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On the Ethics and Economics of Retaliatory Tariffs

Here’s a follow-up note to a correspondent who describes himself as a “recovering free trader.”

Mr. H__:

Thanks for your reply to my last note.

You write: “When other countries reduce their imports from us it injures our economy and President Trump is fully justified in trying to stop them from injuring us like this.”

I disagree. First, even if your argument were correct, it doesn’t describe the actual pattern of Trump’s willy-nilly tariffs.

Second and more fundamentally, your argument is fraught with pitfalls. It’s true that some U.S. producers lose sales because of other countries’ tariffs, and these lost sales can shrink the scale of these producers’ operations, causing their per-unit costs of production to be higher than these costs would be absent the foreign tariffs. But what reason have you to suppose that the benefits that we’d reap tomorrow if our tariffs eventually pressure foreigners to lower their tariffs would be greater than the costs we incur today to exert this pressure? Do you trust politicians to have such knowledge?

Further, as Adam Smith warned, it’s unlikely that there is much overlap of those of us who would pay the bulk of the costs of our government’s retaliation with those of us who would reap the benefits of this retaliation. What ethical principle justifies the U.S. government picking your pocket with tariffs, however temporary, in order to swell my pocket with increased export sales?

Finally, what’s the limiting principle of this too-convenient justification for protective tariffs? Foreign tariffs are not the only source of reduced U.S. exports. Another source, for example, is the fact that foreigners in many countries don’t work on weekends and holidays. Should our government, therefore, impose tariffs on such countries until and unless their governments mandate that all adults in those countries work 365 days each year? Such a mandate, after all, might very well increase our exports.

Foreigners aren’t ethically or economically obliged to buy our stuff. It follows that we are not ethically or economically justified in attempting to force them to buy our stuff – especially when such attempts involve using force to prevent our fellow citizens from spending their incomes in whatever peaceful ways they think best.

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

Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) rightly calls out J.D. Vance for glorifying government slaughter of people not convicted of any crime: (HT Phil Magness)

Vance says killing people he accuses of a crime is the “highest and best use of the military.”

Did he ever read To Kill a Mockingbird?

Did he ever wonder what might happen if the accused were immediately executed without trial or representation??

What a despicable and thoughtless sentiment it is to glorify killing someone without a trial.

Kathleen Parker calls on Trump to press China’s authoritarian government to release the heroic Jimmy Lai. A slice:

Lai lost his freedom, his now-shuttered newspaper and much of his fortune for protesting China’s crackdown on Hong Kong and for defending democracy and human rights. He was charged with two counts of conspiracy to collude with foreign forces and one count of collusion under Hong Kong’s relatively recent national security law for publishing pro-democracy views. He also was charged with sedition under a law passed when Hong Kong was still under British rule that originally was used to silence critics of colonialism.

Fareed Zakaria explains that Trump’s tariffs are strengthening foreign alliances against the United States. Three slices:

What was surprising were the images from the days before, when the Shanghai Cooperation Organization hosted leaders from India, Turkey, Vietnam and Egypt, among others. All these regional powers were generally considered closer to Washington than Beijing. But a toxic combination of tariffs, hostile rhetoric and ideological demands is moving many of the world’s pivotal states away from the United States and toward China. It might be the greatest own goal in modern foreign policy.

…..

The governments and people in these countries are outraged at their treatment. India used to be overwhelmingly pro-American. Now it is rapidly shifting toward a deep suspicion of Washington. In Brazil, President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s sagging poll numbers have risen as he stands up to Trump’s bullying. In South Africa, President Cyril Ramaphosa gained stature when he politely responded to Trump’s Oval Office hectoring. It is worth remembering that other countries have nationalist sentiment, too!

…..

While Washington has been alienating these countries, China has been courting them. It has outlined a plan with Brazil for a transformative railway network connecting its Atlantic coast to Peru’s Pacific one. Xi managed to get Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi to visit China for the first time in seven years. China has courted South Africa with trade and aid, and public sentiment in that country has moved to be quite favorably inclined toward Beijing.

