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This Article is From Jun 12, 2018

Trump Just Flunked Another Math Test

(Bloomberg Opinion) -- Back in 2006, the radio host Howard Stern gave Donald Trump, his daughter Ivanka and his son Donald Jr. a little on-the-air math test that's worth recalling on a day when Trump is tossing around a curious number.

"You went to the Wharton School of Business?" Stern asked Donald Jr.

"Yes," Donald Jr. responded.

"What's 17 times 6?"

As Trump's son struggled for an answer, his sister began to laugh.

"What is it? Do you need a calculator?" she inquired, chuckling.

"96?" Donald Jr. asked, taking stabs at answers. "94?"

"Wrong," Stern said. "Wrong!"

"That's not a practical application," Ivanka responded, coming to her brother's rescue. That prompted Stern to ask Ivanka to multiply 17 times 6 for him. Before she could respond, her father decided to bail out the family.

"It's 1,112," Trump said, pronouncing his answer "eleven-twelve." He nodded confidently toward Stern, missing the correct answer, 102, by 1,010.

A math deficit has never stopped Trump — a serial bankruptcy artist — from anointing himself a financially dexterous business sophisticate. Over the years, he and his children have positioned themselves as astute, keen-minded folks lording over a disciplined, dominant real estate operation.

"The three adult children of internationally renowned developer Donald Trump – Donald Jr., Ivanka and Eric – have forged a formidable team leading development and acquisitions for The Trump Organization," the family's business website proclaims.  

When I occasionally covered Trump as a reporter for the New York Times, I would chat with him about his business and Manhattan real estate. Trump could paint his goals and dreams in broad strokes, but questions about the most basic of concepts familiar to anyone engineering real estate deals — "cash flow" and "net present value," for example — invariably drew blanks. The Great Dealmaker and "The Apprentice" sorcerer just wasn't very good at math or finance. And he didn't really care.

That might have been OK when Trump was just a self-promoter more famous for being famous than for being a first-class developer. But he's president now.

On Tuesday morning, Trump had this to tweet:

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