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Bill Colton’s letter in today’s Wall Street Journal is excellent:

Phil Gramm and Michael Solon provide both evidence and clarity regarding the consumer harm done by the administration’s disastrous tariff fixation in their op-ed “The Trump Tax Increase of 2026” (April 29).

In my lifetime, I have voted Republican because of the party’s reliable pursuit of policies based on economic fundamentals: open markets, free trade, cost-effective regulation and minimum government intervention. President Trump’s trade policies clearly fail any reasonable test of economic reason—so where are sensible Republican voices in the House and Senate? Asleep at the switch it seems.

It’s particularly discouraging because the damage done by tariffs isn’t a complicated topic in economics. God help us if both parties choose now to ignore economic fundamentals.

Eric Boehm is correct: “Trump’s new European car tariffs demonstrate why his ‘deals’ are worthless.” A slice:

When President Donald Trump struck a trade deal with the European Union in July, officials on both sides stressed how it would ensure long-term stability to trans-Atlantic trade.

The Trump administration called the deal a “generational modernization of the transatlantic alliance.” European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said it “restores stability and predictability” by locking in 15 percent tariffs on most European goods exported to the U.S., while most American imports to Europe would be exempt from tariffs.

In other words, Trump got what he wanted out of that deal: A reduction in tariffs on American exports and the establishment of a new, permanent baseline tariff on European goods. European leaders also felt like they’d won something: the 15 percent tariff was lower than the 25 percent tariff Trump had threatened, and the deal would stop Trump from hiking tariffs the next time he was in a bad mood.

So much for that.

On Friday, Trump announced that he would raise tariffs on European-made cars to 25 percent. (Those tariffs are authorized by Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962, so they are not affected by the Supreme Court’s ruling in February that limited some of the president’s power to impose tariffs unilaterally.)

Responding to U.S. trade representative Jameison Greer’s economically ignorant defense of U.S. tariffs on Americans’ purchases of imported pick-up trucks, Adam Ozimek tweets: (HT Scott Lincicome)

I think if you believe domestic truck manufacturers can’t compete but we want to guarantee small truck production stays here at a cost to consumers just say that. There is no world where this is boosting global competitiveness or helping them “perfect their model”.

National Review‘s Charles Cooke understandably is flabbergasted by Elizabeth Warren’s dishonesty. A slice:

What fun it must be to play poisoner and physician.

In 2024, after the Biden administration successfully blocked a merger between JetBlue and Spirit Airlines, Senator Elizabeth Warren was elated. “This,” she tweeted out excitedly, “is a Biden win for flyers!”

Last week, however, as Spirit prepared to close its doors, Warren struck a different note. “The Big Four airlines (American, Delta, Southwest, United),” she lamented, “control 75% of the U.S. market. Fewer choices = higher prices for you.”

Well, then.

Aware, perhaps, that her supposed “win for flyers!” has been seamlessly transmuted into “fewer choices,” Warren is now helping the police look for the real killer. “Spiking fuel prices from Trump’s war,” Warren wrote on Saturday, “was the nail in the coffin for twice-bankrupted Spirit airline. FWIW, JetBlue merger failed because a judge, appointed by Ronald Reagan, said the deal was illegal.”

Superficially, both of those statements are true. It is, indeed, the case that the “nail in the coffin” was “spiking fuel prices,” and that prices spiked because of “Trump’s war.” It is also the case that “a judge, appointed by Ronald Reagan,” endorsed the government’s brief. But neither of those facts comes close to justifying the position that Warren took in 2023, or to letting her and the politics she espouses off the hook. As Warren herself notes, Spirit was in bad shape. It had been “twice-bankrupted,” it was heavily in debt, and both its fleet and its routes had considerably diminished in size. That phrase that Warren used — “nail in the coffin” — ineluctably implies that, by the time the fatal action occurred, there was already a corpse, and that it was inside a coffin that had been almost perfectly sealed. And so there was. Spirit, by April of this year, was such a mess that any noticeable disruption — be it a jump in costs, a strike, or even a period of terrible weather — was liable to drive it into the ground. Which is why, seeing this coming, the airline had tried earlier to merge with JetBlue. If Elizabeth Warren wishes, we can all point at Donald Trump and agree that his decision to invade Iran drove in the final nail. And then, having done that, we can ask about all the others.