Pierre Lemieux continues to write wisely about trade and industrial policy. A slice:

In passing, let’s note that in the roaring ’60s, it was popular among the ruling establishments of underdeveloped countries, supported by the Western intelligentsia, to impose large tariffs on foreign manufactured goods in order to help domestic manufacturing. Only when, a few decades later, it was realized that such an industrial policy was a fool’s errand, were the poor people of underdeveloped countries able to jump on the bandwagon of free trade and to escape dire poverty.

A basic economic reason why “unfairly traded steel” or the underlying ideal of mercantilist and industrial policy is a fool’s errand is that it presupposes a central economic planner possessing what he does not and cannot possess, that is, the information of time, place, costs, and preferences that is carried by prices determined by supply and demand on free markets. Friedrich Hayek explained that in the 1930s and 1940s (see Hayek’s American Economic Review article “The Use of Knowledge in Society”). A central planner cannot even know many intricate effects of his resource-allocation decisions, especially in a complex economy. Thus, government intervention begets government intervention in the greatest political disorder. That the US government only realized after imposing steel tariffs that they should be imposed on steel products too provides a rather funny illustration.

Another important lesson from protectionism—empirically confirmed a thousand times—is how rent-seeking special interests will try to exploit the general public, or part of it, each time the state offers them a means to do so. The requests for tariffs on steel-containing products are already flooding the government.

Alex Cole tweets: (HT Scott Lincicome)

64% of Arkansas farmers voted for Trump, at the present rate because of tariffs, one third of them will be bankrupt by this time next year. Their solution? They want money from the government. So again, it’s not socialism when I get money, just when everybody else gets it…

Brian Albrecht asks if tariffs will cause an outbreak of “greedflation.”

Here’s David Henderson on GMU Econ alum Romina Boccia’s and her co-author’s, Ivane Nachkebia, new book titled Reimagining Social Security: Global Lessons for Retirement Policy Changes.

Reason‘s Nick Gillespie talks with Richard Dawkins about science.

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Quotation of the Day…

… is from page 96 of the late Christopher Hitchens’s October 9, 2008, Vanity Fair essay titled “America the Banana Republic,” as this essay is reprinted in Arguably, the 2011 collection of several of Hitchens’s essays:

How very agreeable it must be to sit at a table in a casino where nobody seems to lose, and to play with a big stack of chips furnished to you by other people, and to have the further assurance that, if anything should ever chance to go wrong, you yourself are guaranteed by the tax dollars of those whose money you are throwing about in the first place! It’s enough to make a cat laugh.

DBx: Hitchens here wrote about the cronyism that was uncorked by the subprime crisis, but his words apply with equal relevance and force to the cronyism now being further uncorked by Trump’s protectionism. Trump is playing with other people’s money – specifically, the money of his fellow Americans. What fun for him! Anything that goes wrong – and much will indeed go wrong – Trump’s personal fortune will be unaffected and he’ll blame others. And members of his base, despite being made poorer by him, will bask in the fantastically false belief that he’s saving them from economic predators.

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Adam Smith Would Be Appalled by Donald Trump

Here’s a letter to a new correspondent.

Mr. H__:

Last week you wrote to criticize me for allegedly “being unaware of the case for retaliatory tariffs made by Adam Smith.” (I responded that I’m not unaware of Smith’s case.) Today you write to praise what you describe as Pres. Trump’s “efficacious use of tariffs to drive more investment to the USA.”

With respect, your argument is internally inconsistent, and not only because Trump continues to be blind to the fact that increased global investment in the U.S. fattens his bête noire: U.S. trade deficits.

Although Adam Smith doubted that politicians can be trusted to use retaliatory tariffs in economically productive ways, he acknowledged the theoretical possibility that tariffs imposed at home in response to foreign tariffs might serve the cause of economic efficiency if they pressure foreign governments to eliminate their tariffs. Importantly, Smith recognized that retaliatory tariffs are useful and justified only insofar as they, by lowering trade barriers, improve the allocation of capital, labor, and other resources across countries by leaving that allocation to be carried out by market forces.

Trump, however, uses tariffs to achieve exactly what Smith argued well-designed retaliatory tariffs might prevent – namely, resource misallocation caused by protectionism. Smith wanted capital, labor, and other resources to be allocated by market forces; Trump wants capital, labor, and other resources to be allocated by Trump.

