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Some Links for a True Liberation Day

Scott Lincicome was quickly out of the blocks after yesterday’s U.S. Supreme Court ruling striking down the tariffs that Trump illegally imposed under the IEEPA statute. Two slices:

In a press conference after the ruling on Friday, Mr. Trump acknowledged that his team had been studying these and other laws as fall-back options, and he announced a slate of new actions to replace his IEEPA tariffs. This includes the current 232 actions, initiating new investigations under Section 301, and imposing a global 10% tariff under Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974, which empowers the president to address “large and serious” balance-of-payments deficits via global tariffs of up to 15% for no more than 150 days (after which Congress must act to continue the tariffs). The administration might later consider Section 338 of the Tariff Act of 1930—a short and ambiguous law that authorizes the president to impose tariffs of up to 50% on imports from countries that have “discriminated” against U.S. commerce—but this is legally riskier.

These measures will create global tariff regime similar to what Trump imposed under IEEPA. The main difference—and the main benefit for America’s economy and trading partners—would rest in how the president does so. IEEPA was essentially an Oval Office “tariff switch” that Mr. Trump could flip on and off at any time, for any reason and in any amount. This created massive uncertainty and crippling complexity for businesses, foreign governments and the U.S. economy. The alternative authorities, by contrast, have substantive and procedural guardrails that limit their size and scope or, at the very least, give companies time to prepare for tariffs (or lobby against them).

To be sure, “guardrails” is a relative term for a president who has already stretched Section 232’s “national security” rationale to cover whipped-cream cans and bathroom vanities. And the courts have largely rubber-stamped the administration’s previous moves under Sections 232 and 301—a big reason why the tariff Plan B will feature them. Abuse is likely, as is more litigation. And unlike with IEEPA, we shouldn’t expect the courts to save us.

The justices’ ruling is an important victory for constitutional governance and will eliminate the most destabilizing element of Mr. Trump’s tariff regime. But until Congress reclaims some of its constitutional authority over U.S. trade policy and limits the president’s legal tariff powers, costly and erratic tariffs will remain the norm in the U.S., to our economy’s great detriment.

Here’s Dartmouth’s great trade economist, Doug Irwin, writing in The Economist. A slice:

The historic ruling is critically important beyond its implications for current trade policy. Had the court not limited Mr Trump’s actions, presidential power on import tariffs would have been completely unchecked by any congressional legislation and untethered to any congressional opinion. If the government had won, this administration and future administrations could have declared an emergency, however frivolous, and imposed steep taxes. As the brief for VOS and several other companies put it, the president could “impose tariffs on the American people whenever he wants, at whatever level he wants, against whatever countries and products he wants, and for as long as he wants”, simply by declaring an emergency that is “unreviewable”.

In oral argument, a hypothetical case was raised of a Democratic administration declaring a climate emergency and imposing high tariffs on imported electric vehicles or diesel trucks as they saw fit. One person could dictate policy without approval from Congress, the representatives of the people. This would have been a radical rewrite of the constitution.

Jane Shaw Stroup reminds us of what is threatened by protective tariffs. Here’s her conclusion:

That’s why today’s Supreme Court ruling was important. It’s a reminder that prosperity is not guaranteed. The world’s economic ascent has been built on openness—on the ability of goods, people, and ideas to move cheaply and freely. Re‑erecting barriers through tariffs risks undoing gains that lifted billions out of poverty and reshaped the human condition.

[DBx: Long experience at debating trade policy prompts me to add this further point, one that I know Jane agrees with: Free trade’s lifting of billions of people around the world out of poverty did not come at the expense of Americans; this free trade also made us Americans richer.]

The Editorial Board of the Wall Street Journal applauds the Court’s ruling in Learning Resources v. Trump. A slice:

The Administration’s strongest argument is that it deserves deference on questions that implicate foreign affairs. The dissent agrees. But as Justice Gorsuch notes in a brilliant concurrence, this logic would have required the Court to uphold the Obama Clean Power plan in West Virginia v. EPA (2022) since climate change is an international issue.

Justice Gorsuch acknowledges that “the major questions doctrine may speak with less force where the President and Congress enjoy “overlap[ping] . . . authority” under the Constitution. But the Constitution expressly vests the power over taxation and foreign commerce with Congress, not the President.

