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As the government shutdown heads into its third week tomorrow, we thought it was time to explain what it’s really about. Yes, you can blame partisan grandstanding and the winner-takes-all atmosphere that prevails in Washington, but Bloomberg News’ John Tozzi unpacks the health-care dispute that’s become the focus of the standoff. Plus: A bank based at Trump Tower has ties to the first family that run deeper than that, and US tariffs are creating new alliances among other trading nations.

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Although US politics can feel as if they’re moving deeper into uncharted territory daily, the current budget standoff has a whiff of déjà vu. Twelve years ago, when Barack Obama was president and Donald Trump was a reality TV host bellowing “You’re fired!” at hapless contestants, Congress shut down the government over the law that was officially dubbed the Affordable Care Act but was informally (and perhaps eternally) tied to Obama. Now lawmakers are doing it again—but the balance of power is reversed.

Obamacare, which expanded insurance coverage via the carrot of subsidies for the poor and the stick of penalties (later relaxed) for those who go without, squeaked through Congress in 2010. By October 2013 some of the first tangible results of the sweeping measure were materializing. People who had previously been unable to purchase health insurance could begin shopping for plans on a special website called healthcare.gov, even if it suffered growing pains after crashing out of the gate. Republicans, who controlled the House and aimed to defund the ACA, blocked a spending deal for 16 days, a last-ditch effort to impede the law before real people started gaining coverage by the millions. 

Obama discussing his health-care law at the White House during the 2013 government shutdown. Photographer: Win McNamee/Getty Images

The ACA survived that shutdown. It also survived attempts to undo it at the Supreme Court and a failed repeal effort during the Republican trifecta of Trump’s first term, when three GOP senators joined Democrats in opposition. After Joe Biden took office in the middle of the Covid-19 pandemic, Democrats bumped up the original ACA subsidies. About three-quarters of enrollees can now buy a plan for less than $10 a month, and higher-income people became eligible for help. As a result, the size of the market exploded to about 24 million people.

Those bigger subsidies were meant to end in December 2022, but the Inflation Reduction Act, Biden’s signature domestic policy law, prolonged them through the end of 2025. And here we are. Democrats have made a deal on the enhanced subsidies their condition for passing a spending bill that would end the shutdown, which requires 60 votes in the Senate. Like their Republican House counterparts 12 years ago, Democratic senators are flexing the one lever of power in Washington they control.

The logic of the 2013 shutdown was to block Obamacare before people started experiencing the program’s advantages. It’s an axiom in politics that once the public has a benefit, it’s hard to take it away. Medicare, controversial when it was created 60 years ago, is considered untouchable now. More than three-quarters of respondents in a poll by health research firm KFF favored extending the assistance, and the people who benefit disproportionately live in states that Trump won. “Growth has been majorly driven by red states that haven’t expanded Medicaid,” says Matt McGough, an analyst at KFF.

That political axiom may be tested in this standoff. Making the enhanced subsidies permanent would boost the number of people with health insurance by 3.8 million—but at a cost of $350 billion over a decade, according to the Congressional Budget Office. The price tag is likely a nonstarter with much of the GOP. A compromise deal to extend them could still raise costs for millions, but for now both sides seem dug in. Republicans “are desperate to raise premiums on people of this country by 75% to finance their tax cut for the wealthy,” Democratic Senator Chris Murphy of Connecticut told Face the Nation on CBS. “To my Democratic colleagues,” Senator Lindsey Graham, a South Carolina Republican, said on NBC’s Meet the Press, “I’m not going to talk to you when the government’s shut down.”

The pressure will ratchet up in the days ahead. Federal workers will start to miss paychecks, raising the real hardship inflicted by the shutdown. And on Nov. 1, millions of people with ACA coverage will discover how much more they’ll have to pay next year as open enrollment begins. They’re all someone’s constituents, so it’s not unreasonable to expect a greater sense of urgency on both sides of the aisle.

