The Big Number
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent is making a bold claim: President Donald Trump has generated about $20 trillion in investment commitments for the United States. That's not a typo. Twenty. Trillion. Dollars.
Speaking about Trump's assertions, Bessent said he believes "these commitments are real," describing them as "investments like we've never seen." The capital is supposedly flowing from a combination of corporate reshoring plans and new international trade agreements.
Breaking Down the Numbers
So where's all this money supposedly coming from? Bessent pointed to several major sources. The trade deal with Japan is expected to bring in $550 billion, while South Korea's agreement is pegged at $350 billion. Then there's Apple Inc. (AAPL), whose ambitious manufacturing reshoring plans "may be up to $500 billion" in total investments, according to Bessent.
To put this in perspective, Bessent drew a stark comparison with the previous administration. "The entire Biden administration was one trillion over four years," he said, including "$250 billion the final year." He emphasized that "many single investments" now exceed what the Biden administration "took in... in one year."
Bessent frames this as evidence that "America's back," crediting Trump's "great tax policy" and extensive deregulation efforts for creating an environment that's attracting capital. He concluded by saying, "President Trump is laying the foundation for a Golden Age economy, with investment returning to the United States in record amounts."
The Skeptics Weigh In
Not everyone's buying it. Economist Peter Schiff recently took aim at Trump's claims of generating $17 trillion in new investments over the next year, running some basic math that raises questions.
"If true, GDP growth would explode by roughly 50%," Schiff noted, pointing out that U.S. GDP currently stands at $30.61 trillion. He also argued that investment inflows of this magnitude would cause the U.S. dollar to "skyrocket," suggesting the numbers don't quite add up to economic reality.
The gap between Bessent's confident assertions and Schiff's skeptical calculations highlights a familiar tension in economic policy debates: the difference between announced commitments and actual capital deployment. Investment pledges are one thing. Money in the bank is quite another.