The progress of artificial intelligence has been astonishing, and now we know it’s helping the overall U.S. economy much faster than most thought. That’s the main story from Thursday’s first quarter GDP report, with AI-related investment driving most of the 2% growth. Meantime, the personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index rose at an annual rate of 4.5%. You don’t need ChatGPT to tell you that President Trump’s tariffs are hitting consumers.
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The AI investment boom and Mr. Trump’s tax cuts—especially the business expensing provisions—are helping to offset the damage from his tariffs. But tariffs are a tax, and taxes hurt growth. Mr. Trump’s willy-nilly imposition of border taxes has also fueled uncertainty, which makes it difficult for businesses to plan investments.
Tariff costs will vary by the particular business and individual, but most Americans are getting stung whether they know it or not. Our friends Michael Solon and Phil Gramm wrote in these pages this week that the $195 billion in new tariffs that were collected last year swamp the $188 billion that taxpayers will receive in lower federal tax liability for 2025 thanks to last summer’s tax cuts.
The Washington Post‘s Editorial Board wisely rejects Bernie Sanders’s ignorant fears of AI and his call for the governments of China and the United States to cooperate in stifling it. Here’s the Editorial Board’s conclusion:
The enormous economic upsides — in medicine, productivity, scientific research — are why neither side can afford to slow down. And the competition, between labs and nations, is not the catastrophe Sanders describes. It is the mechanism most likely to ensure the technology is developed fast and broadly diffused.
The widening gap between American and European prosperity is among the most important facts of the global economy. The clearest manifestation is the chasm in per capita gross domestic product: $94,400 in the U.S., according to the International Monetary Fund, compared with $65,300 in Germany, $61,000 in the U.K. and $52,000 in France.
While America’s prosperity advantage isn’t new, today’s scale is. From a fairly narrow edge throughout the 1980s, the gap widened a bit in the 1990s. Since 2007, however, European per capita incomes have more or less stagnated while the U.S. has enjoyed another growth spurt.
I know what you’re going to say, and it’s no excuse. The U.S. per capita figure is flattered by a small cohort of fabulously successful companies, which create a cohort of fabulously wealthy entrepreneurs. But those companies could just as easily plant their headquarters in Europe (some are even European by birth) and skew the per capita data there instead. Switzerland amps up its per-capita GDP to $126,000 by attracting finance and pharma.
This is another indictment of European shortcomings. The wealth skewing American per capita economic data is a result of innovation and entrepreneurship. Europe lacks America’s per capita output not because it lacks American tech companies and billionaires but because it lacks American-style productivity growth capable of creating tech companies and billionaires in Europe.
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A common refrain in Britain, for instance, is “But we have the National Health Service, and in America everyone has to pay huge sums for medical care.” The people who say it don’t understand how enlightening the observation is. The NHS launders money the indebted government doesn’t have into terrible health outcomes. This feels like a benefit because it conceals from patients the true cost of their care, while its shortcomings relative to other countries are noticeable only to policy nerds. That’s how most of Europe’s welfare states work.
Analyses that find a hollowed-out middle invariably rely on definitions of the middle class that peg thresholds to how the typical family is doing. In that case, even if everyone is better off over time in inflation-adjusted terms, if the middle’s gains are stronger than those of families lower down, more people can fall short of “the middle.” The Pew Research Center, for example, that the share of families that were “lower-income” rose between 1971 and 2023, even though the purchasing power of those lower-income families rose by 55 percent. The explanation for this seeming paradox is that “middle-income” families saw a 60 percent gain, making it harder to reach the middle-income threshold if income rose more slowly than that.
The point of my paper with [Stephen] Rose was that claims of a “hollowing out” of the middle class wrongly reinterpret widespread gains across the income distribution as rising insecurity and declining living standards. Unbeknownst to us, a perfect example of this misinterpretation appeared a week before we published our report in Chicago magazine. The offending article title that “Chicago’s Middle Class Is Disappearing.” My reanalysis of the data behind the piece indicates it would be difficult to articulate a more misleading conclusion. Fewer Chicagoans live in middle-class neighborhoods than in 1970—but only because more live in richer neighborhoods.
My intrepid Mercatus Center colleague, Veronique de Rugy, writes about the marriage gap. A slice:
I’m a libertarian. I don’t care whom, or if, you marry. Yet I’m reminded that there is a problem by a new report from the American Enterprise Institute. Edited by Kevin Corinth and Scott Winship, “Land of Opportunity: Advancing the American Dream” covers a broad range of challenges facing the country today, from the cost of living and workforce development to education, crime, and the erosion of community life.
The authors are not culture warriors. They are empirical economists. But among their most important findings are those dealing with the collapse of the American family and what the government has done to accelerate it.
