GDP and stock market performance are the two metrics that economists (and politicians) use to measure the health of a nation's economy, and by those metrics, Trump is doing a hell of a job.
These are indirect proxies for the health of a nation: when there's lots of economic activity and profits are up, up, up, we're supposed to infer that the average American is sharing in the gains.
But after forty years of neoliberalism, corporate profits and GDP growth have become completely separated from human thriving. Increasing your productivity no longer means that you get a raise, now it means that you work longer hours, while increasing your company's profits no longer means that you'll get a raise.
Meanwhile, GDP rises when private equity firms corner the market on rental housing, convince lawmakers and courts to dismantle tenancy protections, raise rents to never-seen heights, and drive renters into debt and housing poverty.
All forms of debt are also skyrocketing — driving up the share-prices of the companies that originate the loans and sells the goods and services bought with them. Student debt is so bad that they've brought back the arm-breakers to collect on it, and the degree you receive is likely to come from a fraudulent institution, more "Trump University" than actual universtiy. Employment has become a form of indenture, making America into history's first rich poor country.
And it's not like the Trump administration is actually trying to reverse it. The tax cuts passed last year represented an historic gift to the super-rich, and are sure to explode income inequality. When it comes to housing, traditionally a talisman of adulthood and maturity and independence, and often one of the largest expenses for individuals and families, looking to the overall inflation rate is misleading. Housing prices, especially but not exclusively in West Coast cities like San Francisco and Portland, are just getting more expensive, faster, than just about anything else.
This is actually a relatively novel phenomenon.
"That hasn't generically been true—wasn't true in the 80s, wasn't particularly true in the 90s," Baker told me. "It's mostly been a very recent story. So if we talk about 2011 to the present, housing prices have—rental prices—have been outpacing the inflation rate."
People Can't Pay Rent, Debt Is Insane, and the Economy Is Somehow 'Great' [Matt Taylor/Vice]
(via Naked Capitalism)