Before Donald Trump took office, he set high expectations for the kind of economic growth Americans should expect to see if he became president.
Indeed, while Candidate Trump was nearly always vague about his policy goals, he was rather specific about the nation’s GDP, condemning Barack Obama for failing to reach 3% annual growth, and assuring the electorate that in a Trump administration, growth would be between 4% and 6%.
In one especially memorable online missive, the New York Republican marveled at a quarterly GDP report from the Obama era pointing to 1.9% growth. It was, Trump said at the time, evidence that the economy was “in deep trouble.”
Yesterday, the latest quarterly GDP report showed the economy growing at … wait for it … 1.9%. It came the same morning that the president assured the public that we currently have “the Greatest Economy in American History!”
All of which leads to an awkward question about how and why Trump sees 1.9% quarterly growth as both alarming and amazing.
Of course, the GDP is only one of several economic metrics that matter, which led the Washington Post to publish an interesting analysis taking a broader view.









