Tom Palmer explains that “zero-sum thinking creates a negative-sum world.” A slice:
We trade with our neighbors. We trade with people on the other side of town. We trade with people we will never meet from hundreds of miles away in our own countries. We trade with people we will never meet in countries on the other side of the planet. We trade with people whose languages we do not understand. We trade with people of different religions, customs, and sports passions. The fundamental economic and moral principles of trade are not affected by distance, language, religion, customs, or sports. They rest on mutual advantage. When a Vermonter exports maple syrup to a Floridian and imports oranges from the Floridian, there is no essential difference between that exchange and one between a Canadian and a Floridian.
Trade creates intertwined interests. Complex and prosperous societies are those in which people depend on each other in myriad ways—for food, clothing, entertainment, transportation, medical care, teaching, and more. That mutual dependence is a source of harmony, not a loss of autonomy. As Frédéric Bastiat, one of the greatest champions of freedom who ever lived, noted, “The one thing that people overlook is that the sort of dependence that results from exchange, i.e., from commercial transactions, is a reciprocal dependence. We cannot be dependent upon a foreigner without his being dependent upon us.”
A Tax on Imports Is a Tax on Exports
A sales tax imposed on Floridians who purchase Canadian maple syrup may please the Vermont producers (unless they are serious about principles), but it is still a tax imposed on Floridians. It will likely raise the price the Vermont maple syrup producers can charge. In the end, the Floridians will pay more. What’s more, however, it will restrict the Canadian market for Florida oranges, even if the Canadians are rational and refrain from “retaliating” by imposing such a tax on themselves. Why? Because a tax on imports has in the aggregate the same impact as a tax on exports. Exports are what you have to send to get imports. After all, what you want are the imports, not the exports, which you have to send away in order to get the imports.
It’s possible — at great cost — to produce oranges up north and maple syrup in Florida, but it’s a lot better for people to exchange Florida oranges for maple syrup from Canada or Vermont. When the Canadians find that Floridians are not buying their now more expensive (price paid to Canadian producers + the tax taken by Uncle Sam) maple syrup, they will not have the U.S. dollars to buy those oranges, meaning that the Floridians are less able to sell to the Canadian market. The market for oranges has just shrunk, which means lower income for Florida orange producers. The country as a whole is not better off. Taxing imports is, in effect, quite like directly taxing exports. (In economics, that’s called the “Lerner Symmetry Thesis.”)
George Will sensibly argues that Trump’s “loutocracy” has abandoned any claims that it might otherwise have had to the benefit of the doubt. Two slices:
Minneapolis is today’s Birmingham. Citizens with smartphones are supplementing journalists in gathering facts. It is infuriating, yet grimly sublime, that the current national administration, which will not stop banging on about how it is restoring America’s greatness, is incessantly embarrassing (about Greenland, vaccines, and much else). The administration requires an addition to the typologies of government: loutocracy.
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Trust, including trust in government, is the glue that gives successful societies the cohesion requisite for collaborative dynamism. It is calamitous when government forfeits the public’s trust. But when, as today, such forfeiture occurs, assume the worst.
Today, it is more than prudent, it is good citizenship to assume that everything ICE says, and everything the administration says in support of its deportation mania, is untrue until proved to be otherwise. Or, as Noem might say, until it has been “adjusted.”
Some administration louts have said that the most recent (as of this writing) person killed in Minneapolis by a federal officer was a “would-be assassin” and, of course, a “domestic terrorist.” Because Republicans control congressional committee gavels, and because today’s president controls congressional Republicans, there will be no oversight of ICE’s rampages. The Senate, which disgraced itself by confirming Noem and others unqualified for cabinet positions, is especially unlikely to suddenly acquire the inconvenience of a conscience.
So, expect more killings, and more political smearing of the victims. That ICE’s disgraces will continue is, in its revolting way, a promise kept: loutocracy.
Yuval Levin makes a powerful case that the Trump administration continues to recklessly destroy its legitimacy with the public. Two slices:
The Trump administration is facing a serious and justified political backlash to the brutal excesses evident in its immigration enforcement operations in Minnesota. But even more than that, President Trump and his team are beginning to pay a price for their willful blindness to both the dynamics of American public opinion and the logic of the American constitutional system.
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Americans do not generally share the dark, bitter, vindictive hostility toward immigrants and immigration that characterizes the views of some of Trump’s senior aides. And so most voters are not encouraged but alarmed by the thuggish and fascistic tone of much of the administration’s rhetoric on the subject. The militant ICE recruitment ads, the nativist DHS tweets, the mendacious White House press statements, and the callous reactions of senior officials to the killings of protesters in the course of immigration enforcement operations all convey a hunger for confrontation (if not a lust for blood) that is not only grossly unbecoming of the government of a free society but also extremely unappealing as a way of talking to the country.
The result has been evident in measures of public opinion. About 20 percent of the voters who approved of Trump’s immigration policy a year ago now disapprove of it. Immigration remains among Trump’s strongest issues, because the public trusts him even less to manage the economy, but he is at roughly 40 percent approval now, and falling, regarding immigration. That fall did not begin with the killings in Minneapolis, but it has been exacerbated by them and is probably not over.