Justice Gorsuch also amusingly hoists the liberal Justices on their prior dissents that criticized the use of the major-questions doctrine in cases involving overreaches by Democratic Presidents. “Their approach today is difficult to square with how they have interpreted other statutes,” he writes. Yes, it is.

The Wall Street Journal‘s Editorial Board also rightly condemns Trump for his utterly inappropriate and baseless criticisms of the Justices who dared rule against his exercise of power. A slice:

This is ugly even by Mr. Trump’s standards. He’s accusing them of betraying the U.S. at the behest of nefarious interests he didn’t identify, no doubt because they don’t exist. Asked about Justices Gorsuch and Barrett, whom he appointed, Mr. Trump called them “an embarrassment to their families.”

This is rhetoric that could cause some deranged Trump acolyte to turn to violence against a Justice. It’s as bad as Sen. Chuck Schumer’s threat in 2020 that Justices Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh had “released the whirlwind and you will pay the price!” Recall the nut who stalked Justice Kavanaugh’s home in 2022, after the leak of the Court’s draft opinion overturning Roe v. Wade. We hope all nine Justices appear next week at the State of the Union address as a show of self-protective solidarity.

The Editorial Board of the Washington Post calls yesterday’s tariff ruling “a triumph for the separation of powers and individual liberty.” A slice:

Congress never approved the worldwide tariffs at issue in the case. Trump told the court they were authorized by a 1977 law, the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. No president has used IEEPA to impose tariffs, but it contains the phrase “regulate … importation.” Trump said that was sufficient authorization for him to throw out the rest of the tariff schedules and set import taxes however he pleased.

Roberts saw the flimsiness of that reasoning. “Based on two words separated by 16 others,” he wrote, “the President asserts the independent power to impose tariffs on imports from any country, of any product, at any rate, for any amount of time. Those words cannot bear such weight.” Indeed. The executive branch can’t be allowed to grab hundreds of billions of dollars from the American people on such a thin legal basis.

Reading between the lines, there’s a sense that Trump’s frenetic alteration of tariff rates weighed on the court. The opinion notes that under Trump’s reading of the law, he is “free to issue a dizzying array of modifications at will” — and indeed he has. Tariffs have become a lobbying bonanza as companies campaign for exemptions and carveouts.

Also applauding the SCOTUS ruling against Trump’s IEEPA tariffs are the Editors of National Review. A slice:

While the Court’s conservatives were equally divided in this case, we believe that the majority (which included two of Trump’s three appointees to the Court, Justices Neil Gorsuch and Amy Coney Barrett) had much the better of the argument that the extraordinary, limitless delegation of the most central power possessed by Congress needs to hang on language more specific than what IEEPA says. In so holding, the Court was faithful to the same principles it repeatedly cited to constrain Biden on student loans, the eviction moratorium, the workplace vaccine mandate, and carbon emission rules. That means the Court is doing its job — which is why progressives hate it. The right should not sing from that hymnal.

The president’s furious and intemperate response — effectively accusing the justices in the majority of being bought off by foreign powers and suggesting that Democrats might have a point in calls for Court-packing — was not only irresponsible, but also completely politically unhelpful to his own cause. It’s also not apt to win him more friends on a bench that still has many other cases on its docket regarding his powers and his initiatives.

“Small business owners celebrate Supreme Court striking down Trump’s tariffs” – so reports Reason‘s Jack Nicastro.

Using four charts, Adam Michel and Santiago Forster make clear some of the fiscal consequences of yesterday’s SCOTUS ruling.

Those tariff costs offset a majority of the average $3,736 tax cut Americans are projected to receive in 2026 from the OBBBA. Considering both policies together, Figure 4 shows that the bottom two income groups face a net tax increase, decreasing their after-tax income by between 1.2 percent and 0.3 percent. Middle- and higher-income Americans see small net tax cuts of between 0.3 and 0.6 percent of after-tax income. Overturning the IEEPA tariffs will allow more Americans to fully benefit from the 2025 tax cuts.

Also writing about the fiscal impact – or relative lack thereof – of the SCOTUS ruling against Trump’s IEEPA tariffs is my intrepid Mercatus Center colleague, Veronique de Rugy. A slice:

What about the $18 trillion in investment pledges that the tariffs were used to extract from foreign governments and companies? If the gun is taken away, do the promises made at gunpoint disappear with it?

