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‘We Support Free Trade, But….’

Here’s a letter to the Wall Street Journal.

Editor:

Roger Severino insists that the Heritage Foundation under its president Kevin Roberts still supports free markets and free trade, “but” – the “but” is predictable – “we’ll pursue those goods without sacrificing our love of faith and family, our national security, the innocence of our children or loyalty to the U.S.” (Letters, January 2).

What in Hayek’s name does this qualification mean? Impossible to tell, except that it’s sufficiently capacious and vague as to reveal that Heritage supports free markets and free trade except when it doesn’t. And given Mr. Roberts’s express rejection of what he calls the “outdated trade policies” prior to Trump – policies, such as NAFTA, that opened global markets and reduced tariff rates – and his hearty applause for Trump’s protectionism, we can be sure that whatever “free trade” now means at Heritage, this meaning is quite the opposite of what “free trade” meant to Adam Smith, Milton Friedman, Ronald Reagan, and even Heritage’s long-time president, the late Ed Fuelner.

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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In my latest column for AIER, I use two recent events in trade policy – one involving the sale of advanced microchips to China, the other involving “rare-earth minerals” – to highlight the surprising complexity of applying, in the real world, the national-security exception to a policy of free trade. Two slices:

The Trump administration lifted controls that restricted Nvidia’s exports of its H200 chips to China. (The administration made this move in exchange for the US government getting 25 percent of Nvidia’s revenues from these sales — an unjustifiable condition, but also a topic for another time.) The Editorial Board of the Wall Street Journal worries that China’s access to these chips will boost that country’s prospects of surpassing the US in AI technology. The reason, as described by the Journal’s Editors, is that advanced chips such as the H200s “are needed to train advanced AI models.” Unable so far to develop their own advanced chips, the Chinese will now use Nvidia’s chips to further “Beijing’s ambitions to dominate biotech, quantum computing and military power.”

Quite possibly, the Trump administration’s lifting of these controls will indeed undermine US national security. But also, quite possibly not. By supplying the bigger market opened to it by access to China, Nvidia can perhaps take advantage of larger economies of scale that will further improve its chip-making efficiency. And more-efficient advanced microchip production by a company such as Nvidia will, in turn, strengthen US national security.

In addition, Nvidia officials and the White House argue that Chinese dependence on non-Chinese advanced chips diminishes China’s prospects of developing its own advanced chips — an effect that also plausibly promotes US national security by retarding Chinese chip technology. Although acknowledging that this argument has some merit, the Journal believes that it doesn’t carry the day. The Journal worries that the improved computing power that China gains as a result of its access to the H200 chips will further, rather than frustrate, Beijing’s quest for AI dominance.

I have no idea which of these two arguments — to not restrict Nvidia’s sales of H200 chips to China or to restrict these sales — is correct. Not only do both have merit, neither argument seems strong enough to clearly defeat the other. And that’s the point.

…..

The above observations are offered not to render the national-security exception to the case for free trade null, but to caution against its overuse. The Trump administration’s recent treatment of the exportation of American-made advanced microchips, along with its actions regarding rare-earth minerals, each in its own way demonstrates (if unintentionally) the shallowness of the conventional advice to protect any and all industries that produce outputs judged to be important for national security.

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Some Links

Brookings Institution economist Clifford Winston makes the case for privatized airports. A slice:

We then considered whether the Boston-area airports would install heated runways if they were privatized and made the decision based on whether heated runways could increase profits. We found that Logan would have a profit incentive to install heated runways, but the other airports didn’t have enough traffic to justify it.

Airlines would increase their profits and air travelers would gain enough from the reduction in travel delays to offset any increases in fares. Improvements in runway safety would add to travelers’ and airlines’ benefits.

Regulated taxicabs were always free to develop ridesharing and ride-hailing apps that we now associate with Uber and Lyft. But it took innovation by the private sector to first provide this beneficial service to urban travelers. Similarly, public airports lack the imagination and incentive to install heated runways. Privatizing airports would spur them to innovate.

