Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman has a message for anyone taking President Donald Trump's recent credit card rate cap announcement seriously: social media posts don't make laws.
When Tweets Aren't Policy
In a Substack analysis, Krugman pulls no punches about Trump's declaration of a 10% cap on credit card interest rates. He calls it purely "performative" theater, noting that a Truth Social post carries exactly zero legal weight when it comes to changing financial regulations.
"Tweets don't change the law," Krugman writes, describing Trump as a "would-be price controller" trying to govern like a monarch issuing edicts rather than working through the legislative process that, you know, actually exists.
Krugman makes an interesting historical comparison to Richard Nixon. When Nixon imposed price controls in the 1970s, he at least did it through proper legislation. Trump, by contrast, has shown "no interest in doing anything substantive," preferring "bluster and antics" to address his political problems as midterms approach.
This behavior reveals Trump's fundamental lack of ideology, according to Krugman. The president is "utterly transactional," happy to abandon free-market talking points whenever they become politically inconvenient.
The CFPB Problem
Here's where things get particularly rich, according to Krugman. Trump's sudden concern for struggling borrowers sits awkwardly next to his administration's sustained assault on the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
Krugman points out that Trump's own Budget Director, Russell Vought, previously tried to shut down the agency entirely, illegally instructing staff to stop working.
"Trump's motives are clearly cynical," Krugman states. The irony is hard to miss: a president who tried to "disembowel" the only federal agency dedicated to fighting predatory lending now suddenly wants to cap credit card rates when facing electoral trouble.