Well, the thing is, most of those promises were never really what they seemed in the first place, as Scott Lincicome’s detailed analysis at The Dispatch shows. So before you panic about the $18 trillion in investment that Trump claimed his tariffs had secured, it’s worth understanding what that number actually was. It was, in short, mostly fiction.

Alex Tabarrok concludes that the initial appeal of one of the points made by the SCOTUS dissenters dissolves upon careful inspection. A slice:

Congress wants the President to move fast in a real emergency, but it doesn’t want to hand over routine control of trade policy. The right delegation design is therefore a screening device: give the President authority he will exercise only when the situation is truly an emergency.

An import ban works as a screening device precisely because it is very disruptive. A ban creates immediate and substantial harm.  It is a “costly signal.” A President who invokes it is credibly saying: this is serious enough that I am willing to absorb a large cost. Tariffs, in contrast, are cheaper–especially to the President. Tariffs raise revenue, which offsets political pain. Tariff incidence is diffuse and easy to misattribute—prices creep, intermediaries take blame, consumers don’t observe the policy lever directly. Most importantly tariffs are adjustable, which makes them a weapon useful for bargaining, exemptions, and targeted favors. Tariffs under executive authority implicitly carry the message–I am the king; give me a gold bar and I will reduce your tariffs. Tariff flexibility is more politically appealing than a ban and thus a less credible signal of an emergency. The “lesser-included” argument gets the logic backwards. The asymmetry is the point.

Not surprisingly, the same structure appears in real emergency services. A fire chief may have the authority to close roads during an emergency but that doesn’t imply that the fire chief has the authority to impose road tolls. Road closure is costly and self-limiting — it disrupts traffic, generates immediate complaints, and the chief has every incentive to lift it as soon as possible. Tolls are cheap, adjustable, and once in place tend to persist; they generate revenue that can fund the agency and create constituencies for their continuation. Nobody thinks granting a fire chief emergency closure authority implicitly grants them taxing authority, even if the latter is a lesser authority. The closure and toll instruments have completely different political economy properties despite operating on the same roads.

The majority reaches the right conclusion by noting that tariffs are a tax over which Congress, not the President, has authority. That is constitutionally correct but the deeper question is why the Framers lodged the taxing power in Congress — and the answer is political economy. Revenue instruments are especially easy for an executive to exploit because they can be targeted. The constitutional rule exists to solve that incentive problem.

Once you see that, the dissent’s “greater includes the lesser” inference collapses on its own terms. A principal can rationally authorize am agent to take a dramatic emergency action while withholding the cheaper, revenue-lever not despite the fact that it seems milder, but because of it. The blunt instrument is self-limiting. The revenue instrument is not. That asymmetry is what the Constitution’s categorical division of powers preserves — and what an open-ended emergency delegation would destroy.

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Quotation of the Day…

… is from page 162 of the original edition of volume III (“The Political Order of a Free People,” 1979) of F.A. Hayek’s Law, Legislation, and Liberty:

Even today the overwhelming majority of people, including, I am afraid, a good many supposed economists, do not yet understand that this extensive social division of labour, based on widely dispersed information, has been made possible entirely by the use of those impersonal signals which emerge from the market process and tell people what to do in order to adapt their activities to events of which they have no direct knowledge. That in an economic order involving a far-ranging division of labour it can no longer be the pursuit of perceived common ends but only abstract rules of conduct … is an insight which most people still refuse to accept.

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Some Links

The Editorial Board of the Washington Post justly criticizes White House advisor Kevin Hassett for calling for punishing researchers who publish conclusions that the White House finds to be politically inconvenient. A slice:

Having access to more information is a good thing — especially if you’re the National Economic Council director whose ability to do the job relies on data. But White House economic advisor Kevin Hassett would prefer to “discipline” researchers whose calculations are inconvenient for the Trump administration’s defense of tariffs.

Last week the Federal Reserve Bank of New York posted an analysis of how Trump’s tariff hikes affected prices in 2025. U.S. border taxes stood at 2.6 percent at the beginning of the year and 13 percent at the end. Who pays them? According to the study, the bulk of the tariff cost — 86 percent in November — was borne by U.S. importers. Foreign exporters adjusted their prices only modestly.

Hassett wasn’t pleased with the analysis, which was authored by Federal Reserve staff and a Columbia University economics professor. “It’s, I think, the worst paper I’ve ever seen in the history of the Federal Reserve system,” he said on CNBC Wednesday. “The people associated with this paper should presumably be disciplined, because what they’ve done is they’ve put out a conclusion which has created a lot of news that’s highly partisan based on analysis that wouldn’t be accepted in a first-semester econ class.”