President Trump could direct Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy to pursue privatization through the Federal Aviation Administration’s Airport Investment Partnership Program. Keep that in mind the next time a snowstorm disrupts your flight.

Phil Gramm and I are honored that our book, The Triumph of Economic Freedom, is among Tevi Troy’s favorite of 2025.

Jeffrey Frankel offers four reasons why Trump’s tariffs haven’t crashed the U.S. economy. Two slices:

Moreover, Trump introduced major tariff exceptions for some countries. For example, the integrated North American auto industry would have been devastated if he hadn’t decided on 6 March to exempt goods from Mexico and Canada from the 25% levy that had gone into effect two days earlier. Goods from these countries now face no penalty if they are imported under the US-Mexico-Canada agreement.

This softening was predictable. US business would have suffered enormously if Trump had fully implemented the tariffs he had announced, let alone threatened, so it was never likely that he would persist with the worst of them. Trump regularly stakes out extreme negotiating positions, only to back down when the heat is on, even if he hasn’t gotten what he demanded from the other side. In fact, investors’ assumption that “Trump always chickens out” – known as Taco – has become a taunt. But when a madman threatens Armageddon, it is foolhardy to goad him into following through. The tariffs Trump hasimplemented are still very high.

But this does not mean economists got their predictions all wrong. There are good reasons to think that many of the adverse effects of Trump’s tariffs have simply been delayed, and we should expect them to show up in 2026.

…..

To be sure, the prices importers pay have risen proportionately with tariffs, contrary to Trump’s claims that foreign exporters cover the costs of the duties by lowering their prices. It is US companies that have been absorbing the costs, much as they typically do when the dollar depreciates. This partly reflects the fact that they have no idea how long the tariffs will be in place. Trump might change his mind, or perhaps the supreme court will decide to adhere to the law and strike them down. This uncertainty also helps to explain why many affected companies have so far refrained from laying off workers.

But companies will not let tariffs erode their profit margins indefinitely. Assuming the tariffs remain, the US can look forward to more price increases, and downward pressure on real incomes, in 2026.

Eric Boehm is, of course, correct: “From COVID-19 lockdowns to Biden’s inflation and Trump’s tariffs, bad things have happened when economics are sidelined in policymaking.” Two slices:

The dominant attitude driving lockdown policies that closed schools, businesses, churches, playgrounds, and more was well articulated by Jon Allsop in the Columbia Journalism Review‘s newsletter. There is “no choice to be made between public health and a healthy economy—because public health is an essential prerequisite of a healthy economy,” he wrote in April 2020 as debate over “reopening” was ongoing.

That all-or-nothing approach reveals how little the economists were involved in the early decisions over COVID. “There are no solutions; only tradeoffs,” is how Thomas Sowell once put it, but during the early months of the pandemic, solutions were overly promised and tradeoffs were routinely ignored. That was a tremendous error.

“At its most basic, economics is about analyzing choices made under constraints. Politicians and government agencies made a vast range of public health decisions this past year that violated principles that good economists take for granted,” wrote Ryan Bourne, an economist with the Cato Institute, in a 2021 review of early COVID policies. “These decisions made the public health and economic welfare impacts of the pandemic worse than they needed to be. In that sense, the poor response to COVID-19 represents a failure to think economically.”

…..

Economists can be frustrating to advisers in the policymaking process. The impulse to point out the inevitable tradeoffs in any policy can make it seem like their only purpose is to blow holes in the high-minded plans of the nation’s elected officials. But throwing them out of the room does not make foolish ideas more perfect. Six years of dismissing economic reality have not brought us utopia.

If our elected officials are looking for a handy New Year’s resolution for 2026, here’s an idea: Start listening to the economists again.

