Tag: economist

  • White House economist gives plan to control avian flu, lower egg prices

    White House economist gives plan to control avian flu, lower egg prices

    The White House is working toward a plan to control the avian flu, which will help lower egg prices that have skyrocketed due to inflation and how the Biden administration “killed all the chickens” to contain the spread of the disease, National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett said Sunday.

    Hassett appeared on CBS’ “Face the Nation,” where he said that he and Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins are “working with all the best people in government, including academics around the country and around the world” to have a plan ready for President Donald Trump next week regarding the disease.

    “The Biden plan was to just, you know, kill chickens, and they spent billions of dollars just randomly killing chickens within a perimeter where they found a sick chicken,” he said.

    Hassett said the plan being worked on in the Trump administration is to “have better ways with biosecurity and medication and so on, to make sure that the perimeter doesn’t have to kill the chickens.”

    EGG FARMERS ARE FACING THE ‘WORST BIRD FLU OUTBREAK’ IN ‘HISTORY,’ INDUSTRY LEADERS FEAR

    The White House is working toward a plan to control the avian flu, National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett said. (Reuters/Dado Ruvic, File / Reuters Photos)

    “So having a smart perimeter is what we’re working on, and we’re finalizing the ideas about how to do that with the best scientists in government,” Hassett said. “And that’s the kind of thing that should have happened a year ago, and if it had, then egg prices would be, you know, a lot better than they are now.”

    Hassett also addressed the “very large” inflation problem, which he attributed to former President Joe Biden.

    Kevin Hassett

    White House Council of Economic Advisers chairman Kevin Hassett speaks to the media during a press briefing at the White House on Feb. 22, 2018, in Washington, D.C.  (Mark Wilson/Getty Images / Getty Images)

    “We saw the consumer price index come out, and we found out that the stagflation that was created by the policies of President Biden was way worse than we thought,” Hassett said. “Over the last three months, across all goods, including eggs, the average inflation rate was 4.6%, way above target, and an acceleration at the end of the Biden term.”

    FIXING AMERICA’S CHICKEN AND EGG CRISIS

    Average egg prices have risen 15% since January and are up 53% year-over-year, according to the latest consumer price index, released Wednesday. The average price of a dozen Large Grade A eggs is nearing $5.00, as tracked by the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. 

    The White House has previously said the Biden administration contributed to the egg supply shortage by directing the killing of over 100 million chickens.

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    Sources tell FOX Business the culling of infected flocks is current U.S. protocol, but more research and development is needed to control and even prevent outbreaks, such as vaccinating birds. 

    Fox Business’ Suzanne O’Halloran contributed to this report.

  • White House economist says reciprocal tariff negotiations with other countries underway

    White House economist says reciprocal tariff negotiations with other countries underway

    National Economic Council director Kevin Hassett indicated that conversations with “other countries” on reciprocal tariffs are ongoing, telling the press that it remains a “high priority” for President Donald Trump.

    “Reciprocal tariffs are absolutely a high priority for the president, [they] have been forever. You know, our trading partners charge us way more in tariffs than we charge them. And it’s something he talked about before,” Hassett said in a White House press gaggle Wednesday morning.

    “And there’s got to be a lot more action on it today,” he continued. “We even started to have negotiations with other countries. Early this morning I was doing that.”

    Trump’s 25% tariffs on Mexico and Canada could take effect next month after both countries were granted a 30-day pause; the U.S. and China have enacted reciprocal across-the-board 10% tariffs as a phone call looms between Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping; and just this week, Trump announced 25% tariffs on aluminum and steel imports.

    TRUMP IS PLAYING A DANGEROUS TARIFF GAME DESPITE HIS ‘REALLY STRONG’ AGENDA, U.S. ECONOMIST WARNS

    Tariffs are taxes levied on imported goods and services. While they historically played a more significant role in contributing to federal tax revenue, developed countries have moved away from relying on tariffs as a main source of funding and have shifted to other forms of taxes – such as income, payroll or sales taxes.

    White House National Economic Council director Kevin Hassett indicated that reciprocal tariff negotiations are ongoing with “other countries.” (Getty Images)

    In the U.S., tariffs are collected by the Customs and Border Protection (CBP) agency, which is a subagency of the Department of Homeland Security. Trump has proposed creating an “External Revenue Service” that would be responsible for collecting tariffs, though it’s unclear whether that plan will move forward.

    President Trump has also discussed using tariffs to take the U.S. economy back to its “golden age,” potentially eliminating the federal income tax and predominantly supporting government spending with tariffs.

