Odds Are on the GOP to Win the White House, Unless…

Economists are often as obsessed as pollsters and pols with analyzing the political tealeaves in the throes of major elections.

That’s especially true in 2016 when the economy once again could determine whether the Democrats maintain their hold on the White House or if Donald Trump, Ted Cruz or some other Republican will be the next president.

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With the stock market in a major swoon, an economic slowdown sowing fears of a renewed recession and evidence that the deficit is on the rise again, the Democratic nominee – whether it’s former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton or Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont -- will find it challenging to convince voters they should succeed President Obama.

While pollsters are having a hard enough time projecting winners in the Iowa caucuses and New Hampshire primary next month – let alone which party will prevail in the November general election – economists and financial whizzes are fearlessly turning to well-tested models to predict the winner.

And right now, their findings are not good news for Democrats.

The latest economic wise man to step up to the plate is Steven Rattner, a New York financier and former Obama administration adviser on the auto industry who offers regular economic commentary and analysis on MSNBC’s Morning Joe program.

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There are three ways of looking at the election Rattner explained on Friday, beginning with the ebbs and flows of the stock market, then, turning to economic growth and inflation, and finally gauging the impact of the incumbent president’s approval rating in the run-up to the election. “Many economists believe that the state of financial markets, the economy and other quantitative metrics can be used to successfully predict the outcome of presidential elections,” Rattner explained.

And at this point, none of these indices point favorably to a Democratic election this fall. On the contrary, if current trends persist, Rattner says, we may see “a blood bath for the Democratic side.”

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The following charts illustrate what three predictive models might foretell about the outcome of the November presidential election:


Rattner says the stock market has been a first-rate gauge in picking presidents in the past. Indeed, looking back over the past 22 presidential elections beginning with 1928, the change in the stock market over the three months before Election Day determined the outcome 86 percent of the time.