Jeff Jacoby is understandably appalled by Trump’s megalomania. Two slices:

DONALD TRUMP’S obsession with putting his name and face on things long ago passed the point of parody. So far in his second term as president, Trump has moved to affix his name or picture to public buildings and government websites, to national park passes and a savings account for babies, and to a special $1 million visa, the so-called Trump Gold Card, for rich foreigners. The Treasury Department plans to mint a commemorative $1 coin depicting Trump next year. There is even a proposed “Trump class” of US Navy warships.

The president’s “long love affair with his own name and likeness,” as The New York Times recently described it, is certainly vulgar and narcissistic. But more than that, it is utterly at odds with the Republican presidential tradition. For most of the party’s history, Republican chief executives generally refrained from personal self-glorification; many of them regarded it as a vice — something corrosive to judgment, dignity, and republican government itself.

In that sense, Trump’s self-worship, besides being a severe character flaw, amounts to a repudiation of one of the most consistent and admirable moral instincts of GOP leadership.

…..

Nearly every Republican president from Lincoln onward would have recoiled from Trump’s bottomless narcissism. In this crucial respect, as in so many others, today’s Republican president stands not in continuity with his party’s history, but as its very antithesis.

Graham Walker, Williamson Evers, and Phil Magness assess what was done to liberty in 2025.

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Quotation of the Day…

… is from page 17 of my emeritus Nobel-laureate colleague Vernon Smith‘s important 2008 book, Rationality in Economics:

Political activists sometimes juxtapose property rights and “human rights” as mutually exclusive phenomena. But “property” is that over which an individual human, or association of humans, exercises some specified priority of action with respect to other humans. Only humans (and perhaps a few other animal species, notably chimps), but not property, can be recognized as allowed to act without reprisal from others. The emotional appeal of the slogan, “human rights, not property rights,” appears to stem predominantly from an egalitarian ethic that seeks to dispossess those who are “propertied.” Yet the essence of property rights is the right to the product of one’s own labor and to the further productive yield generated by the savings from that product.

DBx: Yes.

Please join me in wishing Vernon a very happy 99th birthday today. May he have many more, not only for his, his dear wife Candace’s, and their family’s sake, but for all of us. Wisdom, learning, and kindness such as Vernon possesses and continues to share are too rare.

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Protectionism Is Destructionism – Not a Funny Matter

Here’s a follow-up note to a new correspondent.

Mr. L__:

Thanks for your follow-up email in response to this note.

You write that my “comparing tariffs to the destruction of household goods and business capital” is “laughable.” But you dismiss my comparison only with giggles and guffaws, never bothering to explain just why you find this comparison to be comically inept.

Suppose you plan to spend $200 on a case of wine imported from France. When you arrive at the wharf, you learn that a 33% tariff has just been imposed. With your $200 you will now get, not the 12 bottles of French wine that you expected, but only nine bottles. You are three bottles of wine poorer.

Now change the example slightly so that there’s no tariff on imported wine. In exchange for your $200 you get 12 bottles of French wine. But upon unloading your case of wine at home, uniformed government agents seize three of your bottles and fling them to the ground to shatter them. You are three bottles of wine poorer.

In what substantive way does this second example differ economically from the first? I see no economic difference.

In the second example, the government will inform you that if you instead buy American wine, none of it will be seized and shattered. Because you and other American wine drinkers obviously prefer not to have part of your wine collection seized and shattered, you’ll buy less non-American wine and more American wine. American vintners, seeing the demand for their product rise, will raise their prices. With your $200, even when buying American wine of similar quality as the French, you’ll get fewer than 12 bottles – maybe 11, maybe 10, maybe 9. Fewer. Your government has conscripted part of your income to enrich American wine growers – growers who, far from earning your patronage honestly, had that patronage stolen from you dishonestly through government action.