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 reminds us that among the most rabid of the covidians were many of today’s leading MAGA-ites. Three slices:

Resistance to the COVID-era lockdowns occupies a central place in the political identity of the New Right—the eclectic group of national conservatives, postliberals, populists, and neoreactionaries at the ideological core of the MAGA coalition. Ironically, it was President Donald Trump who enabled lockdowns by proclaiming a national emergency in March 2020 and appointed Anthony Fauci to lead his administration’s pandemic response efforts. And yet the New Right has opted to look past these contradictions.

It has become routine for New Right political figures to position themselves as leaders of a bold resistance against the COVID restrictions—vice president and self-described postliberal J.D. Vance launched his Senate campaign in 2021 with an attack on “Fauci’s cabal”—even as they were largely absent as these events unfolded in 2020.

…..

[Auron] MacIntyre is a devout [Curtis] Yarvin enthusiast, but with a peculiar twist. At the time of MacIntyre’s claimed COVID awakening in April 2020, Yarvin was busy preaching the necessity of Wuhan-style lockdowns, electronic exposure tracking, and other authoritarian measures to halt the coronavirus in America.

Yarvin’s counter-pandemic “plan” ventured into extremes that even the most fanatical lockdowners avoided stating openly. “Americans all have [cell] phones,” he wrote. “Why haven’t we started full population control—with involuntary tracking, testing, and isolation—yesterday?”

He mocked lockdowns in his home state of California for being insufficiently aggressive to accomplish the task of virus control, ridiculed Americans as too “puerile, spoiled and arrogant” to meet the challenge of COVID, and faulted our free economy and democratic institutions for creating obstacles to imposing a China-esque virus control plan. Yarvin’s proposed interventions read like a would-be dictator’s fever dream.

He called for the creation of a “Coronavirus Authority” with “unconditional and unlimited authority over all public and private actors,” operating beyond the reach of Congress and unaccountable to any court review or constitutional oversight. To blunt the economic disruption of such draconian measures, Yarvin proposed that the Federal Reserve convert all private stock and bond holdings into public assets in exchange for a one-time payment. In this new financial reordering, “The Fed owns all public companies” for the duration of the pandemic, with any debt being incurred by the Fed and then canceled. This temporary dictatorship (or as Yarvin put it, “literally the state capitalism of the Soviet Union”) would run for the course of the pandemic before resetting society after the lockdowns worked—an outcome in which Yarvin had supreme confidence.

As for anyone who complained, Yarvin’s plan called for complete social ostracism and suppression. “In a sane world, anyone with a public record of minimizing the coronavirus would be cancelled—unfit for any further employment, let alone in this crisis.” He wanted people to fear even “being linked to a coronavirus minimizer.”

…..

Today, New Right figures rail against Fauci and the United States’ pandemic response policies that they embraced or acquiesced to in 2020. But they remain suspiciously silent about the lockdown records of other governments they support. The New Right, and postliberals in particular, often extol the government of Viktor Orbán in Hungary as a model for conservative governance. Orbán imposed harsh lockdowns in 2020, far exceeding the restrictions in the United States. Another New Right hero, President Nayib Bukele of El Salvador, imposed one of the strictest lockdown regimes in Central America and repeatedly defied court orders that challenged his rule by emergency decree. Bukele’s subsequent takeover of his country’s judiciary and accompanying prison system are, in part, direct byproducts of his COVID-era restrictions.

As with much of America, genuine fear over an unknown pandemic likely motivated the New Right toward lockdowns and other forms of alarm at the outbreak of the pandemic. Before he turned against lockdowns in the late spring of 2020, [Tucker] Carlson personally lobbied Trump to take more aggressive action in his COVID response. Other, more opportunistic motives also played a role though, as New Right figures tried to appropriate the pandemic response to pet issues such as countering free trade and immigration.

[DBx: On social media, someone – mistakenly supposing himself to score points against this piece by Phil Magness – accused Magness of being a member of the “anti-tariff wing of MAGA.” This accusation is akin to accusing someone of being in the anti-abortion wing of Planned Parenthood or in the anti-government-schooling wing of the National Education Association. Such a wing is not a thing. Furthermore, anyone remotely familiar with Magness’s work would know that he is emphatically not MAGA. He’s quite the opposite.]

