Fareed Zakaria: Trump, Japan, China, Mexico not killing us
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/donald-trump-is-selling-america-short/2015/09/17/95678566-5d78-11e5-8e9e-dce8a2a2a679_story.html
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...In his speech on foreign policy this week, Trump explained that
America is being bested by countries such as China, Japan and Mexico because their leaders are smarter, more cunning and sharper than our leaders. Theyre killing us, he often says.
This is an odd moment to make these charges because
the reality is almost entirely the opposite. The United States is more dominant on the global economic landscape than at any point since the heyday of Bill Clintons presidency perhaps even more so...
Last quarter, the U.S. economy grew at a 3.7 percent clip.
Annual growth now is almost twice that of Europe and four times that of Japan. Unemployment is at 5.1 percent, the lowest in seven years. The deficit as a percentage of gross domestic product (2.8 percent in 2014) is at its lowest since 2007.
The U.S. has come out of the 2008 crisis better than all the others, says Ruchir Sharma, head of global macro investing at Morgan Stanley. Americans have reduced their debt burden more than the Europeans, while
Chinas debt has skyrocketed to extremely dangerous levels.
..
To compare the United States performance and leadership to Mexicos, Japans and Chinas is particularly ill-timed.
Trump might be stuck in a 1980s time warp on Japan. When his The Art of the Deal was published in 1987, Americans were envious of
Japans brilliant leaders, who were said to be outsmarting the United States at every turn. Since then, Japan has become the poster child for economic stagnation and political paralysis. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has been unwilling or unable to get his promised reforms enacted, and the countrys economy continues to shrink.
Mexico is watching its growth collapse. While its president, Enrique Peña Nieto, is a courageous and intelligent leader who has made some very bold decisions, he has also made some significant missteps. Most important, the country was ill-prepared for plunging oil prices that have battered government revenues and growth.
China has had three decades of supercharged growth and competent government policy. But in the past few years, Beijing went on a borrowing binge, running up its total debt to levels that are unprecedented, according to Sharma. And in the past two months it has made mistakes in managing both its equity markets and currency mistakes that have cost $400 billion, the Financial Times reports.
Of course, the United States has problems that are worrying, such as wage stagnation and low labor-force participation. But the important comparison is not to some ideal fantasy of what America might be but to other countries in the real world. And the facts show, Mr. Trump, were killing them .