The same thing happens with tariffs. The 33% tariff destroys a quarter of the purchasing power of the $200 you intended to spend on French wine. When you and other wine drinkers adjust to minimize the destruction of your dollars’ purchasing power by shifting your demands to American wines, the prices of these wines will rise. With your $200 you’ll get less wine than you would get without the tariffs.

Tariffs effectively destroy economic goods no less surely than does physical destruction of those goods – a reality that explains why economists and other reasonable people find the economic case for protectionism to be laughable.

Wishing you and yours a Happy – and protectionism-free – 2026.

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

UPDATE: I changed the titled of this post. The phrase ‘protectionism is destructionism’ is the brainchild of Jon Murphy.

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Some Links

The Wall Street Journal‘s Editorial Board is correct about Trump’s attempt to keep drug prices down: “By importing foreign price controls on drugs, he’s compounding Biden’s mistake.” A slice:

President Trump is cleaning up many of Joe Biden’s regulatory messes…, but then there is his plan to import drug price controls. He’s making this one worse.

Days before Christmas, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) proposed a 560-page regulation to implement the President’s “most-favored nation” (MFN) plan in Medicare. The point is to force drug makers to sell drugs to Medicare at the lowest price available in other developed countries.

This is bad policy for many reasons, but it’s also a government double-cross. More than a dozen firms struck agreements with the Administration this year to boost investment in the U.S. and to sell medicines directly to consumers at lower prices—supposedly in return for a reprieve from Mr. Trump’s threatened tariffs and most-favored nation regime. Now Mr. Trump looks to be playing them for suckers.

The CMS proposal would require drug makers to pay rebates to Medicare covering the difference between prices in the U.S. and the lowest price in 19 countries, including Canada, the Czech Republic and Sweden. While rebates will vary by drug, the kickbacks to Medicare could be upward of 80% of list price.

Most of these countries have government-run systems that restrict access to novel medicines for budgetary reasons, so their patients must wait longer to get them, if they ever do. Mr. Trump’s plan will reduce the incentive to sell drugs in these countries since they’d then have to match those ultra-low prices for the much bigger Medicare market.

Chinese biotech firms fast would be poised to take global market share from U.S. drug makers. Mr. Trump’s plan would also reduce the incentive to develop innovative medicines in the U.S. if firms don’t think they can make a profit to recoup their investment.

Eric Boehm makes clear that “the Minnesota welfare fraud story is really about a broken Medicaid bureaucracy.”

Wall Street Journal columnist Jason Riley points out that minimum-wage legislation makes goods and services even less affordable. A slice:

Advocates contend that minimum-wage hikes increase incomes and reduce poverty, but that depends. The government can force an employer to pay a minimum hourly rate, but it can’t force the employer to hire someone in the first place, or to guarantee current employees a certain number of hours. Minimum-wage workers who keep their jobs and who retain the same number of hours benefit from an elevated minimum wage. But some employees will be let go, others will see their hours trimmed, and still others will never be hired because they’ve become too expensive to employ. These are only some of the trade-offs involved in increasing the minimum wage.

“This is a bad way to deal with affordability concerns,” says American Enterprise Institute economist Michael Strain. “Businesses have to absorb higher labor costs in some way, and one way is by raising consumer prices. Another way is by reducing the number of people they employ. And things become a lot less affordable when you lose your paycheck.”

In a forthcoming academic paper, Mr. Strain and Jeffrey Clemens analyze changes to the minimum wage in the decade preceding the Covid pandemic. They conclude that large increases harmed employment prospects for people with limited skills and work history—the same group who have experienced the most erosion in purchasing power since the pandemic. The authors estimate that “relatively large increases in minimum wages reduced employment rates among individuals with low levels of experience and education by just over 2 and a half percentage points.”

Andrew Wilford explains what shouldn’t – but, alas, what nevertheless always does – need explaining: “Rich people won’t just sit still while you tax them.”

