North America, Opinions Worth Sharing

Bidenomics           

Official White House photo by Adam Schultz on dianerehm.org

Luis Rubio

Biden is a rare specimen in the world of politics. Despite his chronological years and (historical) discursive dyslexia, he has proven to be masterful in legislative matters. Although not recognized for it, he has advanced an agenda much more successfully than would have seemed possible within a context of enormous polarization. The tangible fact is that Biden has altered his country’s economic and foreign policies. The verdict regarding the goodness of these changes has yet to be discerned, but whatever it may be, Mexico will see itself impacted.

Photo: Sean Rayford/Getty Images on insights.som.yale.edu

Beyond personalities, Biden shares a characteristic with Reagan, his predecessor in the eighties. Reagan was a great actor and an extraordinarily talented orator, but without the slightest pretense of being a profound intellectual, as was Adlai Stevenson (twice a presidential candidate in the fifties) or Barack Obama. Nor does Biden entertain the least intellectual aspiration; he stands, as Reagan did, for clear and straightforward principles that orient their decisions and manner of acting. Of course, Biden’s principles are radically distinct from Reagan’s, given that he has not only broken with the notion of the United States as the leading promoter of the world economy but instead advocated for promoting an introspective industrial policy and protecting unionized workers.

Infographic: Tracy Matsue Loeffelholz on thenation.com

Bidenomics, as his economic strategy has come to be known, is nothing other than a coarse way of promoting, through massive subsidies, the installation of manufacturing plants for high-technology goods, especially sophisticated processors, and sustainable energy as part of his strategy of competing with China. This economic thrust complements the aggressive foreign policy of confrontation with China that Trump, his immediate predecessor, had launched but is now financed with massive fiscal subsidies. That is, the government (or the taxpayers) subsidizes great enterprises to stop the fabrication of technological goods in China, Taiwan, and other latitudes.

Photo: on bloomberg.com

In the 2022 mid-term elections, Biden’s party lost control of the House of Representatives, whose new majority has been experiencing one convulsion after another in attempting to elect a leadership that ties in with the Trump cult that has come to dominate the Republicans. Despite that obstacle, Biden has achieved, at least to date, avoiding Congress declaring bankruptcy on the U.S. government for not authorizing the debt limits required. But what is relevant is that, despite the obstacles and the uncertainty of his policies in economic and foreign matters, Biden has been able to advance once and again.

Image: on X.com

In addition to inflation, the electorate does not pardon his age. Biden is an octogenarian who would end his mandate at 86 by winning the next election. Although Trump is only three years younger, the difference between them in communication capacity is undoubtedly noticeable. This circumstance has led numerous observers and potential contenders within his Democratic circuit to call for him to renounce re-election in favor of another, younger alternative.

Photo: Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Image on marketplace.org

Biden is an enigma in the electoral sense. Those of us who have observed him over the decades know that his discursive capacity is minimal and infinite in his propensity for committing gaffes. In the eighties, as a pre-candidate, he was caught plagiarizing a speech, which excluded him from the contest at that moment. Forty years later, he surprised half the world by defeating Trump, who will probably again be the contender for the November election.

PHOTO ILLUSTRATIONS: BLOOMBERG; GETTY IMAGES (2) on bloomberg.com

For Mexico, the U.S. is its principal export market and its principal growth engine through those same exports. Its future depends on the capacity to tighten those links while expanding and generalizing these throughout the entire national territory, in that the revenue that the exports generate translates into incomes for increasingly more Mexicans. The problem is that this logic is not linear: in his eagerness to safeguard companies with unionized workers, Biden threatens to exclude diverse Mexican products, especially in the automotive realm, from the terms of the commercial treaty that regulates the bilateral economic relationship.

Image: Nerthuz on iStock

Perhaps the greatest challenge for Mexico lies in the fact that AMLO, the current president, has objectives that are not in sync with the best economic interests of his own country. In contrast with Biden, who (successfully) has been able to skirt the vast sources of confrontation within the U.S. society to advance his agenda, AMLO sees no reason even to attempt to be the president of all Mexicans: better to polarize and confront than to promote the development of the country.

Photo: on monitoreconomico.org

Mexico, as a middle-power nation but with an outstandingly long border and an exceedingly wealthy neighbor, whosoever it is governing it, has the option of deciding to take advantage of the opportunity that this constitutes or pretend that its future would be more successful by joining the losers of the South of the continent. As at other crucial moments of Mexico’s history, the dilemma is real; the question is whether whoever governs Mexico from next October on will understand the magnitude of the challenge. 

Photo: on presidente.gob.mx

www.mexicoevalua.org

@lrubiof

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