FT : Are we too pessimistic about America?

Are we too pessimistic about America?
There may be worries about tariffs and the rule of law but one cannot discount US resilience

Recently I’ve begun to think perhaps I’m too much of a gloom and doomer about the US economy and its place in the world. I was struck recently by a couple of pieces, one by Joel Kotkin on UnHerd, arguing that we shouldn’t conflate American government with American people, or America, the place. The former may be wildly dysfunctional now, but it hasn’t stopped the dynamism of US businesses, entrepreneurial zeal in America (still much higher than in Europe), or the fact that the checks and balances of the US system (which are admittedly being tested right now) remain the best alternative to Chinese authoritarianism.

I would agree with this (unless Europe gets its act together, launches eurobonds, and really integrates and becomes a political entity capable of anchoring the global economy and defending liberal democracy). I was struck at an investor conference I attended last week at how, despite the political turmoil in the US, American business is just getting on with things: reassessing risk, rejiggering supply chains, and realising that Donald Trump is temporary (barring a true constitututional crisis in which he refuses to leave after his second term).

Of course, there were huge worries about tariff uncertainties and the rule of law and the general economic and political uncertainty created by the US president. But there was also the can-do attitude that has always made the US the most dynamic country in the world, a place where you can still strive, fail, fall, dust yourself off, get up and try again tomorrow with the belief that things will get better. The conference I attended was in Florida by the way, and people didn’t seem nearly as pessimistic there as they are in New York. I am planning to devote more time this summer to getting out and talking to Main Street businesses and real people in red state America about how they see the current moment.

I was also struck by Andy Haldane’s piece in the FT last week entitled “The rise of the panicans”, which posits that we’ve all become too hysterically negative about the state of the world, and the US in particular. Haldane, who I would put right up there as one of the smartest economists in the world, rightly points out that many of us in the media and in financial circles have become “24/7 catastrophisers”. It’s a point that came home to me this past Friday, with the new US employment numbers coming in much stronger than expected. Now, we know jobs are a backward-looking indicator. And we also know that the real effects of tariffs, including inflation and supply shortages, won’t really hit for a few weeks (the last pre-tariff ships are sailing into port right now). Finally, China is looking more open to trade talks, which buoyed markets late last week.

I’m lucky to have my colleague Ed Luce back in the seat as my respondent today (don’t get too excited, this is a one-off!). So, Ed, my question to you is this: do you think predictions of a dismal summer in which inflation spikes and the economy falls into recession may turn out to be flat-out wrong? I know you, like me, have been down on Trump for a long time, but are we giving him too little credit here? Could we see him pull a positive rabbit out of the hat over the next few months? Or is this entire column just a desperate effort on my part to say something contrarian?