Megan McCardle corrects someone who’s appallingly ignorant of both economics and history. (HT Scott Lincicome)

Jeffrey Blehar bids adieu to 2025. A slice:

Zohran Mamdani, the new and splendidly diverse Democratic nominee for mayor of New York City, is revealed to have lied about his race on his college applications — apparently, rich and ethnically Indian upper-class children get a bad shake with admissions committees, so he marked himself down as “African-American,” despite being neither. (Later, he became an American citizen; he remains non-black to this very day.) In other racialist news, Elon Musk, still smarting from the DOGE experience, proudly rolls out his new AI creation “Grok” to Twitter/X, a handy chatbot designed to give only “truthful” answers, without woke fear or favor. It takes exactly six hours for online trolls to feed it enough carefully-tailored prompts to turn it into MechaHitler, at which point it is hastily shut down for retooling, like a failed Robocop prototype.

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Quotation of the Day…

is from page 259 of Vol. 1 of the 1980 Knopf edition of Alexis de Tocqueville’s 1835 Democracy in America [footnote deleted]:

If it be admitted that a man possessing absolute power may misuse that power by wronging his adversaries, why should not a majority be liable to the same reproach? Men do not change their characters by uniting with one another; nor does their patience in the presence of obstacles increase with their strength. For my own part, I cannot believe it; the power to do everything, which I should refuse to one of my equals, I will never grant to any number of them.

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The Condition of My Support for a Policy of Free Trade

Here’s a letter to a new correspondent.

Mr. L__:

Thanks for your email.

Calling me a “tiresome free trade fanatic,” you write that “it is unreasonable to rule out unconditionally the possibility of government restricting imports in such a manner as to improve our country’s overarching economic conditions.  Adults keep this option open.”

I don’t rule out this possibility unconditionally; I rule it out only on the condition that the creatures in government are human beings – that is, self-interested individuals with limited knowledge. If a benevolent God-like deity were to take the reins of government, I’d concede that such an omniscient being could indeed improve the economy with surgically imposed import restrictions. (I’d still oppose such restrictions, however, on moral grounds, as I treasure economic freedom as an end it itself.)

But until God sets up shop on Pennsylvania Avenue, I will oppose the government trying to improve the economy by restricting imports for the same reason that I oppose the government trying to improve the economy by sending out gangs of thugs to destroy a certain percentage of our household possessions and the capital stock of American companies.

Clever sophomores can write – as some economists have actually written – whiteboard theories under which import restrictions imposed just so will make everyone better off economically. To do so is child’s play – just as it’s child’s play to write a theory under which government-mandated destruction of X percentage of household goods and Y percentage of companies’ capital stock will make everyone better off economically. Yet I suspect that you’d have no patience for anyone proposing to keep this latter option “open.”

Adults reject policies that are justified only by such childish games. And so adults reject protectionism as a means of improving the economy.

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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The Terms of Protectionism

Here’s a letter to the Wall Street Journal.

Editor:

Mark Penn and Andrew Stein advise Pres. Trump to “cut taxes and red tape to stimulate business investment, lower energy prices by cutting regulations, use tariffs to get the U.S. better trade terms, stoke innovation and investment in artificial intelligence, and reduce waste in government, especially needless energy subsidies and welfare fraud” (“Trump’s Economic Struggle, and Clinton’s,” December 30).

All good advice except for the bit about tariffs.

On its face, getting “the U.S. better trade terms” is unobjectionable. Who doesn’t want better terms? The trouble is that what Mr. Trump and his fellow protectionists regard as better trade terms are, in fact, worse trade terms. The president, foolishly obsessed with U.S. trade deficits, wants to use tariffs to increase American exports and decrease American imports – that is, he wants to arrange for Americans to give to foreigners more and to receive from foreigners less. This change in trade terms would indeed be better – but better for foreigners and worse for us Americans.