From economist Robert VerBruggen’s chapter on the erosion of married parenthood, I learned that in the mid-20th century, only one in 20 children were born out of wedlock. Now it’s two in five. I also learned that America has the world’s highest rate of children living in single-parent households: 23 percent in the U.S. against an international norm of 7 percent.
Imagine someone who chooses to manufacture horse-drawn carriages in the modern United States. Outside of niche markets, like Jackson Square in New Orleans, demand for such a good is minimal. Call him James. He is producing something very few people want, and the economic value he is, therefore, generating is quite low. Accordingly, the wage that could be sustained by his line of work will also be low.
James, however, is not discouraged. He insists that he deserves a “living wage” simply by virtue of being employed.
The absurdity of the demand should be apparent. It is not a question of the dignity of the work. Let us assume his craftsmanship is top-notch, and he is obviously not engaged in the production of anything morally objectionable. Yet, the value James creates is limited relative to other uses of labor and capital. So much so that, economically speaking, James is not even engaged in production but consumption.
Paying him a high wage, then, would require diverting resources away from more valuable activities. In effect, this would mean asking others to subsidize James’s “production” that consumers have already overwhelmingly revealed to be of little value. If James wishes to continue this work for personal satisfaction, he is free to do so. But it does not follow that others are obligated to sustain it.
Perhaps the most contentious statement of Donald Trump’s career has been his assertion in August 2017 that there were “very fine people on both sides” of the agitation in Charlottesville, Va. Mr. Trump was right in more ways than he realized—at least one person was on both sides. Meet F-37, a figure in the indictment a federal grand jury in Montgomery, Ala., handed up last week against the self-styled antiracist nonprofit Southern Poverty Law Center.
“F-37 was a member of the online leadership chat group that planned the 2017 ‘Unite the Right’ event . . . and attended the event at the direction of the SPLC,” the grand jury alleges. “F-37 made racist postings under the supervision of the SPLC and helped coordinate transportation to the event for several attendees. Between 2015 and 2023, the SPLC secretly paid F-37 more than $270,000.00.”
F is for “field source,” the SPLC’s term for inside informants it paid to gather intelligence on white-supremacist groups. According to the indictment, “between 2014 and 2023, the SPLC secretly funneled more than $3 million in SPLC funds to Fs who were associated with various violent extremist groups.” Among these, the indictment says, were F-9, who got a cool million over a decade for activities that included stealing documents from the neo-Nazi National Alliance, and F-39, whom the SPLC paid $6,000 to take the rap for F-9’s theft.
The SPLC raises money and sustains its relevance by stoking the perception that white supremacy is pervasive and influential. I have argued since 2008 that this aligns the center’s interests with those of supremacist groups. My point received insider validation from a 2019 New Yorker article by journalist Bob Moser, whom the SPLC hired as a writer in 2001. “Though the center claimed to be effective in fighting extremism, ‘hate’ always continued to be on the rise, more dangerous than ever, with each year’s report on hate groups,” Mr. Moser wrote. He and his colleagues came up with a mordant slogan: “The SPLC—making hate pay.”
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To observe that the SPLC practices journalism isn’t to give it a seal of approval. To the contrary, it is to insist that the center’s work be judged by the ethical standards of journalism. In America at least, respectable journalists don’t pay sources for information—much less hire sources to obtain information illegally, as the SPLC allegedly did with F-9. We don’t deliberately deceive our readers, as the SPLC allegedly did by attributing F-9’s theft to F-39 and by publishing an exposé of F-42 that concealed the most interesting and pertinent fact about him—that he was on the SPLC payroll.
Journalists like Mr. Page don’t understand the SPLC because such clarity would reveal that this journalism scandal implicates their own organizations. Mr. Moser noted in 2019 that the SPLC’s hate-group list “remains a valuable resource for journalists.” News outlets frequently pass along other SPLC work with a gloss of expert authority. They couldn’t do that if they acknowledged the center for what it actually is—a competitor, and a particularly disreputable one.


In sum, if the devotees of protection want to persuade scholars to adopt their viewpoint and not mislead unsuspecting and innocent policymakers, they need to offer much more evidence in favor of their case. It will not suffice to offer half-baked arguments for infant industry protection, often relying on the post hoc fallacy, and point fingers at cases in which liberalization failed to deliver. If they insist that free trade advocates produce iron-clad evidence of a causal link between trade and growth, they must subject themselves to the same standard of proof. Or at least they must produce evidence that matches what free trade advocates have produced. To date they have not even come close to doing so.
When the federal government spends far beyond the tax revenues it has, it gets the extra money by selling bonds. The Federal Reserve has become the biggest buyer of these bonds, since it costs them nothing to create more money.
