The producer price index will be released at 8:30 a.m. … The consumer sentiment index will be out at 10 a.m. … Dallas Fed President Lorie Logan will participate in a panel at the Federal Home Loan Bank of Dallas’s Women in Financial Services Conference .… Fed Gov. Michelle Bowman will speak before the 18th Annual Community Bankers Symposium hosted by the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago at 1:10 p.m. .… Trump’s latest econ pitch — Donald Trump continued to sprint to the left on economic policy on Thursday. Democrats aren’t buying it. The former president has courted Wall Street with pledges to lower corporate rates and slash regulation. But he’s also courted working class and rank-and-file union voters with a bevy of policies that he says will help working families, including capping interest rates on credit card loans, and eliminating taxes on Social Security benefits and overtime. In a speech at the Detroit Economic Club on Thursday, he went even further, saying he would make interest payments on car loans fully deductible. Trump told the Motor City crowd that the deduction would “revolutionize your industry,” your MM host reported with Gavin Bade. “This will stimulate massive domestic auto production and make car ownership dramatically more affordable for millions and millions of working American families.” The cost of the new policy to the federal government would likely be significant. There’s more than $1.6 trillion in outstanding securitized auto loans, according to Federal Reserve data, and Trump’s economic policies are already projected to add trillions more to deficits than what Vice President Kamala Harris has proposed. Trump’s policy could effectively restore a deduction that existed before President Ronald Reagan overhauled the tax code in 1986, said Brookings Institution fellow Aaron Klein. It’s also unclear who would benefit, as many subprime borrowers may not itemize their deductions. The auto loan deduction — coupled with other Trump tax policies like the credit card interest cap — “is a very blunt way of messaging: ‘When I’m president I’ll stand up for you on your behalf,’” Graham Steele, a former Biden Treasury official who’s now an academic fellow at the Rock Center for Corporate Governance at Stanford Law School, told MM. “The way he’s governed has been very different from that.” Progressive Democrats have been quick to point out that the former president ran a similar playbook in 2016. He proposed raising taxes on carried interest — a political third rail for the private equity industry — and reinstating the 1933 Glass-Steagall law, which would have broken up big banks. Did any of that happen? No. But Trump’s new collection of populist economic proposals are opening up new policy fronts on the left as Harris courts the center. “It is far easier to campaign against Trump on social issues, where his views on abortion, racism, and on culture are often out of step with both the left and the country club scene,” said Klein. On economic policy, “he’s running to the left, right and center of her, and up and down.” Speaking of economic populism… First in MM: The trouble with ‘no tax on tips’ — Both Harris and Trump say they want to eliminate taxes on tipped income. Trump has also said he’d slash taxes on overtime pay. The end result of those policies would create new forms of tax inequity for workers who make the same amount of money, according to a new analysis from the Budget Lab at Yale. For some filers, it would “double the current level of inequities in the [tax] code,” wrote John Ricco, the think tank’s associate director of policy analysis. An inequitable system could lead to “loopholes, inefficient tax avoidance and notions of unfairness,” they wrote.
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