In fact, the finding — that taxing something raises its cost — is consistent with not only Econ 101 but other professional research on how tariffs affect prices. Isn’t the point of tariffs, after all, to raise the price of foreign goods so Americans will buy domestic goods instead?

The Wall Street Journal‘s Editorial Board criticizes the Trump administration’s refusal to acknowledge the truth about tariffs – a truth obviously embarrassing to Trump. A slice:

Clearly the White House is worried that voters might conclude this research aligns with their own experience. Kevin Hassett, director of the National Economic Council, took to CNBC Wednesday to pan the New York Fed research as “the worst paper I’ve ever seen in the history of the Federal Reserve System” and suggested the people who wrote and published it should be “disciplined.” Disciplined how? Put in stocks? For a tariff paper?

The Fed analysis aligns with other research into the distribution of tariff costs from Harvard economists and Germany’s Kiel Institute—and with common sense. There isn’t widespread evidence that foreign producers are cutting their prices to offset the tariffs, the main mechanism by which foreigners would “pay” for the border taxes.

Nor is the dollar strengthening, which is the other possible mechanism for making foreigners pay (we’ll spare you the equations). Instead the tariffs are causing an increase in post-tariff prices of those goods that are still imported, alongside a modest decrease in the volume of imports. Americans pay higher prices, or “pay” in the form of less choice.

In his more honest moments, Mr. Trump admits this is the effect, if not the intention, of his tariffs. That’s what he meant when he said last year that Americans may have to buy fewer dolls for their children as a result of his trade policies. The handful of economists who support his tariffs believe the border taxes rebalance the global economy specifically by deterring American consumption.

The Fed research and similar papers try to put some numbers on these phenomena. The serious kernel of Mr. Hassett’s complaint, to the extent there is one, is that the New York Fed economists overlooked a wide range of other ways the tariffs could affect the U.S. economy, such as stimulating reshoring of production and an increase in domestic wages.

But such an analysis also probably wouldn’t flatter the Trump tariffs. So far the manufacturing boom Mr. Trump promised hasn’t appeared, as manufacturing jobs are down over the last year. The New York Fed and other research on cost distribution shows one reason why: To the extent American companies eat some of the costs of tariffs, that’s less cash available for investment and hiring.

The Trump economy has been as healthy as it is despite the tariffs, not because of them. The market response to his April 2025 “liberation” tariffs was so negative that the President quickly withdrew them and negotiated lower tariffs as part of “trade deals” that may turn out to be partly illusory. He has also laced the tariffs with multiple exemptions. A dollop of tax reform, a big dose of deregulation and an AI investment boom are allowing the economy to cope with the tariff distortions and uncertainty.

Scott Lincicome exposes the many fallacies that infect Trump’s boast about the allegedly enormous sums of investment funds his tariffs, and tariff threats, are attracting into the U.S. Two slices:

My Cato Institute colleague Alan Reynolds works his way through the figures and finds several basic errors. First, he looks at the Fed’s 2025 foreign investment data and finds no evidence of a significant uptick. In fact, FDI “grew 23% more rapidly during the Biden years, 2021–24, than it did in the first three quarters of 2025.”

Broader domestic investment figures were similarly unspectacular last year, particularly in the manufacturing sector that Trump is targeting: “growth of US fixed investment in plant and equipment was relatively weak last year. … Real investment has been rapidly falling in manufacturing structures (factories)—the opposite of the President’s familiar justification for high and erratic tariffs on imported manufactured goods (to ‘rebuild American manufacturing’).”

The obvious rebuttal to these figures is that Trump’s investment figures are prospective—meaning they represent investments to come, not spending that has already happened. And that’s a fine point, given the announcements’ timing. Yet here, too, there are plenty of problems. For starters, the only actual evidence the White House has offered of a tariff-fueled “Trump Effect” on domestic investment is a list of 132 “private and foreign investment” announcements it claims was “made possible by President Trump’s leadership.” But even that totals just $9.6 trillion—a little more than half of what Trump keeps claiming.