Gage Klipper reviews a new movie about covid.

Eric Boehm is correct: “Trump promised that protectionism and immigration enforcement would be good for the economy. The latest jobs report tells a different story.”

Also correct is Noah Rothman: “You can’t eat record ‘tariff revenues’.” A slice:

Lutnick was right; July’s disappointing numbers grew from the initial 73,000 new jobs to today’s 79,000. But at the same time, the BLS adjusted June’s numbers downward, finding that the U.S. lost 13,000 jobs that month — the first month of employment contraction in the United States since the height of the pandemic. June’s ugly figures mirror May’s ugly figures, when just 19,000 new jobs were created. If the president and his advisers want to take the BLS’s good June, they’ll have to acknowledge the legitimacy of its bad August, July, and May.

All told, the BLS’s reports over the past four months indicate that the American job market hit a wall in April — an impact that coincided with the inauguration of the great trade war. It’s a sharp decline from the six months that preceded May, each of which showed the U.S. creating more than 100,000 jobs per month.

Soon enough, the sluggish job market combined with the growing sense that high and rising prices are a feature of the Trump economy will present this administration with growing political challenges. If the White House’s only answer to those challenges is to bedazzle you with the amount of money that, but for the tariff regime, would still be in your bank account, they’ll discover that the public’s tolerance for the administration’s many other flights of fancy has limits.

The Wall Street Journal‘s Editorial Board reflects on yesterday’s dismal jobs report. Two slices:

President Trump fired the Bureau of Labor Statistics commissioner last month because he didn’t like the monthly jobs numbers. He claimed the numbers were “rigged.” But Friday’s monthly report for August confirms that job creation has stalled amid his tariff barrage.

Employers added a mere 22,000 jobs last month while the numbers were revised down for the previous two by a combined 21,000. This means only 107,000 new jobs were created in the last four months—an average of 27,000. Monthly job gains averaged 167,000 last year.

…..

What Mr. Trump needs is a broad revival in business confidence of the kind that accompanied his November victory and appeared before his tax on imports and willy-nilly interventions in private business decisions. Repeat after us: Tariffs are taxes, and taxes hurt economic growth.

Mr. Trump this week asked the Supreme Court to hear the legal challenge to his tariffs on a fast track. The best news for the economy would be if the Court takes up his challenge and finds them unconstitutional.

Jennifer Huddleston explains “what the Google antitrust remedies ruling means for antitrust, consumers, and innovation.”

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Quotation of the Day…

is from page 57 of Norbert Michel’s brilliant 2025 book, Crushing Capitalism: How Populist Policies are Threatening the American Dream [footnotes deleted; links added]:

Several researchers have studied the “China Shock,” a reduction in US manufacturing employment after 2000 that was supposedly caused by increased trade with China. One problem with this story is that, although Chinese imports did increase in 2000, they largely replaced imports from other Pacific Rim countries. As a Congressional Research Service paper points out, Pacific Rim countries, including China, accounted for 47.1 percent of all US manufactured imports in 1990, the same share they had in 2017. All that changed is the share of the 47.1 percent accounted for by Chinese imports – it was just 7.6 percent in 1990, but it was 55.4 percent in 2017.

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Bonus Quotation of the Day…

… is from page 403 of The Thomas Sowell Reader (2011):

A careful definition of words would destroy half the agenda of the political left and scrutinizing evidence would destroy the other half.

DBx: Indeed so.

And now that the political right has largely adopted the same agenda (although wrapped in different packaging) as has long been peddled by the political left, Sowell’s wise words apply today to the political right no less than to the political left.

Consult tomorrow’s “Quotation of the Day” for one such fact that undoes much of the case made by the likes of Trump (on the right) and Sanders (on the left) for protective tariffs. (That “Quotation of the Day” will go live tomorrow, September 6th, at 4:15am Eastern Time.)

