imagine going back to 1979 and saying "Between 2000 and 2022, the newly-founded Department of Education will easily consume a budget totaling over $2T and, in 2022, whether out of genuine ignorance, legal prudence, or popular sentiment, de facto, de jure, or de rigueur, future-SCOTUS' historic first black *and* female nominee, a Harvard Graduate, will be unable to answer the question 'What is a woman?'"
Yeah, it beggars belief.
“ You either have a free market or you don’t (for any given sector of the economy). It’s kinda binary since the second the government puts its finger in the pie, it’s no longer a free market.”
Only if your world is an absurd, absolutist fantasy. In the real world, everything is more something or less something, not pure yes or no.
Now that scale suddenly became a thing to TDS-cultists; What's the economic costs on those 6-Items and how does that scale in comparison to Bidens $1.2 TRILLION ?Infrastructure? bill?
On the scale one would have to say Trump is less-this-something than recent precedence.
I'll say it again. Trump wouldn't look so good if the left wasn't so horrible.
Course TDS-Cultists never want to acknowledge the 'scale' unless it scores a point against Trump.
Evidently you feel required to make a stupid argument for the sake of disagreement.
SRG2: 'I'm a lying pile of steaming TDS-addled shit!'
How would you know? You’ve never favored a free market. You favor a globalist system like they do in the EU.
You come from Britain, right? Isn’t that your claim?
Non-sequitur. Just because Dems are shit doesn't excuse Trump. And all that COVID nonsense happened under Trump, and happened in both red and blue states.
BS Lie. All that COVID nonsense happened under Biden/Fauci and [D] State/Local BS.
BS Lie. It does excuse Trump because Trump isn't progressing the BS central-planning; he just directing it. WTF do you think the job of the president is? Just to go along with the [D]emon-crap in government?
ll that COVID nonsense happened under Biden/Fauci
Fuckwit, who was president for the first year or so of Covid?
Asswipe, and who did none of that? Fuck off and die.
The nonsense came from Biden, and democrat governors, ‘fuckwit’.
When were lockdowns and mask rules first implemented?
They were implemented in spring of 2020 by STATE GOVERNORS. There was no federal orders for masking and lockdowns.
Why do you try and play these games here? Did you really think you wouldn’t get slapped down like I’m slapping you down right now?
Best you shut up and learn to obey.
LOL - you keyboard warrior, you - 300lb of delivery pizza
You're unfamiliar with David Brin's polemical judo. You've just been thrown.
https://www.kff.org/covid-19/comparing-trump-and-biden-on-covid-19/
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9115435/
Hurry off - that may be the doorbell with today's meat-lover's extra large for you. Did you get the free Coke or do you prefer Mountain Dew?
I didn't hear Powell confirm or deny whether the over-budget "remodel, refurbish, etc." could potentially serve as a valid summons to a grand jury. Investigating his statements under oath to that very same project at a Congressional hearing. Especially, as I understand it. A few very extravagant offerings in the plan that Powell wasn't candid about with his testimony. All of which is to say the current estimates are about a billion (with a "B") over what was originally set as the price of the "improvements."
So which one of those is the policy where Trump is expanding Government intervention? Seems to me all those powers were put there due to [D] legislation so unless you've got some example of Trump actually expanding Gov powers into some already free-market area you haven't got sh*t except JUST-TRUMP can't do that.
5 out of 6 is not bad.
Yes, Republican socialism is horrible. However, regarding the Powel, cost-overrun investigation, why do so many reason editors want to look away and not investigate cost overruns. The libertarian stance is to investigate all cost overruns and all wasted government spending. Maybe if they investigated more cost overruns we will have less.
"...why do so many reason editors want to look away and not investigate cost overruns..."
Seems TDS-addled steaming piles of lying shit flock together.
Make that seven ways: "...The era of student loan leniency in the US is officially over," reports Bloomberg. "During the Covid-19 emergency, mandatory payments on federal student loans were paused to shield borrowers from the financial repercussions of missed bills. Even after the economy recovered, multiple extensions and a grace period meant they could get away with ignoring their debts. President Donald Trump's return to office has brought that period to a close..."
The Lefty elite can't stomach that the POTUS might actually attempt to do something good for the average American, like trying to fix the "Affordabilty" crisis, as the chattering class refers to it. Hell, he might even succeed, if gas prices are any indication.
He’s making the affordability crisis worse, not better, with his policies. Then he tries to force others to cover his failure.
Look at agriculture. Tariffs lead to lower sales and profits for the farmers (particularly soybean farmers), so Trump gives them billions to cover the loss. But the underlying problem remains because it is the policy that is causing the problem.
Then you should be extremely happy Trump isn't honoring those payments huh?
https://sustainableagriculture.net/blog/trump-denies-over-2-billion-in-payments-owed-to-30000-farmers/
Or are you going to play the d*mned if he does and d*mned if he doesn't game?
I have not fallen into the trap that Trump can only be viewed as Orange Man Bad or joined his sycophant equivalent of UAW committee men defending his every policy. When BlackRock buys houses and rents them out, they have no interest in the renters obeying the community's ordinances. I agree with Trump on this move. Trump needs Powell to cut interest rates to offset the adverse effects of his overbroad tariff policies. I say "over broad," but maybe "incoherent" might also apply. He TACOS on tariffs because of his short-sighted view on their impacts.