Jimmy Alfonso Licon explains that “the knowledge problem dooms municipal grocery stores every time.” Here’s his conclusion:

Mamdani’s grocery store will fail. Even if shoppers save a dollar over Food Bazaar, that pound of apples will include appropriated tax dollars, food waste, labor distortions, and a thousand other costs that will make it wildly more expensive than the sticker would indicate. The real price is far more expensive than a market competitor’s, even if the shelf price doesn’t show it.

The price of apples is a secret language, the communication of a billion bits of dispersed, organic, intuitive knowledge of costs, trade-offs, and alternatives. All that information, over time and geography, quietly working away in the minds of Washington apple growers and migrant fruit pickers, beekeepers and cider makers, interstate truck drivers and NYC shelf stockers, is infused into the price sticker on a pound of apples in a market-driven grocery store. And Mamdani, like hubristic dreamers before him, thinks he can wipe all that away, slap on a price that looks like success to the voters, and hide all the rest in your tax bill.

Samuel Abrams reflects on the upbringing of “faculty brats” such as Zohran Mamdani and Katie Wilson, each the child of prominent academics – and each now mayors of big American cities. Two slices:

The term faculty brat isn’t an insult. It is a description of formation. Plenty of faculty children learn to be rigorous and humble. A growing number doesn’t; they instead emerge confident, articulate, ideologically coherent and almost entirely insulated from the consequences of being wrong.

I first encountered the type as an undergraduate at Stanford and later as a graduate student at Harvard. The faculty brats were at home with the buildings, the rituals, the language, the professors. Classmates and professors alike described them as the most privileged students on campus. Elite preparatory schools produce faculty brats, too. The category has migrated upward over the past generation, into the highest reaches of finance, technology and now city government. The fluency is the same. So is the insulation. And so, I now realize, is the unearned authority.

…..

The pattern extends beyond finance. New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani is the son of Mahmood Mamdani, a professor of government at Columbia and one of the most prominent postcolonial theorists in the American academy, and noted filmmaker Mira Nair. The future mayor attended Bank Street, then Bronx Science, then Bowdoin. By his own description, his upbringing was “privileged.”

In Seattle, mayor Katie Wilson is the daughter of two Binghamton University biology professors, David Sloan Wilson and Anne Barrett Clark. Her parents helped pay for her years at Oxford. They were still paying her bills, including child care, into her 40s. She’s 43. When it became a campaign issue, Ms. Wilson defended the arrangement as “relatable.”

Both mayors are intelligent. Both are well-versed in the moral vocabulary of the institutions that produced them. Both now govern cities full of people who live inside the exact constraints—rent, payroll, trade-offs, consequences—from which they have been spared. The heart of the problem isn’t that they’re unqualified. It’s that they’re unacquainted.

The deeper issue is the monoculture that produced them. On campus, trade-offs can be abstracted away. Policies are often debated for their symbolic meaning rather than their practical effects. Moral clarity becomes a substitute for empirical testing. Dissent is treated as ignorance or bad faith. That works inside a seminar room. It fails in a city. And it produces leaders who mistake the applause of their peers for evidence that they are right.

None of this is inevitable. Universities still have the capacity to form serious, grounded citizens. But doing so requires reintroducing friction. It means real engagement with economics, scarcity and the unintended effects of well-meaning policy. It means time spent outside the academic bubble.

The Editorial Board of the Washington Post tells how Transportation secretary Sean Duffy – thankfully – won out over Commerce secretary Howard Lutnick to prevent a U.S. government bailout and takeover of Spirit Airlines. A slice:

When President Donald Trump suggested that the federal government “just buy” Spirit Airlines, Duffy stood up for taxpayers. “There’s been a lot of money thrown at Spirit, and they haven’t found their way into profitability,” he said on April 21. “If no one else wants to buy them, why would we buy them?”