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Some Links

The folks at Unleash Prosperity share a chart that shows that Japanese industrial policy – which we Americans a few decades ago were warned by oh so very many pundits, professors, and politicians left, right, and center would propel Japan’s economy to great heights and leave America’s in the dust – was a curse to the Japanese people. [DBx: “MSCI” is an acronym for “Morgan Stanley Capital International” – an index of equity values.]

Speaking of the economic inefficiencies of state-directed enterprises, the New York Times reports that such inefficiencies are real in today’s China. (HT Scott Lincicome) A slice:

Absent from the top of China’s E.V. rankings are four state-owned automakers with ties to China’s national government: FAW Group, Dongfeng Motor, Changan Automobile and the GAC Group. The government-owned giants are strong in internal combustion engines but weak in electric cars.

Beijing is struggling to contain the industry’s overall capacity in part because the state-owned companies refuse to shrink to offset the growth of the private companies making so many electric and hybrid vehicles. Closing state-owned factories that make gasoline-powered cars and laying off their workers is politically difficult, especially in a high-profile industry like automobiles.

GMU Econ alum Dominic Pino is correct:

Trump’s nominee for the Federal Reserve Board of Governors, Stephen Miran, has said he will remain as the chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers if he is confirmed as a Fed governor. This is disqualifying.

Alvaro Vargas Llosa decries what is becoming of the United States. A slice:

As a native Peruvian who has spent more than three decades writing about Latin American economics and politics, I’m familiar with heavy-handed politicians exerting control over private businesses.

Never in my wildest nightmares, however, could I have imagined that the United States would follow suit: going from the big-government, tax-and-spend, woke Democrats to a command economy of sorts under the supposedly free-market Republicans. Yet, that is what President Donald Trump’s recent actions unequivocally represent.

The White House strong-armed chipmakers Nvidia and AMD into giving the U.S. government 15 percent of the money obtained from selling chips in China. It was either that or saying goodbye to any hope of getting an export license.

The Editorial Board of the Wall Street Journal reports that Trump is turning to Biden-esque “green-energy” policies to shield himself from some of the political costs of his tariffs punitive taxes on Americans’ purchases of imports and import-competing products. A slice:

The Administration is trying to mitigate the pain caused by Chinese retaliation to the President’s tariffs. The U.S. has long been China’s top soybean supplier. But “China has contracted with Brazil to meet future months’ needs to avoid purchasing any soybeans from the United States,” the American Soybean Association said in a letter to the President last month.

Soybean “prices continue to drop and at the same time our farmers are paying significantly more for inputs and equipment” thanks to the Trump tariffs,” the letter says. As a result, “soybean farmers are under extreme financial stress” and “cannot survive a prolonged trade dispute with our largest customers.” The best solution is to roll back the tariffs.

Instead, the Administration is trying to make refiners—some located in the swing states of Pennsylvania and Michigan—and drivers subsidize farmers and biofuel producers. One bad policy turn begets another.

Robby Soave rightly describes the British government’s arrest of Irish comedian Graham Linehan as “an outrage.”

My GMU Econ colleague Bryan Caplan concludes that “[Ludwig von] Mises’ analysis of the political power of economic illiteracy is dead on.”

Neal McCluskey laments the continued survival of the U.S. Department of “Education.”

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Quotation of the Day…

… is from page 40 of the 1st edition (1995) of Russell Roberts’s remarkable book on trade, The Choice; here, Russ has the ghost of David Ricardo responding to someone who insists that “it’s better to make computer chips than potato chips” [link added]:

It depends. Some workers in the potato chip business make a good living. But the real flaw in the saying is the implication that if America gets pushed out of the computer business by unfair foreign competition, or even loses out in a fair fight, the only jobs that are left are the menial ones. But jobs aren’t sitting there like boxes waiting for people to jump into them. Think back to the high-paying medical jobs that wouldn’t exist if disease were eliminated. Do you think the people who would have been doctors are now going to be street sweepers? Or workers on an assembly line producing potato chips? They are not. They are going to take their skills and discipline to learn about something other than medicine. There is no limit to the human imagination. America’s greatest resources are knowledge, know-how, and creativity. Such markets can never be cornered. There have always been occupations that use these skills and there always will be.

