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Mitch McConnell speaks to reporters after Trump wins election, Republicans retake Senate
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5 ways Trump’s next presidency could affect the U.S. economy — and your money
President-elect Donald Trump’s victory in the November 5 election highlights the frustrations of millions of voters, with many Americans noting in exit polls on Tuesday that they’re still hurting from the highest inflation in 40 years and dissatisfied with the nation’s economic trajectory.
Trump ran on a campaign that vowed to tackle those issues, pledging to end the “inflation nightmare” and to bring prices down “very quickly.” He also offered a myriad of tax cuts to various groups, ranging from senior citizens to homeowners, as well as to finance some of those cuts through new tariffs on imports from China and other nations and to deport millions of undocumented immigrants.
In the aftermath of Trump’s win, economists and policy experts are assessing how those policies might impact the economy as well as consumers’ wallets. Already, Wall Street is predicting that his policies could boost corporate growth, sending the S&P 500 higher by as much as 2.2% on Wednesday.
But some experts note Trump’s plans may also boost inflation, potentially hurting consumers who are hoping for relief at the checkout counter.
“The devil will be in the details,” Ed Mills, Washington policy analyst at investment bank Raymond James, told CBS MoneyWatch. “The Trump tax, trade, tariff and immigration agenda could have significant economic impacts and raise concerns about a second wave of inflation.”
However, compromises or alterations to his plans “could mitigate the impact,” Mills added.
To be sure, whether Trump can respond to voters’ most pressing economic issues isn’t certain, especially if the House of Representatives flips to Democratic control, which could stymie his plans to extend tax cuts that were enacted in his 2017 Tax Cuts & Jobs Act (TCJA) as well as to enact other changes.
Here are five ways Trump’s policies could impact the economy and your money.
Your money under Trump’s tax plans
The core of Trump’s tax plan is to extend the provisions in the TCJA that are set to expire at the end of 2025. These include the law’s lowered tax brackets and expanded standard deduction.
Trump also wants to provide deeper tax cuts for some individuals and businesses, with his campaign proposing lowering the corporate tax rate to 15% from its current 21%. He’s floated the idea of eliminating personal income taxes on many types of earnings, from tips to Social Security benefits, but has yet to offer details.
Trump’s combination of tariffs and tax cuts, would rank as the sixth-biggest tax cut since 1940, according to a recent Tax Foundation analysis.
If Trump is able to enact these tax code changes, personal income taxes would decline for all income groups. But the biggest beneficiaries would be high-income households, according to an analysis from the Penn Wharton Budget Model (That research assesses Trump’s proposed tax cuts but doesn’t include the impact of tariffs.)
That means a middle-class family with earnings of about $80,000 a year would get a tax break of about $1,740 in 2026, the analysis found. Top-earning households, with incomes of more than $14 million, would see their taxes reduced by $376,910, according to Penn Wharton.
What could happen with inflation?
Consumers rank inflation as one of their biggest economic concerns, with many still feeling impact of soaring prices during the pandemic. Although the U.S. inflation rate has now fallen close to the Federal Reserve’s 2% annual goal, many Americans still describe it as high because prices haven’t come down; rather, prices are simply rising more slowly than they did during the pandemic.
Economists have cautioned that Trump’s plans could reignite inflation. That’s because tariffs are essentially sales taxes paid by American consumers, rather than the countries that export goods to the U.S. On top of that, Trump’s plan to deport millions of immigrants could also boost inflation as employers would likely face higher wages due to a labor crunch.
“Two main pillars of his policy proposals, tariffs and mass deportations, are likely to cause prices to rise as they will make it more difficult for businesses to produce goods,” Jacob Channel, chief economist at LendingTree, told CBS MoneyWatch.
Trump’s plan to levy a 10% tariff on all imports and 60% or more on Chinese goods shipped to the U.S. could add $1,700 a year in additional costs for a typical middle-class household, according to the non-partisan Peterson Institute for International Economics.
Trump’s plans could boost the inflation rate by as much 1 percentage point, bringing it to an annual rate of about 3.4% — above the Fed’s 2% goal — according to Andrzej Skiba of RBC Global Asset Management.
“If you add 1% to next year’s inflation numbers, we should say bye to rate cuts,” Skiba said.
Could the economy grow faster?
The economy could initially grow slightly faster under Trump’s plans to cut corporate taxes, but that impact could fade over time, especially due to the impact of deporting millions of immigrants, according to Oxford Economics.
Real GDP growth could be 0.3 percentage points higher in 2026 than if current economic policies continued, wrote Ryan Sweet, chief U.S. economist at Oxford Economics, in a November 6 research note.
