- Trump emphasizes promoting aggressive oil and gas extraction to combat inflation.
- He proposes using tariffs to incentivize U.S. manufacturing.
- He prioritizes extending 2017 tax cuts and reducing corporate tax rates.
After his inauguration on January 20, 2025, 47th President Donald Trump has wasted no time. He took to his desk and signed a series of executive orders that tested the limits of executive authority; causing immediate legal challenges and of course a lot of concern.
At the World Economic Forum, which took place on Thursday in Davos, Switzerland; Trump spoke remotely and promoted his "America First" economic agenda emphasizing three primary initiatives: energy expansion, manufacturing protection, and tax reduction.
During his speech, he endorsed the maximizing of U.S. oil and natural gas resources. He stated that expanding energy production would reduce costs across multiple sectors and also position the United States as a global manufacturing and technological hub, most especially in the AI and cryptocurrency sectors.
"The United States has the largest amount of oil and gas of any country on Earth, and we're going to use it." Trump declared at the Forum.
The former and current president also put forth a controversial traffic strategy to encourage domestic manufacturing.
While tax policy was the central focus, with Trump seeking an extension of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, which is to expire at the end of 2025, he urged companies to manufacture their products in America at extremely low taxes or face tariffs.
"But if you don't make your product in America, prerogative, then very simply you will have to pay a tariff," the 47th president added.
He also proposed reducing the corporate tax rate to 15% for companies manufacturing products within the United States and ambitiously promised to pass the largest tax cut in history.
Additionally, Trump pressured Saudi Arabia and OPEC to lower oil prices, arguing that this would facilitate lower interest rates.
He criticized the Federal Reserve's current monetary policy and called for immediate interest rate reductions.
Economists remain divided on the potential impacts of these proposed policies, with concerns that tariffs could potentially increase inflation by driving up consumer prices.
Edited By Annette George