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    “We were talking about just laying the groundwork for discussions over reciprocal trade,” Hassett said further of Wednesday’s alleged meetings. “The person leading those discussions today was Howard Lutnick, of course. But I was on those calls too.”

    It’s all “a work in progress,” Hassett added. “Everybody’s talking about it right now. And actually, the conversations with other countries began this morning really early… You might see an announcement about progress or also guidelines of the things that [Trump’s] thinking after having some exchanges of views with foreign people today and yesterday. It’s more of an outline.”

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    FOX Business’ Eric Revell contributed to this report.

  • Trump is playing a dangerous tariff game despite his ‘really strong’ agenda: US economist

    Trump is playing a dangerous tariff game despite his ‘really strong’ agenda: US economist

    A whirlwind two weeks for the Trump administration’s negotiations on tariffs has left economists forecasting the good and the bad that lies ahead for America’s financial health.

    One such economist and senior fellow from the American Enterprise Institute (AEI) – where National Economic Council director Kevin Hassett previously worked – expressed concerns that President Donald Trump’s tariff strategy could work against what fortitude he brings to the economy.

    “I don’t think there’s any doubt, at least in my mind, that a 25% tariff on imports from Mexico and Canada would have severe negative economic consequences,” AEI’s Michael Strain told Fox News Digital.

    “The economic effects of these tariffs are pretty clear that they would hurt workers, that they would hurt households, that they would hurt businesses and that they would hurt the economy overall,” he added, before acknowledging some optimism ahead with “a number of aspects of President Trump’s agenda.”

    E.U. SAYS TRUMP’S ‘UNJUSTIFIED’ TARIFFS ‘WILL NOT GO UNANSWERED’

    “Including his plans to increase domestic energy production, including his goals to make the United States solidify its position as a global leader in artificial intelligence technologies. So these are all things to be excited about. If President Trump launches a trade war with Canada and Mexico, if he launches a trade war with the European Union, then that will work against his goals. That will weaken the American economy, that will increase the cost of living facing Americans, and that will make American businesses less competitive.”

    President Donald Trump signed executive orders on Monday imposing 25-percent tariffs on imported steel and aluminum, the latest salvo in his ongoing effort to overhaul the U.S. trading relationship with the rest of the world. (Getty Images)

    Hours before a midnight deadline, both Canada and Mexico barely escaped their 25% tariffs by agreeing to certain border security stipulations with Trump for a 30-day pause. However, a 10% tariff on China that turned into a retaliatory levy did go into effect, and an anticipatory negotiation call has yet to happen between Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping.

    Monday evening, Trump imposed a 25% tariff on steel and aluminum set to take effect on March 12. The move hopes to allow local U.S. producers to work without intense global competition, likely impacting European Union nations most.

    “The goals that he’s hoping to achieve with the threat of tariffs on Mexico and Canada are different than the goals he’s attempting to achieve with tariffs on China,” Strain said while pointing out this is the first time in U.S. history that a president has threatened allies with “enormous” tariffs to make political concessions or change behavior.

    But the economist argues that, traditionally, tariffs raise prices consumers pay for imported goods and parts, contribute to inflation and make domestic manufacturers less competitive on a global scale.

    “If they’re scheduled to go into effect and if businesses believe that they will go into effect on the day that they’re scheduled, then American consumers would see price increases very, very soon, in a matter of days,” Strain said.

    “I think many Americans are quite concerned about the effect that these tariffs would have on their household finances. And they should be,” he continued. “Their groceries will be more expensive, many products that are made in America that they would buy will be more expensive, their automobiles would be more expensive, and this would reduce the purchasing power of their wages and incomes. And it would hit their pocketbooks.”

    TRUMP PROPOSES ABOLISHMENT OF FEDERAL INCOME TAX, BRINGING U.S. BACK TO ‘RICHEST PERIOD’ IN HISTORY

    A recent analysis from researchers at Yale found that, if enacted, Trump tariffs would create a $1,170 income loss. Additionally, a Fox News poll conducted from Jan. 10 to 13 found that a majority of Americans expect tariffs will hurt the U.S. economy.

    Some trade groups and Democrats have sounded the alarm over Trump waging a worldwide trade war, and to some extent, the AEI economist agrees.

    “I think clearly our trade war with China, which President Trump started, has escalated a bit. When President Trump threatened Canada and Mexico with big tariff increases, Canada responded by saying that they were going to put tariffs of their own on certain critical U.S. exports, and that, I think, meets the definition of a trade war,” Strain said.