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

Phil Magness is, shall we say, not favorably impressed with Sven Beckert’s new doorstop-of-a-book, Capitalism: A Global History. Two slices:

Adam Smith, widely considered the first major theorist of capitalism, abhorred the institution of slavery. “Whatever work [a slave] does…can be squeezed out of him by violence only, and not by any interest of his own,” he wrote in 1776. In an earlier lecture, Smith indicted laws that “strengthen the authority of the masters and reduce the slaves to a more absolute subjection.” The plantation system at the core of this economy was not a competitive market; planters had secured a state-sanctioned “monopoly against all the rest of the world” and “indemnif[ied] themselves by the exorbitancy of their profites for their expensive and thriftless method of cultivation.” Smith singled out the exceptional cruelty found in the British colonies of “Jamaica and Barbadoes, where slaves are numerous and objects of jealousy [and] punishments even for slight offences are very shocking.”

Yet in Capitalism: A Global History, Sven Beckert calls colonial Barbados “an almost perfectly Smithian economy, with utility-maximizing individuals creating a newly productive division of labor”—indeed a model of market capitalism. A simple contrast of those two characterizations is enough to raise the question of whether Beckert bothered to consult what Smith actually wrote about West Indian slavery.

In the 19th century, slaveowners and abolitionists alike noted the tensions between the emerging industrial economy and the plantation system. The former depended on freedom of movement and on choice in career and industry. The latter grafted elements of feudal hierarchy and coerced labor onto a fixed model of agrarian mass production. Proslavery theorists such as George Fitzhugh saw the two systems as irreconcilable. “Laissez faire,” he argued, was “at war with all kinds of slavery, for they in fact assert that individuals and peoples prosper most when governed least.” Such testimonies complicate Beckert’s interpretation of slavery as a fundamentally capitalistic institution.

Beckert’s book, a sweeping 1,300-page history, synthesizes bits and pieces of the academic literature to recount the emergence of capitalism over the last millennium, tracing it from the port cities of Yemen in the Middle Ages to the global economy of today. But that literature is uneven and selectively curated. Standard works on the “Great Enrichment”—the sustained worldwide explosion in wealth and living standards over the last two centuries—receive scant mention. Despite the centrality of slavery to Beckert’s narrative, he relegates the vast body of empirical analysis on this question to a single footnoted reference to an unremarkable synopsis by another author.

…..

Beckert’s account repeats many common errors of this genre. He depicts 20th century trade liberalization as the quintessential neoliberal project, ignoring that its main institutional faces, the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade and later the World Trade Organization, grew out of the New Deal. While characterizing the “neoliberal” postwar economy as an institutional veneer for coercive economic violence, he almost entirely neglects its historical context amid a geopolitical struggle with the Soviet Union’s coercive applications of Marxist doctrine. And in a final twist, Beckert cannot resist impugning capitalism with another form of violence. “Fascism never broke with a fundamentally capitalist organization of economic life,” he contends, citing its alleged entrancement with the “commodification of inputs, outputs, and labor” and, above all, private property.

These features transmitted into “neoliberalism” after the war, he argues, because of the “absolute primacy of securing the workings of the price mechanism” in its doctrines. This produces a high “neoliberal” tolerance for authoritarianism, even “admiration for fascism”—a point he attempts to sustain with an out-of-context quotation by Ludwig von Mises in 1927 that credited interwar fascist governments for halting Marxist political violence.

Compare that with Beckert’s assessments of Sombart, whom he praises as “incisive” and visionary. Beckert omits the final turn in Sombart’s career. In 1934, this student of Schmoller, former correspondent of Friedrich Engels, and prophet of capitalism’s evolutionary procession would forever discredit the reputation of the German Historical School by linking it to the Third Reich. Sombart’s Deutscher Sozialismus demarcated this moment as an “age of late capitalism, which at the same time is early Socialism” and prophesied the rise of a new socialist economic order rooted in a Germanic “Volksgeist.”

