The Road to Trump Began With Reaganomics & the Loss of the Middle Class, Economist Says
![John Komlos singles out the](/sites/default/files/legacy-files/styles/story_hero/public/Kolmos-Trumpism.jpg?itok=6OSizTC_)
Donald Trump's rise to the White House can be traced to President Reagan鈥檚 economic policies that 鈥渉ollowed out the middle class.鈥
That鈥檚 according to an economic historian who laid out a slew of sobering data on income, taxes, Chinese imports, debt and more that he connected to across-the-board tax cuts that began in 1980.
鈥(Reaganomics) paved the way for Trumpism,鈥 John Komlos, a former Duke economics professor and professor emeritus of economics and economic history at the University of Munich, said last week during a talk at the John Hope Franklin Center. 鈥淭hat to me is where our problems started, because it created a great amount of inequality.鈥
Komlos cited 鈥渆conomic dislocations鈥 in three Rustbelt states as one of the main reasons Trump won over voters who had gone for Barak Obama in 2008 and 2012.
This dislocation includes low and stagnating wages, increasing indebtedness, downward social mobility, declining relative incomes 鈥渁nd the hopelessness accompanying them while at the other end of the income distribution the economy was simply booming.鈥
鈥淧eople without a high school diploma, they are really hurting,鈥 Komlos said. 鈥淭hey are the ones that Donald Trump loves. Some people are doing marvelously, and other people are really behind the eight ball. And Trump would not have won otherwise.鈥
Komlos said he鈥檚 met people who support Trump simply for 鈥渧engeful reasons.鈥
鈥淚 can understand that; the system didn鈥檛 treat them well.鈥
He cited a three-decade process that started with Reaganomics and its tax cuts, which he says favored the rich by increasing their wealth and political clout. In tax year 1985, for example, he said the top 1 percent gained a $350,000 windfall while the typical household received $3,500, and the poor received a couple of hundred dollars (all in today鈥檚 dollars).
Reaganomics also hurt the middle class by crushing unions, he says.
Komlos blamed Democrats, too. Financial deregulation and hyper-globalization under President Clinton accelerated the process of hurting the middle class, according to the economist.
鈥淕eorge Bush Jr. continued to pamper the superrich with his tax policies,鈥 Komlos says. 鈥淭he process culminated with Barack Obama鈥檚 bailing out the super-rich and his disregard of Main Street. This is fermentation for people in despair.鈥
Komlos said the United States blew an opportunity to drastically restructure its economy and make it fairer when the bottom fell out in 2008-2009.
鈥淭he rich and powerful were on their knees, they were bankrupt,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the only time when you could have really put the economy on a bigger path.鈥
He added that the taxpayer bailout 鈥渨as the biggest transfer of wealth from bottom to the top in history of mankind.鈥
And Komlos said Obama鈥檚 choice of Timothy Geithner, a former president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, to be his first secretary of the treasury was the 鈥渨orst decision Obama made in his life.鈥
鈥(Geithner) didn鈥檛 care about Main Street, he cared about banking,鈥 Komlos said. 鈥淥bama is not blameless by any means.鈥
He noted that Citibank and Bank of America had a combined market value of $24 billion in March 2009. Today they are worth $400 billion.
鈥淭he taxpayer didn鈥檛 get a cent of the capital gains,鈥 Komlos said.
鈥淲e鈥檙e in bad shape folks, we鈥檙e in much worse shape than we think 鈥 because all these problems are not even recognized.鈥
He added: 鈥淒o not blame Hillary鈥檚 鈥榖asket of deplorables鈥 for heaven鈥檚 sake. They are the victims. They did not create the system and they do not understand the system and they are being manipulated in a big way.
鈥淢y argument is it鈥檚 the economic policies that led to the deplorables, and vengeance on us.鈥
The and 老牛影视 sponsored last week鈥檚 talk.