Phil Magness is a fan of Stephen Macedo’s and Frances Lee’s book, In Covid’s Wake. A slice:

Macedo and Lee’s investigation of the COVID era surveys multiple similar incidents in the United States and abroad. They recount how Scott Atlas, a dissenting member of the US COVID task force who opposed lockdowns, was censured and pilloried by the Stanford faculty senate for his stance. They walk the reader through the debate over COVID’s origins, showing how political considerations privileged a natural outbreak at a Chinese wet market and discouraged investigation into a possible lab-leak incident at a nearby Chinese government facility that studied bat coronaviruses. They explore how scientific journals overstated the evidence for masks, following months of contradictory claims by health officials and an ambiguous scientific literature behind them. The resulting study paints an alarming portrait of scientific collapse during the worst pandemic in a century – one where the normal mechanisms of hypothesis testing, peer review, and, at an even more fundamental level, the ability to voice scientific dissent succumbed to intense political pressures to maintain a uniform professional “consensus” behind a pro-lockdown, pro-mask, pro-mandate policy response.

The book itself is part history of how this policy response came to be, part diagnostic analysis of its failures, and part warning about the dangers that the COVID response portends for a democratic society in future public health emergencies. The authors approach these subjects as political scientists who started from different sides of the COVID issue – one began the pandemic with reservations about the emerging lockdown policies, while the other acquiesced to the initial alarm of “two weeks to flatten the curve.” Both began to notice that something was amiss with the scientific response, particularly as it privileged and embraced an aggressive COVID containment policy that eschewed Western democratic norms and resembled China’s authoritarian governance structure.

My Mercatus Center colleague Rebecca Lowe is well worth listening to.

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Quotation of the Day…

… is from page 316 of Thomas Sowell’s 2002 collection, Controversial Essays:

Has anyone ever asked what a full professor is full of? In some trendy new fields, the title “empty professor” would be more appropriate.

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The Correct Term is “Free Trade”

Here’s a letter to the Wall Street Journal.

Editor:

Gerard Baker displays his usual impressive wisdom in decrying President Trump’s second-term pursuit of a misguided and extreme ideological agenda (“What Happened to the Pragmatic Trump of the First Term?” May 4). But Mr. Baker himself inadvertently grants the validity of one of the premises that fuels that extremism when he writes of “the elevation of international capital that ravaged communities at home.”

The correct name for “the elevation of international capital” is “free trade.” Why not use this term? It better reveals the innocent increased freedom of ordinary people to spend their incomes as they choose, while avoiding the mistaken suggestion that a lowering of trade barriers benefits Davos-vacationing capitalists at the expense of the masses.

And where are these “ravaged communities at home”? Politicians and pundits incessantly talk about these communities, but serious attempts to locate them encounter difficulties. The economist Jeremy Horpedahl studied the ten metropolitan statistical areas in the U.S. that suffered the largest negative hits during the infamous “China Shock” of a quarter-century ago. According to Horpedahl, “all of the MSAs hit hard by the China Shock still managed to have significant and positive real wage growth across the distribution since 2001…. Wage gains in several of these places, in fact, are better than the national trends.”

Whenever economic change occurs, some particular workers lose jobs, and some particular locations lose business and population. Economic growth requires economic change and adjustment. It always has and always will. But the story of America is that ordinary people not only recover over time, but become wealthier. It’s an error to single out the freer trade of the past few decades as a unique source of economic change that justifies greater skepticism of globalization.

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

The Editorial Board of the Wall Street Journal decries the consequences of Lina Khan & Co.’s “neobrandeisian” revival of highly interventionist antitrust. A slice:

Recall how Timothy Wu, Jonathan Kanter, Lina Khan and others on the left sought to revive long discredited theories of antitrust that view nearly all mergers as anti-competitive. Mr. Kanter tested that view on the airline industry, with disastrous results.

In 2021 the Biden Justice Department challenged a JetBlue Airways alliance in the Northeast with American Airlines. In 2022 JetBlue offered Spirit a $3.8 billion merger lifeline so the combined companies could offer more competition for the four U.S. airline giants. Mr. Kanter’s Antitrust Division sued to block the merger in 2023 and prevailed in court in January 2024 in one of the most bizarre opinions we’ve ever read.

Federal Judge William Young admitted Spirit’s financial troubles. He also agreed that “an expansion of all aspects of JetBlue’s business—including network, fleet and loyalty program—would allow for more vigorous competition with the Big Four, which carry most passengers in the country.”