The Editorial Board of the Wall Street Journal warns of the damage that Trump’s hostility to immigrants is doing to America’s economy. A slice:
The Census Bureau also projected that net international migration will fall to 321,000 this year. That’s about three-quarters lower than during the first Trump term. If current “trends continue, it would be the first time the United States has seen net negative migration in more than 50 years,” the bureau says.
Restrictionists in the White House will rate this as a success—a sign of progress on the way to Stephen Miller’s goal of zero immigration for many years. But declining immigration—legal and illegal—is notably occurring against a backdrop of falling fertility rates and an aging population. Natural population growth last year was a paltry 519,000, down from 1.1 million in 2017 and between 1.6 million and 1.9 million during the 2000s.
Conservatives say Americans should churn out more babies, but regardless of the virtues of child-rearing, government can’t force people to procreate. Slowing immigration and an aging population present serious workforce challenges, as any employer will tell you. Artificial intelligence and robots can increase productivity. But America will still need workers for all kinds of vital jobs—from health services, to plumbing and electrical repair, to building homes or working in biotech labs.
The Cato Institute’s Marian Tupy, writing in the Washington Post, makes clear that the ultimate source of prosperity is creative ideas rather than atoms and molecules mashed together into different physical forms by nature. Two slices:
In the long run, nations do not become rich and safe by hoarding rocks. They become rich and safe by building the rules and habits that turn knowledge into production, and production into strength. They become rich and safe through ideas.
That is how the United States rose. America had plenty of natural endowments. So did Russia, Venezuela and Congo. What made the U.S. exceptional was a system that rewarded discovery, experimentation, entrepreneurship and scale. When that system works, resources stop being fixed constraints and become problems to be solved. When Santa Barbara, California, suffered from prolonged drought, for example, it built a desalination plant to increase its fresh water supply.
American economist Julian Simon said it plainly: The ultimate resource is people. Scarcity is not mainly a story about nature’s endowments. It is a story about human ingenuity unleashed under good institutions. If markets are allowed to work and innovators are allowed to profit, scarcity gives rise to substitution, efficiency and new supply.
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Trump is right to care about the supply side. He is wrong to think the path to greater productivity runs mainly through controlling more stuff. America’s durable advantage is its capacity to generate and apply ideas under a relatively free and flexible business environment.
That is the strategic resource that compounds.
Robby Soave is correct: Katie Miller – wife of White House’s ardent nativist Stephen Miller – is wildly mistaken to think that classical liberalism is woke leftism. A slice:
Classical liberalism is the forerunner of modern libertarianism: It is a philosophy that emphasizes individual rights, including civil rights and property rights. Classically liberal thinkers such as John Locke helped establish the notion that government should be accountable to the people. Economists such as Adam Smith and David Ricardo used classical liberalism as a guiding principle when arguing in favor of free markets and free trade. In the realm of government, the political leaders associated with classical liberalism and laissez faire economic policies are people such as former President Calvin Coolidge, former U.K. Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, and Argentinian President Javier Milei. Note that these figures are not exactly defined by their love of wokeness. To the extent that “wokeness” is even a coherent set of views, it emphasizes collective rights for various identity groups instead of the individual-rights framework of classical liberalism.
Leftists tend to agree with classical liberals and even most conservatives on some broad principles, like the notion that people should elect their leaders. But modern liberals, progressives, and leftists tend to disagree sharply with classical liberals and libertarians on economics: They want much more government regulation, taxation, and centralized government control of the economy. On these issues, leftism bears a closer resemblance to the version of conservatism advocated by Stephen Miller—who supports tariffs and extreme restrictions on immigrant labor—than it does to classical liberalism.
Christian Britschgi examines Trump’s executive order that foolishly restricts corporate ownership of homes.
Marcus Witcher reviews historian David Beito’s new book on Franklin Roosevelt. A slice:
Further, FDR rejected calls from Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins “to admit the maximum combined quota for the next three years (82,000 in all).” Most tragically, when the German liner, the SS St. Louis, arrived off the coast of Florida carrying over 900 Jewish refugees, the administration not only did not admit them, the Coast Guard ensured that none of the refugees would be able to swim to freedom. Even after evidence of mass genocide in Europe reached Roosevelt, “the administration’s stance toward refugees showed no sign of shifting.” Beito concludes that “while FDR and his advisors certainly viewed the Nazis as international gangsters, the plight of the Jews was never a priority.”
The Washington Post‘s Editorial Page reports on France’s self-inflicted fiscal woes. Two slices:
France has budget problems, so politicians reached for a politically popular solution: Tax the rich.
Never mind that France already had the second-highest tax rate in Europe for its top bracket at 55.4 percent. Or that it already had surtaxes on income over 250,000 euros and income over 500,000 euros.
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The unsustainable welfare state also means France cannot afford its ambitions to build a self-sufficient military or fully support Ukraine as it fends off Russia.
The bleak conclusion: Politicians in Paris have made promises they can’t keep to a people who are now dependent on government for their livelihoods.
Charismatic socialists keep trying to sell Americans on the European model. Look under the hood, and it’s clearly a lemon.