Elizabeth Warren says the ‘warning lights are flashing’ for the next economic crash

FAN Editor

Elizabeth Warren speaks at her campaign for the Democratic nomination for the 2020 United States presidential election during a Community Conversation at Prairie Winds Event Center in Orange City.

Jeremy Hogan | LightRocket | Getty Images

Democratic presidential contender Sen. Elizabeth Warren warned on Monday that the next financial crisis is on its way.

“Warning lights are flashing. Whether it’s this year or next year, the odds of another economic downturn are high — and growing,” Warren wrote in a post on the blogging platform Medium.

The Massachusetts Democrat wrote that increasing household and corporate debt have left the economy on precarious footing.

She also cited weakness in the manufacturing sector, putting the blame for its recent slowdown on President Donald Trump, who has tangled with China over trade. Despite Trump’s pledge to bring back manufacturing jobs, the sector is now in recession, she wrote, and wages for the industry lag the national average.

“The country’s economic foundation is fragile. A single shock could bring it all down. And the Trump Administration’s reckless behavior is increasing the odds of just such a shock,” Warren wrote.

The post is written in the meticulous and citation-heavy style that Warren’s campaign has adopted in its prolific policy roll-outs. The first sentence links to an article written by the fact-checking website PolitiFact, which found in April that Warren’s claim that she predicted the 2008 financial crisis before it happened is truthful.

Trump has boasted of the strength of the economy as part of his own re-election bid. Since he was elected, the stock market has soared — the S&P 500 index of the largest American companies has risen nearly 40% — and unemployment has sunk to its lowest rate in decades. Real wages have also risen.

But growth is expected to slow. On Friday, the release of second quarter GDP data is expected to show the economy growing at a relatively sluggish 1.8%, according to an estimate from Dow Jones, compared to 3.1% in the first quarter. 

Warren, a bankruptcy law expert who was an influential professor at Harvard Law School before running for the Senate, is a longtime consumer advocate.

Despite her bleak prognosis, she wrote that the “good news is that we have the chance to head off a crisis — just like we had a chance to head off the 2008 crisis — if we take bold action now to address the underlying problems” in the economy.

The government should cut household debt by canceling up to $50,000 in student loan debt for most families, raise the minim wage to $15 an hour, and strengthen the power of unions, Warren wrote. She also said that the Financial Stability Oversight Council must meet “specifically to discuss these risks and announce a plan for addressing them.”

“And we should take the prospect of breaching the debt ceiling off the table forever by either eliminating it or by automatically raising the ceiling to accommodate spending and revenue decisions authorized by Congress,” Warren wrote.

Free America Network Articles

Leave a Reply

Next Post

A couple of analysts raised expectations for Amazon days before earnings

Jeff Bezos, founder of Amazon and Blue Origin speaks during the JFK Space Summit, celebrating the 50th anniversary of the moon landing, at the John F. Kennedy Library in Boston, June 19, 2019. Katherine Taylor | Reuters Two Wall Street analysts are betting big on Amazon‘s quarterly report later this […]