He still ruled the merger an antitrust violation because it would eliminate one low-fare option on some routes. JetBlue ended its merger bid soon thereafter, and Spirit declared bankruptcy in November 2024, long before the Iran war fuel spike. Now it’s shutting down for good. As these columns warned after the judge’s ruling, “Justice has essentially set Spirit up for failure.”

Well, congratulations Judge Young. With Spirit’s demise, that low-fare option is gone. The big boys are likely to snap up Spirit’s planes, airport gates and other assets, and there will be less competition than if the merger had been allowed. JetBlue is also struggling these days. Judge Young owes those Spirit employees and the traveling public an apology, and so does Mr. Kanter.

Writing in the Washington Post, GMU Econ alum Julia Cartwright explains that Americans would have access to more “affordable” housing if Americans had access to more construction workers. A slice:

Construction is already heavily dependent on immigrant labor, and the sector faces a serious worker shortage, exacerbated by the impact of the Trump administration’s tough immigration agenda. One possible solution would involve increasing the number of temporary worker visas that allow foreign workers to fill short-term labor needs. This would ease the labor shortage and relieve upward wage pressure. Streamlining occupational licensing across state lines would let workers follow demand rather than being trapped in a state by patchwork credentialing rules. And repealing prevailing wage laws, which mandate union-scale compensation on any project touching public funds, would directly bring down the cost of building the units most intended to help low-income renters.

Ilya Somin, a GMU colleague over in the Scalia School of Law, compares European libertarians to American libertarians. A slice:

Not surprisingly, there is a large overlap between the two groups’ views and priorities. A high proportion of what I saw and heard at LibertyCon Europe differed little from what I would expect to see at a comparable US event. For example, libertarians on both sides of the Atlantic are deeply concerned about excessive government spending and regulation, growing efforts to impose restrictions on access to various websites (often under the pretext of protecting children), protectionist restrictions on international trade, and more. American libertarians have greatly influenced their European counterparts, and vice versa. As the great Austrian libertarian economist F.A. Hayek put it, “[t]he growth of ideas is an international process.”

There are, however, several noteworthy differences. First and foremost, it is notable that European libertarians have an almost unanimously negative view of Donald Trump and his administration. Many, probably most, American libertarians are similarly negative. But there is a significant faction that is “anti-anti Trump” (holding that Trump is flawed, but still preferable to his opponents, or at least no worse than them), and a smaller but vocal group that is actively pro-Trump.

Laura Williams explains why beef prices in the U.S. are likely to remain high. A slice:

Capital equipment required to keep cattle ranches running is increasingly expensive, partly due to the high cost of importing steel and other metals. Tariffs of 50 percent apply to materials coming in from China and Canada, some of our most prolific trading partners.

The Washington Post‘s Editorial Board reports on the likely loss of tax revenue that will be the consequence the State of California’s attempt to seize an additional five percent of its wealthiest citizens’ assets. A slice:

Steven Spielberg, for example, denies the billionaire tax had anything to do with his entirely coincidental relocation to New York City at the start of the year, but the timing sure was convenient, since the initiative specifies that the billionaire tax will be retroactively assessed on anyone residing in California as of Jan. 1.

Memo to California voters: If it is possible for a citizen of your state to lower their tax bill by moving to Manhattan, something has gone seriously wrong.

Ironically, timing the tax to the start of the year was supposed to make it harder for billionaires to avoid paying. Instead, this too-clever-by-half design forced them to jump the gun, even though doing it this way was almost certainly illegal and retroactive taxation would be challenged in court.

Human Progress tweets:

In 1826, a ream of 500 sheets of paper cost about $5. With average wages near five cents an hour, the time price was 100 hours.

Paper was precious.

Today, 500 higher-quality sheets sell for $7.99 at Staples. With average wages around $36.86 an hour, the time price is just 13 minutes.

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Quotation of the Day…

… is from page 81 of the late I.M.D. Little‘s 1999 book, Collection and Recollections, as shared by Douglas Irwin in Irwin’s December 2024 essay “Changing the Trade and Development Consensus“:

We were slow to realize that the most prevalent reason for market failure was government itself. Governments were driven by false economic ideology – heavy industry, protection, import substitution – and also became increasingly self-serving and corrupt.

