From the phrasing, this seems like a fairly straightforward question; to increase the wealth of the nation, Trump has to support education. However, given Trump's track record with education and his appointment of Betsy DeVos as Secretary of Education, this is a generally complicated issue.
I'd argue that Trump should fire Betsy DeVos, reduce military spending and reallocate money to fund public education specifically in urban and impoverished regions of the country, and coordinate finding and hiring a team of education policy makers to reassess public education and the educational system's structure. Considering Adam's argument and points on the "invisible hand" in economic systems, I believe that Trump should specifically restructure the education system to provide education for both academic/white collar professional career tracks (doctor, lawyer, banker, politician, etc.) and technical career tracks (mechanic, farmer, industry worker, etc.) so as to provide workers for each specialized role to fit into the economic system. The current education system largely focuses on "No Child Left Behind" and the Common Core that stresses the academic track as the sole path to success, but this ignores the fact that technical workers are needed to produce a functioning economic system of producers. In this way, Trump's educational change could stabilize and strengthen the economic system, thus increasing the social wealth of the nation.
I definitely agree with your recommendation. This is structuring of an education system to provide training for both academic/white collar and technical career tracks reminds me of Smith's division of labor—that might be what you were getting at, already! Smith provides a smaller scale example of assigning specific tasks within a pin factory, but it might be applied to the assignment of labor roles on a larger economic scale. Providing options for different career tracks is not the same thing as assigning people to different tasks, but this system that you've suggested acknowledges that an economy must have a streamlined division of labor.
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