University of Chicago economist Tomas Philipson’s letter in today’s Wall Street Journal is excellent:

Your editorial “By All Means Raise Mitt Romney’s Taxes” (Dec. 22) correctly stresses that the rich pay a disproportionate share of taxes. Mr. Romney still argues that people like him should pony up even more. This view is central to socialism and frequent among economists, such as Thomas Piketty, who seem confused about how markets work. They assume government has a monopoly on service, neglecting that private business owners are more generous than the most progressive of tax schedules.

In the private sector you can only sell things if you help others—that is, if customers benefit more than they pay. If you’d cough up $100 for being able to brush your teeth but a toothbrush costs $5, you benefit 20 times as much as the sticker price. That sum, what economists call “consumer surplus,” averaged across industries is about 95% of the social value created by a business.

But this is only part of how company owners help others. On average 60% of sales are wages, the best welfare program invented. Put differently, 98% of the value of starting a risky business benefits others, presumably more than the “fair share” of the rich’s labor than even communists dare propose.

Many politicians nevertheless act as if the only help that matters is given through the public sector, with them as middlemen. Never mind that help to the poor is often reduced by taxing the rich—money that would have been administered more effectively via private donations. The 250 billionaires of the Giving Pledge, launched by Bill Gates and Warren Buffett, are donating half their fortunes—surely more helpful than a 50% wealth tax.

If reformers understood markets, they would get out of the way of the superrich who are benefiting the public and resist any disincentives to their generosity. Their contributions to others are reflected proportionally in their accumulated wealth.

GMU Econ alum Dan Mitchell reports on some of the consequences of Trump’s tariffs punitive taxes on Americans’ purchases of imports.

Andrew Stuttaford warns of how nanny-staters, intoxicated with their own supposed moral superiority, are tendentiously using the concept of “externalities” to justify policies to restrict Americans’ access to alcohol.

Peter Suderman is correct: “Zohran Mamdani didn’t run on ‘affordability.’ He ran against prices.” A slice:

It’s not surprising that a self-declared socialist would make price controls a central part of his economic program. The conceit at the heart of socialism is that when it comes to the economy, politicians and bureaucrats know best. But prices, when they are allowed to work, are signals that provide decentralized information. Price controls don’t solve economic problems; they disguise them, making it harder to know what’s happening. Prices are messages, and Mamdani wants to shoot the messenger.

Consider one of Mamdani’s most notorious ideas, a pilot program to set up five city-run grocery stores because “food prices are out of control.” Mamdani pitched those stores as a way to alleviate high food prices by exempting them from rent—and by eliminating markups and profits. As he put it, these stores would be prohibited from “price gouging.” That’s just another way of saying that, in addition to tax and infrastructure advantages, they would be prohibited from charging market prices, especially in emergencies and times of great need.

Price gouging laws already exist in many states, often targeted at emergency situations such as natural disasters. When they are enforced, they tend to result in shortages. After a hurricane, for example, it can be difficult to get food, water, and generators into an impacted area. When prices are capped by law, there’s no market incentive to make an extra effort to increase supply.

Charging higher prices in times of extreme demand isn’t a form of exploitation. It’s a way of allocating scarce resources more efficiently, and bringing more supply online.

Jonah Goldberg explains that Tucker Carlson, Candace Owens, and other of today’s peddlers of whackadoodle conspiracy theories are part of a long (and not-so-admirable) American tradition. A slice:

They feed the audience just enough to get hooked in pursuit of the big reveal that is never quite revealed. Mixed in is relentless gossip about how other personalities are responding to the allegation du jure or each other. It’s equal parts soap opera, conspiracy, gossip, taboo violation and fearmongering.

The market for such titillation and tripe never went away. What vanished were the post-WWII technological and institutional roadblocks to providing it at scale. Also vanished: the willingness of enough responsible people to condemn it.

Kevin Gentry talks with my GMU Econ and Mercatus Center colleague Tyler Cowen.

Here are the 14 most-read articles in 2025 at AIER’s Daily Economy.

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