This hefty sum, moreover, is also wildly exaggerated. A Bloomberg analysis of the White House’s “investment” list shows that about $2.6 trillion isn’t investment at all. Instead, it’s routine U.S. business expenses (e.g., worker training) or vague commitments to purchase U.S. goods. Some of those commitments, moreover, relate to military equipment that foreign governments (e.g., Saudi Arabia) already wanted to buy. Others, such as India’s promises to stop buying Russian oil and start buying U.S. liquid natural gas, might never happen for practical and geopolitical reasons. Others still—as is the case of the EU’s purchase promises—simply can’t happen because government officials in these places don’t have the authority to control private firms’ purchasing decisions.

The remaining $7 trillion on the White House list is split evenly between U.S. firms and overseas governments and companies, but there are big red flags here, too. “Most of the biggest investment plans,” Reynolds explains, came from large multinational corporations—Apple, Meta, Nvidia, Microsoft, Google, Micron, IBM, Eli Lilly, Pfizer, Merck, Johnson &Johnson, and AbbVie—that were already investing heavily in the United States and had already planned even more spending in the future, long before any tariff-induced “Trump Effect.”

…..

A comprehensive review would also need to consider the resources (capital, labor, materials, etc.) any forced investments take away from other possible projects, as well as what might have happened to investment in the U.S. without all of Trump’s tariffs and threats. As economist John Cochrane recently noted in this regard, some of the administration’s efforts to remove “regulatory and legal barriers to making the investment or making a profit on it in the US” are worthwhile and may have encouraged new spending in key sectors without “bludgeon[ing] other countries with tariffs to get the investment.”* He also cautions that “government-directed investment from other governments is not usually known for its focus on efficiency,” raising the risk that some of these investments become yet another U.S. industrial policy boondoggle. Influential writer and energy entrepreneur Austin Vernon seemingly concurs in his recent deep dive on the future of U.S. manufacturing, warning that tariffs (and industrial policy) will encourage the wrong type of manufacturing, reduce total output, and also divert finite policy attention away from things like regulatory reform that actually can move the investment needle in the direction we want.

Finally, a comprehensive review of the “Trump Effect” also will need to consider how Trump’s tariffs and threats may have discouraged other investments—or prodded full-on divestment—due to the higher costs and uncertainty that accompany them. As I just wrote for Bloomberg, there are increasing signs—in global trade flows, foreign investment data, and new trade agreements—that companies and governments are slowly diversifying away from the increasingly unreliable United States.

The U.S. trade deficit in goods is a concept that would be completely lacking any economic relevance were it not for the fact that politicians – and especially those now in charge at the White House – think it to be relevant and, therefore, craft trade policy to address this economic irrelevancy. Yet even on that front, the allegedly curative trade policies are failing.

My intrepid Mercatus Center colleague, Veronique de Rugy, continues her noble crusade against fiscal incontinence. A slice:

Between now and 2036, the CBO projects $94.6 trillion in federal spending against $70.2 trillion in revenue, a decadelong deficit of $24.4 trillion. Outlays reached 23.1 percent of GDP in 2025, nearly two full percentage points above the 50-year average, meaning annual spending growth is outpacing the economy itself. Debt held by the public is projected to hit 101 percent of GDP this year, which will surpass the post-WWII record of 106 percent by 2030, and climb to 120 percent by 2036.

Here’s Michael Magoon on the Scottish Enlightenment and the commercial society. (HT Arnold Kling)

GMU Econ alum Julia Cartwright, writing in the Washington Post, draws lessons about money from the Winter Olympics. A slice:

For generations, people bit gold coins to verify that they were genuine. Gold is a relatively soft metal, so a pure gold coin would show a faint tooth mark. If a coin were diluted with a harder metal, or merely plated in gold, your teeth would quickly tell the difference. The bite was not kitsch. It was quality control.

Ed Crane is remembered by Johan Norberg, José Piñera, Vernon Smith, and other friends of liberty.

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Here’s a letter to the Washington Free Beacon.

Editor:

Thanks for publishing Ira Stoll’s insightful criticisms of Oren Cass’s latest denigration of the financial industry (“’The Finance Industry Is a Grift,’ Oren Cass Claims in the New York Times. Look Who’s Talking.” February 10).

Mr. Cass peddles the physicalist fallacy, which is the false notion that only activities that churn out the likes of lumber, steel, automobiles, and other tangible things are truly productive – or at least are more productive than activities that produce services. That Mr. Cass’s does indeed peddle this fallacy is evident from his many denunciations of free trade, which he blames for the U.S. consistently running merchandise-trade deficits, and for the American economy generating fewer manufacturing jobs than he has somehow divined should be generated.

