• Kilowatt Madness: Demented Old Trump's electricity crisis and ours

    From Occam's Razor@21:1/5 to All on Fri Aug 22 14:40:28 2025
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    Kilowatt Madness
    Trumps electricity crisis and ours
    Paul Krugman
    Aug 22



    We're hearing a lot of talk about stagflation now, for good reason. Tariffs
    and mass deportations are both stagflationary: They increase inflation
    while depressing growth.

    Its becoming increasingly clear that theres a third major stagflationary
    force coming into play: Soaring electricity prices, which will also hurt
    growth while increasing inflation.

    Now, during the 2024 campaign Donald Trump boasted a lot about how he would bring down energy prices. He talked very big, and made specific promises. Notably, he declared that he would cut the price of electricity in half
    within 12 months of taking office:

    So hows that going?

    And this is only the start. Many analysts expect further large increases in electricity prices over the next year or more, largely because of surging demand from AI data centers. The electricity outlook is sufficiently scary
    that Texas Texas! has passed a new law giving the grid operator the right
    to cut off data centers during periods of power shortage.

    An aside: In the America I grew up in, people who made big boasts about
    what they would achieve then completely failed to deliver were considered unserious blowhards. What happened to that country?

    But Trump has a scapegoat, which probably wont surprise you renewable
    energy:

    Its unclear what his theory is. How does adding wind and solar generating capacity increasing electricity supply lead to higher prices?

    To the extent that there is a story here, it involves what Ive called MAGA brain, the belief that the only way you can get results is by being tough
    and nasty, avoiding anything that might be considered woke which includes renewable energy.

    As it happens, the data overwhelmingly reject Trumps claims about
    renewables and prices. The Department of Energy has data on the share of
    each states electricity generated by renewable sources. For example, Iowa
    gets 80 percent of its utility-scale power from renewables, mostly wind,
    while New Jersey only gets 4.6 percent from renewables. Yet Iowas
    electricity prices actually fell slightly from May 2024 to May 2025, while
    NJ prices rose 10 percent.

    Trump, however, has his own reality:

    Except New Jersey doesnt have any windmills. There have been proposals for large offshore wind farms, but they have never come to fruition and Trump
    has signed executive orders that will effectively ban future offshore wind development.

    So why are electricity prices soaring? The main answer is clearly a surge
    in power consumption by data centers, driven mainly by AI. Crypto is also playing a role, although we dont know for sure how much and thanks to the influence of the crypto bros, we may never find out:

    Can we blame Trump for rising electricity prices? Not yet. The AI boom
    began well before Trump won the election, and the grid just wasnt ready.
    Trump is, however, doing all he can to make the problem worse boosting
    crypto and AI while blocking the expansion of renewable energy, which has accounted for the bulk of recent growth in electric generating capacity:

    Oh, and the Trump administration is rolling back energy efficiency
    standards for home appliances, which will worsen the electricity shortage.

    So the electricity crisis is set to get worse. And it will matter a lot. Households spend a substantial share of their budgets on electricity, but
    the overall impact of electricity prices goes well beyond your utility
    bills: electricity is an important cost of doing business, and an increase
    in that cost will be passed on to consumers. By my estimate, overall
    spending on electricity both direct spending by consumers and spending by businesses that ultimately gets passed on to consumers is about 2 percent
    of GDP. So large electricity price increases could have a significant
    effect on the cost of living.

    Rising electricity costs will also lead businesses to produce and invest
    less. In particular, as I wrote the other day, energy shortages could bring
    the boom in AI spending to a screeching halt and that spending is
    currently the only thing keeping the U. S. economy above stall speed,
    growth so slow that economic weakness becomes self-reinforcing.

    Many people, myself included, have drawn parallels between the current AI frenzy and the telecoms boom and bust of the late 1990s an alarming
    parallel, because the telecom bust led to years of elevated unemployment.
    But as Peter Oppenheimer of Goldman Sachs has pointed out, there have been
    many such boom-bust cycles over the centuries, going back to Britains canal mania in the 1790s. And heres one analogy that has occurred to me: What
    would have happened if, midway through the 1790s canal-building boom,
    investors had realized that there wasnt enough water to fill all those new canals?

    So the electricity crisis is serious, adding significantly to the risk of stagflation. Unfortunately, it would be hard to find policymakers Id trust
    less to deal with this crisis than the Trump administration, whose energy policy is driven by petty prejudices (Trump is still mad about the
    windmills he thinks ruin the view from his Scottish golf course), macho posturing (real men burn stuff), and hallucinations (the imaginary
    windmills of New Jersey. )

    A word about Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook

    Ill write more about the Lisa Cook affair next week, but feel that I should
    say something now. Cook is a Federal Reserve governor, a long-term
    appointment long-term because we want to insulate the Fed from political pressure.

    Now Trump officials are demanding that Cook resign because, they claim, she once provided false information on mortgage applications, claiming two different houses as her primary residence.

    Its clear that the Trump Administration is weaponizing federal mortgage
    records to go after anyone they think stands in their way. First Leticia
    James, next Adam Schiff, and now Lisa Cook. Rather than follow fair legal procedures and allow Cook to defend herself, Trump makes insinuations about Lisa Cook and demands that she quit her position.

    Of course, everyone understands whats happening here even that socialist
    rag, the Wall Street Journal. Trump wants to replace Cook with an obedient minion, so Trump loyalists went trawling through everything they could find
    out about her, looking for some pretext to force her out. This is a
    grotesque abuse of power.

    It also endangers Americas future. The Feds perceived independence is a
    major source of economic stability more about that in this weeks primer.
    Were already worried about stagflation. The risk will be far greater if
    Trump can dictate monetary policy by bullying individual Fed officials and creating a servile Federal Reserve Board. Just look at what happened in
    Turkey.

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