DBx: Yes. It’s a point so simple yet profound – and ignored by protectionists, who hold such a low opinion of their fellow citizens’ abilities and gumption that they, the protectionists, presume that individuals, as well as these individuals’ children and grandchildren, are capable of thriving only in the particular current jobs these individuals hold.

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Some Links

GMU Econ alum Dominic Pino reflects on last Friday’s ruling, by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, that the tariffs Trump imposed under IEEPA are unlawful. A slice:

The government tried to defend the tariffs as a national security measure, and the court didn’t buy it. “While the President of course has independent constitutional authority in [foreign affairs and national security], the power of the purse (including the power to tax) belongs to Congress,” the court said. “Absent a valid delegation by Congress, the President has no authority to impose taxes.”

The judge who wrote the dissent in favor of much of the Trump administration’s position was Richard Taranto, who was appointed by . . . Barack Obama in 2013. It should come as no surprise that an Obama-appointed judge could find something to like in executive overreach.

The majority could have written the kind of biased, screeching, left-wing, anti-Trump opinion that some federal judges have written over the years. Instead, it wrote a boring, measured opinion that used conservative judicial principles to get to its result.

Eric Boehm is correct: “American manufacturing needs relief from Trump’s tariffs.” Two slices:

The data are becoming impossible to ignore: American manufacturers desperately need relief from the very same tariffs that the Trump administration incoherently believes are helping American manufacturers.

That conclusion is evident from both results of a new survey of manufacturing companies’ CEOs and new economic data showing that manufacturing activity has declined for six consecutive months—the sort of slide over two economic quarters that typically meets the definition of a sector-wide recession. In short, both words and actions point to something being very wrong with American manufacturing since February, which just so happens to be when Trump announced the first of what have become many rounds of new tariffs on imported goods and raw materials.

The economic data come courtesy of the Institute for Supply Management (ISM), which tracks a combination of factors including orders, employment, and inventories. A score higher than 50 in the monthly index indicates expansion, while a score below that threshold means contractions. For August, the ISM survey showed a score of 48.7, up from 48 in July.

…..

No wonder so few businesses are optimistic. The bearings will continue until the White House improves its understanding of basic economics.

Alex Tabarrok reports on the simple mathematics of Chinese innovation. Here’s his conclusion:

To be clear, the rise of China and India as scientific superpowers is not per se a threat. Whiners complain about US pharmaceutical R&D “subsidizing” the world. Well, Chinese pharmaceutical innovation is now saving American lives. Terrific. Ideas don’t stop at borders, and their spread raises living standards everywhere. It would be wonderful if an American cured cancer. It would be 99% as wonderful if a Chinese scientist did. What matters is that when more scientists attack the problem, the odds of a cure rise so we should look favorably on a world with more scientists. That is progress.

The danger is not China’s rise but America’s mindset. Treat science as zero-sum and every Chinese patent looks like a loss. But ideas are nonrival: a Chinese breakthrough doesn’t make Americans poorer, it makes the world richer. A multi-polar scientific world means faster growth, greater wealth, and accelerating technology—even if America wins a smaller share of the Nobels.

Mike Munger warns of the dangers that loom because of the decline in human population. Two slices:

Earth is going to hit “peak population” before the end of this century. Within 25 years, most of the world’s developed nations will be facing sharp population declines, with shrinking pools of young people working to support an ever-aging population.

The reason is not famine, war, or pestilence. We did this to ourselves, by creating a set of draconian solutions to a problem that didn’t even exist. Fear has always been the best tool for social control, and the fear of humanity was deployed by generations of “thinkers” on the control-obsessed left.

…..

But there is more going here than just gulling the gullible; the overpopulation hysteria of the 1960s and 1970s had world-changing consequences, effects that are just now becoming clear. It’s not fair (though it is fun) to blame Ehrlich; the truth is that the full-blown family-size freakout emerged from a pseudo-science that held growth was a threat to prosperity. Influential organizations were founded by very worried people. The Population Council and the International Planned Parenthood Federation were both created early on, in 1952. Developing nations began promoting aggressive family planning initiatives, often with substantial support, and sometimes with coercive pressures, from Western governments and international agencies.

