White House National Economic Council Director Larry Kudlow spoke to CNBC this morning, though if his comments were intended to reassure, they appear to have fallen short.
Larry Kudlow, President Donald Trump’s chief economic advisor, told CNBC on Friday that he doesn’t want to “panic on policy measures” designed to combat the new coronavirus and said that U.S. growth remains strong.
At a surface level, there’s nothing wrong with a prominent White House official discouraging panic and trying to reassure the public that an ongoing problem is being addressed. But just below the surface, Kudlow — who has a notorious track record for being wrong — went a bit further this morning that he should have.
According to CNBC’s report, for example, the National Economic Council director said the economy “looks sound,” which was vaguely reminiscent of John McCain insisting in 2008 that the “fundamentals of the economy are strong,” even as the system crashed around him.
But more importantly, Kudlow added this morning, “[R]egarding the containment issue, I will still argue to you that this is contained.” CNBC’s report went on to quote Kudlow saying, “We don’t actually know what the magnitude of the virus is going to be. Although, frankly, so far it looks relatively contained.”