But, he added, GDP growth could eventually fall to 0.6 percentage points lower in 2028 than earlier projections due to the impact of deportations and higher tariffs.
Will housing become more affordable?
Probably not, according to Bright MLS chief economist Lisa Sturtevant.
First, if Trump’s plans reignite inflation as some economists are forecasting, the Federal Reserve may not continue lowering its benchmark rate. Without further cuts in borrowing costs for consumers and businesses, mortgage rates aren’t likely to fall, she added.
Second, deporting millions of undocumented immigrants could impact the housing sector — which already faces a severe shortage of homes — because it relies on these workers to build new homes, Sturtevant said.
“His mass deportation proposal would have a chilling effect on the construction industry, shrinking the already constrained labor force and stalling badly needed new housing construction,” she said. “At the same time, proposed tariffs will increase building costs.”
Will Trump’s policies help your 401(k)?
Possibly, given that Trump’s proposed corporate tax cuts and support for lighter regulations on businesses, if enacted, could bolster company profits and lift the stock market.
On Wednesday, indices including the S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average soared on Wall Street optimism for stronger corporate growth.
“Lower corporate taxes and/or deregulation of the energy and financial sectors under a Trump administration could provide additional support,” Solita Marcelli, chief investment officer Americas, UBS Global Wealth Management, said in an email.
Other financial instruments could also get a boost, including cryptocurrencies, due to Trump’s pledge to make the U.S. the “crypto capital of the planet.”
At the same time, much of these forecasts depend on Trump pushing through changes to the tax code, regulations and other laws, Channel noted.
“Virtually all of these policies will be tough to implement, even with Republican control over the House, the Senate and the presidency,” he said. “With that in mind, we might not see much change at all in the broader economy.”
He added, “Inaction from the next Trump administration could mean that the economy continues to chug along its current course.”
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“Most mysterious song on the internet” identified after 17 years — and the band was oblivious to the online phenomenon
For the last 17 years, a worldwide army of online sleuths obsessively tried to figure out the title of what has been dubbed “the most mysterious song on the internet.”
Now, they have the answer after a chance discovery by one intrepid researcher who triumphantly reported his breakthrough on online forum Reddit: it is called “Subways of Your Mind” and was recorded by a little-known 1980s German band called FEX.
The former band members are “absolutely overwhelmed” by the news, 68-year-old Michael Haedrich, who played keyboard and guitar and sang back-up vocals for FEX, told Der Spiegel magazine.
The band had been oblivious to the online phenomenon, he admitted.
How the mystery unfolded
The mystery began in 2007, when a German brother and sister uploaded a track online that they had digitized after originally recording it as teenagers on a cassette from the radio. As Rolling Stone reported in 2019, the tape mostly featured songs from popular bands like XTC and The Cure, as well as one particular song that remained a mystery — until now.
The German siblings asked for help to identify it and audiophiles soon took up the challenge.
The track did not show up in any music databases, but online sleuths tried to work out what instruments could be heard and analyzed the lead singer’s accent.
Initial attempts to identify the song, soon classified by many as being in the 1980s’ “New Wave” genre, yielded little.
It was only when the track was uploaded onto Reddit in 2019 that global interest exploded.
A Reddit subforum called “r/TheMysteriousSong” attracted tens of thousands of members, and the hunt was reported on in German media and beyond.
The big breakthrough finally came earlier this week when a user called “marijn1412” said he had identified the song as “Subways of Your Mind.”
He said he came across former FEX members while researching an event for up-and-coming bands that had been organized in the 1980s by a public broadcaster in northern Germany.
The Reddit user wrote that he had reached out to members of what was a four-piece outfit from the northern city of Kiel, who sent him a version of the mystery song, and revealed its long-sought-after name.
Marijn1412 wrote: “After I emailed him back that the song is actually quite a famous ‘lost song,’ he asked me not to go public with it until he spoke with his old band members. In the meantime, though, the song did get registered at [the German performance rights organization] GEMA and people found out about it. But I’m happy to say that the band members agreed for me to go public with it.”
Haedrich, who is still a musician, told Spiegel that it was the first time he had heard about the massive search effort.
“I thought it was amazing that someone was interested in music by a band that was only successful regionally, if at all, and that was over 40 years ago,” he said.
Haedrich, who lives in Munich, said the band members now want to reissue “Subways of Your Mind” and are trying to track down the original recording of the song.
Their success may have been decades in the making, but he said “for us, it has just come suddenly.”