Research Briefing | Apr 12, 2024

Trumponomics: The economics of a second Trump presidency

Continuing our series of analyses on the 2024 election, we modeled the macroeconomic impact of a second Donald Trump presidency. If the former president wins on Election Day, he will most likely return to the White House with Republican majorities in the House of Representatives and Senate. Assuming full Republican control of government after the 2024 election, we constructed two scenarios that bookend a range of outcomes for the US economy. Both would likely push inflation above the baseline.

What you will learn:

  • Our first “limited Trump” scenario assumes a Republican-led Congress extends the personal tax cuts under the 2017 tax law and enacts higher spending levels, while the president uses his presidential powers to reduce immigration and impose targeted tariffs on China and the EU. These policy changes raise the level of real GDP 0.6% higher than our baseline in 2027 and add as much as 0.3ppts to the Federal Reserve’s preferred measure of inflation – the core personal consumption expenditure deflator – in late 2027 and early 2028.
  • The second “full-blown Trump” scenario assumes Republicans prevent the expiration of the personal tax cuts under the 2017 tax law and cut corporate taxes, and lawmakers agree to even higher spending levels. At the same time, the president curbs immigration to a greater extent and imposes across-the-board tariffs on major trading partners. In this scenario, inflation would be even higher, while the renewed trade wars more than offset the benefit from lower taxes, dragging down the level of real GDP as much as 1.8% lower relative to our baseline. The economy slows to a pace that is well below its potential growth rate.

For more insights on the 2024 US Presidential Election, click here.

Back to Resource Hub

Related Services

Post

Can politics and the Fed mix or is it oil and water?

Extensive academic research shows the importance of central bank independence in reducing inflation. Those institutions with strong operational independence from political figures have been more successful in keeping inflation expectations anchored and achieving lower inflation.

Find Out More

Post

Trump presidency would be a headwind for US manufacturing

A second Trump presidency would directly harm US manufacturing through two channels: repeal of President Biden's Inflation Reduction Act (IRA); and the enactment of new tariffs on goods. Those actions, combined with the overall macro impacts of the complete Trump agenda, will negatively impact manufacturing to the extent that the stated Trump campaign promises, as modelled in our two Trump presidency macro scenarios, are implemented in full.

Find Out More

Post

Trumponomics – the economics of a second Trump presidency | Beyond the Headlines

The 2024 US Presidential Election is less than seven months away. In this week’s Beyond the Headlines, Bernard Yaros, Lead Economist, outlines two scenarios for the US economy if former President Donald Trump returns to the White House and Republicans sweep Congress.

Find Out More