This physicalist fallacy naturally fuels Mr. Cass’s antipathy to finance. Finance, in his view, produces nothing – a view that Mr. Stoll explains is hopelessly distorted.

It’s interesting to note that Mr. Cass’s organization, American Compass, has among its major supporters the Omidyar Network. Pierre Omidyar earned his fortune by founding eBay and then enhancing the profitability of that e-commerce site by acquiring Paypal in 2002 for $1.5 billion. In 2015 Paypal was spun off from eBay at a price of $50 billion.

Paypal produces nothing tangible; it ‘merely’ eases the moving around of money. Paypal is a finance company.

If Mr. Cass were correct that finance is “grift,” then large swathes of the financial support for his organization are ill-gotten gains.

Mr. Cass will likely protest that Paypal differs from other financiers, but this protest will be tendentious. The fact is, Paypal’s profits are honestly earned through its success at assisting people to more easily achieve their economic goals – just as are the profits earned by other financial-market activities. These gains are in no way ill-gotten – a reality that renders highly ironic Mr. Cass’s use of financial-market profits to berate financial-market profits as ill-gotten.

Sincerely,
Donald J. Boudreaux
Professor of Economics
and
Martha and Nelson Getchell Chair for the Study of Free Market Capitalism at the Mercatus Center
George Mason University
Fairfax, VA 22030

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Some Links

GMU Econ alums Caleb Fuller and Scott Burns, understandably, are not favorably impressed by President Trump’s recent attempt in the Wall Street Journal to defend tariffs PUNITIVE TAXES on AMERICANS’ purchases of imports. Three slices:

At the end of January, President Trump penned a triumphant op-ed declaring “Mission Accomplished” for the signature economic policy of his second term: tariffs.

Unfortunately, his entire victory lap revolved around phony numbers, cherry-picked facts, and a strawman caricature of his critics’ arguments.

…..

Trump loves to tout that 4.3 percent annualized growth estimate for Q3 2025. Yet he neglects to mention his -0.6 percent growth rate during his tariff spree in Q1 2025. Experts project that actual growth for 2025 will fall somewhere between 2.2 percent and 2.5 percent — well below Sleepy Joe’s nothing-to-write-home-about 2.8 percent mark in 2024.

Incidentally, this 0.2-0.5 percent decline in real GDP is exactly in line with what economists predicted. Is 2.5 percent growth catastrophic? No. But it’s hardly an “economic miracle.” And it’s a far cry from the 5 percent growth we’ve been promised.

Another stat he conveniently omits: manufacturing employment has declined for nine straight months since Liberation Day. On that day, the White House predicted tariffs would add 2.8 million manufacturing jobs. Instead, we’ve lost 70,000.

…..

Trump loves to point out that billions in tariff revenue are “pouring in” to the Treasury each month. Economists yearn to snap back: “But who is paying it?!”

In his article, Trump cites a Harvard study that “found” foreigners are paying “at least 80%” of the tariffs. One minor problem: the study found the exact opposite: import prices are rising twice as fast as domestic goods prices, and virtually all of that burden has been borne by US firms and consumers. A different study found that Americans pay 96 percent of the tariffs. Evidently, Trump didn’t do his homework (or perhaps his ghostwriter put too much faith in ChatGPT).

Trump also takes credit for our declining monthly trade deficits. A reporter should follow up by asking: If trade deficits are so bad, Mr. President, then why don’t you cut your own hair to eliminate your trade deficit with your barber? Trade deficits sound scary, but they’re not. They don’t make us poorer. They aren’t akin to budget deficits. They entail no debt and impose zero obligation. They simply reflect net trade flows between nations. Truth be told, economists don’t think there’s any point in tallying trade “deficits.” What matters for our economic wellbeing isn’t net trade flows — it’s the total volume of trade and how easy it is to trade with foreigners. Trade, by definition, makes both sides richer. The more we trade, the better off we are — regardless of which direction that trade flows.

Sol Trujillo is correct: “Mass deportations sabotage the economy.” A slice:

No one wants to harbor violent criminals. But the Cato Institute obtained internal Department of Homeland Security data showing that 73% of those detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement between Oct. 1 and Nov. 15 had no criminal conviction and only 5% had a violent-crime conviction.