    “In President Trump’s first term… he significantly increased tariffs on Chinese imports. China retaliated by increasing their tariff rates on U.S. exports of agricultural products to China. And that hurt the U.S. agriculture sector so severely that President Trump had to offer subsidies to farmers in order to make up for the effects of Chinese retaliation. If President Trump and Canada had continued on the path they were going,” he expanded, “something similar might have happened as well.”

    On a larger scale, Trump has stated that the tariffs provide a way to bring America back to an economic “golden age” before the federal income tax was invented. But funding the government entirely on tariffs could be a challenge, according to Strain.

    “It is completely unrealistic to argue that the U.S. could replace the income tax with an increase in tariffs. There’s just not enough money in taxing imports. In order to make up for the money, we would lose by eliminating the income tax,” the economist said.

    A better solution, he noted, could be taxing income less and consumption more: “But a consumption tax would have to be structured so that it didn’t only target imports. Again, there’s just not enough money there. And if you only target imports, that’s quite distortionary, you’d want to have a more broad-based consumption tax.”

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    Overall, America’s economy “is in really strong shape” and the Federal Reserve still has work to do to reach its inflation goals, Strain noted while emphasizing the “things to be excited about” in Trump’s agenda could outplay a tariff game.

    “My hope is that four years from now, tariff rates are lower than where they are today. My concern is that the Trump administration might have to put its hand on the hot stove of high tariffs in order to learn firsthand the economic damage that tariffs, that are as high as the president is discussing, can do to American consumers and households and businesses.”

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    FOX Business’ Eric Revell contributed to this report.

  • White House economist teases the ‘biggest’ fiscal reform ‘America has ever seen’

    White House economist teases the ‘biggest’ fiscal reform ‘America has ever seen’

    President Donald Trump’s economic plans are being set into motion, according to one of the newest top White House officials, who believes America will see the “biggest” fiscal reform on trade, energy, regulations and tax and spending cuts.

    “When the people who are trying to cause panic over President Trump’s trade policy simulate what it’s going to do, they don’t account for all the other policies. So President Trump is drill, baby, drill and deregulate and tax cuts and reduce spending,” National Economic Council director Kevin Hassett said in an exclusive interview on “Kudlow,” Monday.

    “And if you look at tariffs as part of an overall strategy, you’re going to see, as President Trump says, a golden age,” he added. “And it’s going to be the biggest supply side reform that America has ever seen.”

    On the presidential campaign trail, Trump repeatedly proposed tariffs on trade countries like Mexico, Canada, China and others to be used more as a negotiation tactic. This proved to work earlier this week when Colombian President Gustavo Petro swiftly backtracked on his refusal to accept deportation flights from the United States after Trump threatened tariffs and other measures.

    ODDS OF U.S. RECESSION DECLINING: N.A.B.E. ECONOMISTS

    “I think that you saw from the Colombia negotiation that the president is going to use tariffs if he needs to, in order to get people to make policy concessions that are good for America, that put America first,” Hassett reacted.

    National Economic Council director Kevin Hassett talks President Trump’s top fiscal priorities, from taxes and tariffs to AI and energy. (Getty Images)

    “The bottom line is that a tariff isn’t necessarily just a weapon, but economically, if you do the math, a tariff can be part of a supply side strategy that includes a big tax bill as well,” the director continued, while confirming that a universal tariff is something that Trump and House lawmakers will “negotiate” in a reconciliation bill.

    Also under reconciliation negotiations is the 15% corporate tax rate, which currently sits at 21%.

    Hassett also emphasized the impact that domestic energy and gas production has on minimizing inflation, claiming Wall Street analysts had hypothesized wrongly about the extra costs of Trump’s economy.

    “If you spend $1.5 trillion a year more on government spending, you’re going to get inflation. If you don’t let people drill, baby, drill, energy prices are going to go up… If you do, as Biden did over the last couple of years, kill 130 million chickens, then egg prices are going to go up. So the fact is that we’re doing micro things correctly, deregulatory things correctly, and we’re going to get the macro stuff right, too,” he argued.

    The newly appointed economic director also pointed out: “Inflation under Joe Biden was just under 5% for his whole term, about a little bit less than it was under Jimmy Carter and way more than double what it was under President Trump. And we’re 100% on the ball going after inflation, but it’s going to require an all-of-the-above approach. And right now, we’ve inherited really high inflation.”

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    Trump is also aware of the artificial intelligence (AI) race’s future impacts on the economy, according to Hassett, but remains immediately focused on reversing consequential effects from Biden’s “reckless spending.”