RELATED: Five Ways Out of the US Government Shutdown Standoff

In Brief

  • JPMorgan soared past analysts’ estimates for third-quarter trading and investment-banking fees, driven by a pickup in dealmaking and underwriting amid lingering volatility tied to Trump’s tariffs. On the consumer credit card side, Chase is in a fierce fight with Amex over higher fees, extravagant events and every perk imaginable.
  • China sanctioned the US units of a South Korean shipping giant and threatened further retaliatory measures on the industry, the latest in the trade war between Beijing and Washington.
  • The protein craze that turbocharged energy bars and meat sticks is now coming for Doritos, waffles and even frosted Pop-Tarts.

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Behind Two Trump Brothers’ Investments

Illustration: Isabel Seliger for Bloomberg Businessweek

One of the newest tenants of Trump Tower in New York City is a startup investment bank called Dominari Holdings Inc. It’s located only two stories below the headquarters of the Trump Organization—a proximity that Dominari’s president, Kyle Wool, considers a point of pride.

Wool spent years cultivating a relationship with the Trump family, and since last year’s election he’s emerged as a kind of financial fixer for the president’s two eldest sons and a cadre of senior Trump Organization employees. Together they’ve struck a succession of lucrative deals.

Dominari is on the 22nd and 23rd floors, in a sleek space once occupied by Tommy Hilfiger’s family office. At the entrance on one afternoon in July, a television tuned to Fox Business was facing a shelf of Lucite trophies commemorating successful fundraisings for corporate clients. Few of these clients are household names. The bank specializes in raising money for microcaps, small but publicly traded companies whose share prices often gyrate wildly, driven as much by hype as by any expectation of earnings. That helps explain why Wool’s partnership with the Trumps has proved so fruitful.

How fruitful? Annie Massa and Zachary R. Mider write that Wool has helped Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump make more than half a billion dollars boosting stocks: The Banker Behind the Trumps’ Quick Wall Street Wins

SHARE YOUR STORY: A recent Massachusetts Institute of Technology study made waves with a striking conclusion: 95% of corporate artificial intelligence pilot projects fail to deliver a return on investment. Bloomberg journalists are looking to connect to employees who have found practical and creative ways to leverage AI technology into real business value. If that’s you, share your experience with us in a brief survey.

Creating New Pathways for Trade

Illustration: Raven Jiang for Bloomberg Businessweek

Canada is importing more cars from Mexico than from the US. China has snubbed American soybean farmers at harvest time and is buying from South American growers instead. India and China are resuming direct flights between the two countries and trading rare earths, ending years of frozen relations.

The new contours of global commerce are starting to emerge as governments redraw trade alliances and companies seek other markets to avoid the highest US tariffs since the 1930s.

Smaller economies are also adapting to a world where US consumers and companies are costlier to reach. Peru is seeking buyers in Asia for its blueberries, and Lesotho, a textile producer, is pivoting to Asia, Europe and the rest of Africa. A group of 14 countries that includes New Zealand, Singapore, Switzerland and the United Arab Emirates has formed a partnership to boost trade and investment.

The global economy has defied expectations of a recession triggered by a tit-for-tat retaliation against President Donald Trump’s tariffs. Instead, America’s turn toward protectionism has demonstrated the durability of the 85% of global trade that occurs outside the US.

Enda Curran writes about the rush to make deals: Highest US Tariffs Since the 1930s Redraw the International Trade Map

RELATED: The president’s push to do everything at once has overwhelmed Democrats, the courts, the media—and the White House. In a new World Stage column, Wes Kosova writes about the mess it leaves behind: Trump’s ‘Flood the Zone’ Strategy Also Involves a Lot of Mopping Up

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Private Assets

$205 billion
That’s how much client money BlackRock pulled in over the third quarter, as the world’s largest fund manager expanded its footprint in private credit and alternative assets. Investors added $153 billion on a net basis to stock, bond and other exchange-traded funds, which topped $5 trillion for the first time.

Bailing Out a Friend

“Without this aid, the currency was going to hell. That was going to hit prices, erasing the inflation gains that were Milei’s strong point.”
Mariel Fornoni
Director of Management and Fit, a polling firm in Buenos Aires
The Trump administration is expected to announce a $20 billion lifeline to help Argentine leader Javier Milei, who is in dire need of cash and facing midterm elections on Oct 26. Read the full story here.

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