Research from the Center for Migration Studies finds that the undocumented workforce in the U.S. is large and overwhelmingly employed across key sectors of the economy. Many of the 675,000 immigrants deported last year were working to build data centers, manufacturing plants, energy infrastructure and housing. Who will take their place when the U.S. has six million unfilled jobs?

Deportations impose costs on citizens too. The Peterson Institute for International Economics projected in 2024 that deporting 1.3 million workers could raise consumer prices by 1.5% within three years as labor shortages worsen. Deportations lead to the loss of jobs for citizens, according to the Hamilton Project. As the lack of workforce tamps down business growth, fewer U.S.-born workers are hired as a result. Consumption also declines: The Brookings Institute estimates that the U.S. lost between $40 billion and $60 billion in consumer spending in 2025 because of deportations. That, too, slows economic growth.

The cost also shows up in your tax bill. The ICE budget has risen from $9.99 billion in 2024 to a proposed $11.3 billion this year, and last year’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act gives ICE access to a $75 billion fund on top of discretionary funding available through 2029. Add to this lost tax revenue from immigrants themselves. A 2024 American Immigration Council report found undocumented-immigrant households paid more than $70 billion in federal, state and local taxes in 2022.

Tyler Cowen argues that “if you want to see whether immigration is making cities better or worse, just look at property values.” Here’s his conclusion:

If we consider the United States as a whole, the main magnets for immigrants, such as New York City, Los Angeles, and Miami, remain very pricey. Home prices have continued to do well in most of the country more broadly. Which suggests that, at the aggregate level, immigration is hardly tearing us apart.

If you do not believe that and you live in one of these places, then you should test your assumption: Will you put your money where your mouth is by selling your home as quickly as possible? I suspect that challenge will find few takers.

“So much for the ‘warmth of collectivism'” – so reports Jack Nicastro.

Dan Alban reports on yet another of the many instances in the U.S. of the banana-republic practice of civil asset forfeiture.

The Editorial Board of the Washington Post nails it:

The Trump presidency ought to be an education for progressives in the ways government overregulation can distort politics and business. For the latest example, see the spat between Stephen Colbert and his network, CBS, around the equal-time rule. The controversy might make for good ratings and fundraising appeals, but Congress could address the underlying issue simply by repealing the outdated regulation — or eliminating the Federal Communications Commission altogether.

Dan Klein applauds Adam Smith’s “anti-hegemist spirit of ’76.”

George Will decries Trump’s, and his minions’, misuse of government resources to find evidence for that which there is no credible evidence to be found – namely, that Trump really won the 2020 election. A slice:

Someone should read to him “Lost, Not Stolen,” a 2022 report by eight conservatives (two former Republican senators, three former federal appellate judges, a former Republican solicitor general, and two Republican election law specialists). They examined all 187 counts in the 64 court challenges filed in multiple states by Trump and his supporters.

Twenty cases were dismissed before hearings on their merits, 14 were voluntarily dismissed by Trump and his supporters before hearings. Of the 30 that reached hearings on the merits, Trump’s side prevailed in only one, Pennsylvania, involving far too few votes to change the state’s result. Trump’s batting average? .016. In Arizona, the most exhaustively scrutinized state, a private firm selected by Trump’s advocates confirmed Trump’s loss, finding 99 additional Biden votes and 261 fewer Trump votes.

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Quotation of the Day…

… is from page 633 of the 1988 collection of Lord Acton’s writings and notes to himself (edited by the late J. Rufus Fears), Essays in Religion, Politics, and Morality; specifically, it’s a note drawn from Acton’s extensive papers at Cambridge University:

You can prove geometry to every man, not history. You can only prove history to men of good will.

DBx: Indeed.

David Hume correctly identified in the human mind a powerful natural tendency, and an impressive ability, to rationalize belief in whatever the emotions want the human mind to believe. Share with 100 protectionists evidence and coherent argument that U.S. economic growth in the 19th century was not caused by – or even assisted by – protective tariffs, and 99.6 of them will remain unconvinced, each finding fanciful reasons to dismiss the inconvenient facts and logic. Share with 100 progressives evidence and coherent argument that legislated minimum wages diminish and worsen the employment options open to low-skilled workers, and 99.6 of them will remain unconvinced, each finding fanciful reasons to dismiss the inconvenient facts and logic. And so it goes for people who today cheer on industrial policy, rent-control, socialism, and countless other lovely sounding economic interventions.