    “One of the really fun things in the last week… is to walk around and to see the DOGE people, to see Elon Musk in the halls and to see all the great ideas that people have to make sure that Americans are not seeing their money wasted by a wasteful government,” he said. “There’s a heck of a lot for our team to fix, and I think we’re very optimistic about our ability to rein in spending.”

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    Fox News staff contributed to this report.

  • CNN’s net worth cut in half between 2021 and 2023, forensic economist reveals during defamation trial

    CNN’s net worth cut in half between 2021 and 2023, forensic economist reveals during defamation trial

    A Florida jury found that CNN defamed U.S. Navy veteran Zachary Young last week, allowing a rare peek in the network’s books that revealed its net worth was cut in half from 2021 to 2023. 

    Young successfully alleged CNN smeared him by implying he illegally profited when helping people flee Afghanistan on the “black market” during the Biden administration’s military withdrawal from the country in 2021. The six-person jury ruled Young was to be awarded $4 million in lost earnings and $1 million in personal damages, and it also found punitive damages were warranted against CNN. 

    Before punitive damages were awarded, both sides had a chance to argue their case to the jury. The plaintiff called acclaimed forensic economist Robert W. Johnson to break down the current condition of CNN’s finances and the network’s ability to pay punitive damages. 

    JURY FINDS CNN COMMITTED DEFAMATION AGAINST NAVY VETERAN, SETTLEMENT REACHED ON PUNITIVE DAMAGES

    A Florida jury found that CNN defamed U.S. Navy veteran Zachary Young last week.

    Johnson, who was a paid witness, used the “standard method of economic analysis” that is “used and relied upon by economists to quantify the financial condition” of CNN. He said in a perfect world he would have seen CNN’s balance sheets and income statements, but those were “never provided.”

    Instead, CNN provided 1120 U.S. Corporate Income Tax returns for the years 2021 through 2023. Johnson said he would have preferred to also receive the 2024 tax statement, but he would rely on the information that was provided.

    “We believe them to be accurate, valid and truthful,” Johnson said of the documents he was provided. 

    CNN was worth $4.4 billion in 2021 but dropped to $2.3 billion in 2023, according to Johnson. 

    CNN DEFAMATION TRIAL: EDITOR WHO SAID STORY WAS ‘FULL OF HOLES LIKE SWISS CHEESE’ GRILLED ON WITNESS STAND

    A Florida jury found that CNN defamed U.S. Navy veteran Zachary Young last week, allowing a rare peak into the network’s books that reveal its net worth was cut in half from 2021 to 2023.

    Before punitive damages were awarded in Zachary Young’s victory over CNN, both sides had a chance to argue their case to the jury. The plaintiff’s paid witness showed the jury CNN financial data from 1120 U.S. Corporate Income Tax returns for the yea

    A Florida jury found that CNN defamed U.S. Navy veteran Zachary Young last week, allowing a rare peak into the network’s books that reveal its net worth was cut in half from 2021 to 2023.

    CNN’s net worth was cut in half from 2021 to 2023, according to data shown to jurors. 

    During that time, CNN has had multiple leadership changes as it struggled to attract viewers during the Biden administration. CNN has seen significant turnover since 2021, with high-profile hosts like Don Lemon and Chris Cuomo out the door. 

    Former parent company WarnerMedia merged with Discovery to create Warner Bros. Discovery in 2022. 

    Johnson’s data also showed that CNN’s revenue dropped from $2.2 billion in 2021 to $1.8 billion in 2023. CNN’s net income over the same period dropped from $0.6 billion in 2021 to $0.4 billion in 2023, according to the network’s tax returns provided to Johnson. 

    Washington Post media reporter Jeremy Barr responded to the data on X, writing “these are not numbers we normally get.”

    CNN DEFAMATION TRIAL: PLAINTIFF ACCUSES NETWORK OF FAKING CRITICAL PHONE CALL FOR ‘THEATER’

    A Florida jury found that CNN defamed U.S. Navy veteran Zachary Young last week, allowing a rare peak into the network’s books that reveal its net worth was cut in half from 2021 to 2023.

    Forensic economist Robert W. Johnson.

    CNN still had a $424.9 million cash flow profit in 2023 despite widespread struggles to attract an audience. CNN and Young reached a settlement before the jury could decide on punitive damages. 

    CNN dismissed Johnson’s findings. 

    “The numbers represent the Plaintiff’s interpretation of a subset of data as presented in litigation, and they do not represent financial data for the whole of CNN’s business,” a CNN spokesperson told Fox News Digital.

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