Thursday, October 22, 2020

701 Economists Call for the Defeat of Donald Trump

NOTE: Institutions are listed for identification purposes and should not be viewed as signatories to the letter.


We, the undersigned economists, strongly urge voters not to re-elect Donald Trump on the following grounds:


  • His chaotic and ineffective approach to negotiation has damaged relations with trade partners, interrupted supply chains, degraded international norms, and harmed American farmers -- all without achieving his stated goal of reducing the trade deficit. Even his landmark trade deal, the USMCA, is not projected to have a meaningful impact on either GDP or the trade deficit.

  • His managerial incompetence has damaged the credibility and effectiveness of the public sector. Agencies cycle through acting heads, disgruntled former staffers frequently appear in the media with dire warnings, and family members are put in charge of critical pandemic response initiatives.


  • He claimed to have the unique ability to generate growth (in real GDP) of between 4% and 6%, but never surpassed 2.9% in his first three years in office. Furthermore, analysts at Goldman Sachs and Moody’s Analytics have projected that Joe Biden’s economic plans, if implemented, would actually generate faster growth in both employment and real GDP.


  • He failed to achieve his campaign’s core economic promises: manufacturing remained a small share of employment, and both the fiscal and trade deficits increased. As economists explained in 2016, most of his promises either didn’t make sense or weren’t achievable using his proposed policies. This remains true in 2020.

  • His administration’s public health response to COVID-19 was described by medical scientists as having turned "...a crisis into a tragedy" and as having underperformed relative to other democracies by "orders of magnitude."

  • He has consistently undermined the independence and credibility of our major health agencies, including the Food and Drug Administration, the Centers for Disease Control, and the National Institutes of Health, eroding public trust in their approvals and recommendations at exactly the time when we most desperately need it.

  • He has dramatically overemphasized the extent to which economic growth and public health are in conflict during a pandemic. In fact, many countries that have been more effective in their viral containment efforts have also performed better economically.


  • His personal behavior during the COVID-19 outbreak endangered public health, the economic recovery, and the safe re-opening of schools. He undermined mask use and social distancing, held indoor rallies, encouraged the use of unproven and potentially dangerous medical substances, downplayed the severity of the pandemic, and hosted a superspreader event that incapacitated the White House and forced military leadership into quarantine.

  • He regularly spreads dangerous misinformation, even during times of crisis, and has been the single largest source of misinformation during the pandemic.

  • He has made the country less attractive to skilled and hard-working immigrants by assaulting religious freedom and by insinuating that the children of non-white immigrants are not truly American.


  • He has made the country a less appealing place to do business by creating an atmosphere of perpetual chaos and uncertainty, and by using the levers of government to punish individuals and businesses that were insufficiently reverential.


  • He has fostered a culture of unabashed corruption by pressuring foreign countries to undermine his political opponents, using the resolute desk to promote a political supporter’s bean products, attempting to divert intergovernmental meetings to his commercial properties, using public resources to conduct campaign events, and allowing White House staff to openly flout the Hatch Act.

  • He has refused to release his tax returns -- unlike his political opponents in both 2016 and 2020 -- making it difficult to determine the extent to which his financial interests conflict with the country’s. Recent reporting, which has secured his returns for two decades, suggests that his businesses have consistently claimed large losses and that he appears to have many unresolved conflicts of interest.


  • He spreads conspiracy theories that undermine long-term trust in democractic institutions for seemingly no reason other than to influence media coverage in a single news cycle.

  • He has a poorly-informed, zero-sum view of economics that engenders needless viciousness and cruelty.


In just one term in office, Donald Trump has rendered the United States unrecognizable, and has faced no consequences for doing so. He has carried out a sustained assault on democratic institutions, put his family members in charge of critical government functions during a pandemic, called for his political opponents to be thrown in prison, normalized corruption, and weakened the economic recovery with selfish and reckless behavior. For these reasons, we strongly recommend that the electorate do what no one else can: reclaim your democracy by voting to remove Donald Trump from office.


Henry J Aaron, The Brookings Institution
Alberto Abadie, MIT
Teshome Abebe, Eastern Illinois University 
Ryan Abman, San Diego State University
Rahi Abouk, William Paterson University
Joelle Abramowitz, University of Michigan
David Abrams, University of Pennsylvania
Jason Abrevaya, University of Texas, Austin
Daron Acemoglu, MIT
Sara Adler-Mandelbaum, Western Governor's University
Amanda Agan, Rutgers University 
Dennis J. Aigner, University of California, Irvine
Ugur Aker, Hiram College
George Akerlof, Georgetown University
Stefania Albanesi, University of Pittsburgh
Randy Albelda, University of Massachusetts Boston 
Jim Albrecht, Georgetown University
Harold Alderman, IFPRI
Treb Allen, Dartmouth College
Andres Almazan, The University of Texas at Austin
Douglas Almond, Columbia University
Rosanne Altshuler, Rutgers University
Nurul Samiul Aman, University of Massachusetts Boston
Pedro Amaral, California State University, Fullerton
James E. Anderson, Boston College
Kathryn H. Anderson, Vanderbilt University
Robert M Anderson, University of California, Berkeley
Axel Anderson, Georgetown University 

Victor William Ribeiro Andre

Plus 700 more.  

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