Of course, we are all subject to this bias, and must forever be aware that we too, when confidently expressing the lessons that we believe that we draw from history and logic, might well be unwitting passengers on this Humean elephant. Yet it is also the case, despite this elephant, that there are arguments and theories that are indeed ‘true,’ and it remains the job of people of good will to diligently search for such ‘true’ truths amidst the countless number of false ‘truths.’

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“Power Tends to Corrupt…

… and absolute power corrupts absolutely” – so Lord Acton famously wrote to Bishop Creighton on April 5th, 1887.

History, of course, has no shortage of examples – from the minor to the monstrous – of this truth. White House advisor Kevin Hassett has just supplied history with yet another example when he not only criticized the new empirical study by the New York Fed that shows that the bulk of Trump’s tariffs punitive taxes on Americans’ purchases of imports are indeed paid by Americans, but when he – Hassett – also insisted that “consumers were made better off by the tariffs.”

The corruption unleashed by possessing power, or by being in friendly close contact with it, can be of the mind. Or this corruption can be of the soul. Or it can be of both mind and soul. I’d prefer to believe that Mr. Hassett’s rendezvous with power has corrupted his mind and not his soul – that his nearness to power has merely disengaged his ability to think straight, to reason soundly, and to examine facts and arguments dispassionately.

Minds can be fixed. Souls, once corrupted, not so much.

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The Absurd Doctrine of the Balance of Trade

Here’s a letter to the Wall Street Journal.

Editor:

Jason Riley eloquently decries President Trump and so many other Republicans (and Democrats) today for falling for the zero-sum mercantilist fallacies that were exploded 250 years ago by Adam Smith (“GOP Doesn’t Know Smith From Adam,” February 18).

The most pernicious of these fallacies serves as the explicit justification for Mr. Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs – namely, that a country that runs trade deficits necessarily loses wealth to other countries. This fallacy is also the one that Adam Smith spent most time and ink debunking. His conclusion, brilliantly backed by careful reasoning, is powerful and succinct: “Nothing, however, can be more absurd than this whole doctrine of the balance of trade.”

In a more-rational world, we would worry about our so-called “trade balance” with other countries no more than we worry about our trade balance with other towns, counties, and states – or, indeed, our trade balance with people whose hair or eyes are of different colors than ours. As it is, alas, our freedom of commerce is obstructed by our own leaders who are beguiled by this absurd doctrine.

Sincerely,
Donald J. Boudreaux
Professor of Economics
and
Martha and Nelson Getchell Chair for the Study of Free Market Capitalism at the Mercatus Center
George Mason University
Fairfax, VA 22030

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This letter was submitted several days ago to the New York Times but not published there.

Editor:

Oren Cass’s criticism of U.S. financial markets overflows with questionable claims and suggestions (“The Finance Industry Is a Grift. Let’s Start Treating It That Way.” February 7). An example is his blaming the growth in finance and its alleged obsession with “the Excel spreadsheets” for the fact that since the end of the Great Recession “productivity in America’s manufacturing sector — the output generated per hour of labor — has been falling.”

Manufacturing-worker productivity has indeed fallen slightly. But it’s doubtful that this decline was caused by an engorged financial sector, for the simple reason that since the end of the Great Recession the size of the financial sector relative to GDP has also fallen slightly.

This recent shrinkage in the relative size of the financial sector stands in stark contrast to what happened from the end of WWII until the Great Recession. During these years, the financial sector relative to GDP grew steadily and impressively, rising from 3% in 1950 to 4.5% in 1980, then to just over 8% in 2009 before falling to about 7% today. If increased financialization suppresses manufacturing-worker productivity, that productivity from 1950 through 2009 should have fallen, or at least not risen. But in fact, over those same many decades the real hourly output of manufacturing workers also grew steadily and impressively. In 2009 that output was about 40% higher than in 2000, 60% higher than in 1990, 80% higher than in 1980, 100% higher than in 1970, 140% higher than in 1960, and 200% higher than in 1950.*

These facts are difficult to square with the accusation that a growing financial sector suppresses the productivity of manufacturing workers.

Sincerely,
Donald J. Boudreaux
Professor of Economics
and
Martha and Nelson Getchell Chair for the Study of Free Market Capitalism at the Mercatus Center
George Mason University
Fairfax, VA 22030

* Phil Gramm and Donald J. Boudreaux, The Triumph of Economic Freedom (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2025), page 93.

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