The United Nations, the World Bank, and bilateral donors, particularly the United States through USAID, increasingly integrated population control into foreign aid programs. High fertility rates, particularly in Asia, Africa, and Latin America, were viewed not merely as demographic trends but as Malthusian obstacles to modernization, poverty alleviation, and global security. China implemented its infamous “One-Child Policy” in 1979 with coercive measures, including forced sterilizations and abortions. India conducted mass sterilization campaigns, particularly during the Emergency period (1975–1977), often using force or extreme social pressure, including withholding ration cards. A number of countries in East Asia saw aggressive state-controlled programs, often funded by the World Bank, that sought to use questionable and coercive methods to reduce population growth quickly and permanently.

My intrepid Mercatus Center colleague, Veronique de Rugy, is rightly alarmed by the prospect of a U.S. sovereign wealth fund. Two slices:

When President Donald Trump announced in August that the federal government took an equity stake in Intel, he bragged that taxpayers had “paid zero” for part of a company now “worth $11 billion.” In reality, taxpayers paid plenty: $8.9 billion in subsidies with potentially more to come. The government simply dressed up the giveaway as an investment, which some leaders see as only the beginning.

If you’re not deafened by Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick’s cheers, you’ll hear economists from the right and the left expressing alarm. Politicians picking winners, subsidizing favored firms and now grabbing government ownership stakes create the market distortions that conservatives once decried.

Also, acting as both regulator and shareholder generates conflicts of interest on an epic scale. Will Washington regulate Intel as forcefully as the company’s competitors or tilt the field? The question answers itself.

…..

SWFs are political institutions and unlike private investors, governments are never disciplined by profit and loss. As then-presidential-candidate Barack Obama once warned in 2008, they can be “motivated by more than just market considerations.” Their portfolios, as [Jack] Salmon documents, have become playgrounds for lobbying, regulatory capture and ideological crusades.

J.D. Tuccille applauds the increase in alternatives to K-12 government-supplied “education.”

Phil Gramm and Jeb Hensarling defend the independence of the Federal Reserve. A slice:

The Fed is independent only in its conduct of narrowly defined monetary policy. When the Federal Reserve Board became one of the nation’s most vocal supporters of massive federal spending during and after the pandemic, it was operating outside its remit. That was also true when the Fed allowed itself to get caught up in climate politics and created internal climate committees. It also jumped on the DEI bandwagon: It sponsored a diversity conference and redefined its maximum employment mandate to be “a broad and inclusive goal.”

By involving itself in the political process, the Fed undercut the argument that it should be independent of that political process. Political independence, like virtue, is hard to reclaim once lost.

Despite the Fed’s failings, we continue to support its independence in conducting monetary policy and oppose the president’s attacks on it. We don’t take this stance because we support the actions of the current board but because those principles hold true regardless of who holds office at the Fed.

In 2017 we both urged President Trump to appoint as chairman John Taylor of Stanford’s Hoover Institution. Jerome Powell’s monetary record is mixed. He deserves credit for bringing inflation down from its 40-year high and, at least so far, reducing the Fed’s balance sheet without disrupting economic activity. On the other hand, he helped cause that inflation when he refused to respond to rising prices based on the argument that the inflation was the result of a supply shortfall and therefore transitory. That argument wasn’t credible given that the federal government was spending more in two years than it had ever spent in three and the Fed during the pandemic was expanding the money supply faster than in any other year since World War II ended. But again, the issue isn’t Mr. Powell’s record—it’s monetary-policy independence.

That brings us to Gov. Lisa Cook. We don’t have sufficient information to judge whether she violated the law or engaged in unethical conduct worthy of removal. There has yet to be a formal investigation, and she has not been formally charged, much less convicted, of anything. Her “for cause” firing appears to be another assault on monetary policy independence.

Does the president have the authority to fire Mr. Powell or any other member of the board at his discretion? We believe that in creating the Federal Reserve, Congress delegated an enumerated power that Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution had given it. The Founding Fathers knew the long history of executives abusing the power to create money. As with other potentially dangerous powers, such as the power to tax, spend public money and declare war, the Founders concluded that the safest bet was for Congress to hold “the power to coin money and regulate its value thereof.”

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