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China Shock 2.0 vs. China Shock 1.0

This post by Oxford economist J. Zachary Mazlish is very good; I encourage you to read it. (HT David Levey)

Nevertheless, there are two points that I think to be worth making in response to Mazlish’s post.

I will here make one of these points. I’ll make the other of these points in a follow-up post at Cafe Hayek.

Mazlish writes:

These doomsayers are responding to what has been dubbed “China Shock 2.0.” China Shock 1.0 was the rise in Chinese exports of low value added goods that occurred in the early 2000s. Shock 2.0 is when China begins exporting the high value added goods that constitute what remains of the industrial bases in the US and Europe.

Critics of trade with China do indeed worry about what will happen outside of China when that country “begins exporting … high value added goods” – goods different from the low-value-added goods that China exported during the so-called “China Shock 1.0.”

But reality isn’t optional. President Xi and his many mandarins can escape neither the reality of scarcity nor the principle of comparative advantage. If China does indeed start producing more high-value-added goods, it will have to produce fewer of other goods. And the goods that in China will likely be produced in reduced quantities are the kinds of goods that China produced and exported during the “China Shock 1.0.”

And so shouldn’t Americans who decry the consequences of “China Shock 1.0” applaud rather than agonize over this so-called “China Shock 2.0”?

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Some Links

Scott Lincicome, Alfredo Carrillo Obregon, and Chad Smitson explain that “the AI boom is being fueled by imports — and free trade.” Two slices:

Data published today by the US Bureau of Economic Analysis show that domestic investment in artificial intelligence is currently acting as a massive tailwind for US economic growth (gross domestic product). The data also show that this American investment boom is being fueled by imports of the servers and other things that datacenters and related AI technologies need.

…..

Surely, the AI boom isn’t solely due to free trade, and we wouldn’t expect it to cause every other US industry to boom like AI is today. But one still must wonder how many other American industries might similarly benefit from the same “special” treatment that the AI industry enjoys today—i.e., the treatment almost every industry received before the Trump tariff wall was erected last year.

National Review‘s John Puri is correct:

As the leader of a bureaucracy constructed by progressives, President Trump is like a toddler in a toy store. The levers and pulleys of regulatory power all around him present endless opportunities to exert his will. These instruments were designed for supposedly dispassionate experts who falsely believed that they could rationalize society and properly organize the economy. Trump yanks on them to do what he pleases.

…..

In any case, the past year has demonstrated the danger of vesting merger-review power in one person. When the president exploits the law to bully the market, merger-review power becomes a tool of unilateral governance. An uninhibited executive can hold multibillion-dollar deals hostage until he receives a payoff or is handed effective control of a company. He can jawbone media companies into softening their coverage. He can pick the winners and losers of bidding wars.

The Wall Street Journal‘s Editorial Board busts the ‘progressive’ myth that recent changes in U.S. election law are stifling voting by minorities. A slice:

Fast forward to this week, and the political left is again heralding the return of Jim Crow after the High Court ruled that carving up districts based on race is illegal (Louisiana v. Callais). Amid the overwrought reaction, let’s see what happened to minority voting and representation in Congress since the Court’s 2013 Shelby County landmark.

Justice Samuel Alito’s majority opinion this week highlighted America’s racial progress. He quoted Shelby County as saying that since the VRA’s enactment in 1965, “voting tests were abolished, disparities in voter registration and turnout due to race were erased, and African-Americans attained political office in record numbers.” He added that “black voters now participate in elections at similar rates as the rest of the electorate.”

The left ignores all this, but let’s look at the numbers. Barack Obama’s candidacy super-charged black turnout in the 2008 and 2012 presidential elections such that it matched that of whites. The share of blacks voting in presidential elections has since fallen somewhat from those record highs, though it has increased in midterm elections.

Some 45.1% of the black voting-age citizen population cast ballots in 2022 and 51.1% did in 2018, according to Census Bureau data. That’s significantly higher than the black turnouts in three midterms prior to Shelby County; 2010 (43.5%), 2006 (41%) and 2002 (42.3%).

Voting among Hispanics and Asians has also increased over the last two decades. About 40% of Asian citizens cast ballots in the 2018 and 2022 midterms, versus 30.8% in 2010. Hispanic turnout rose to 37.9% in 2022 and 40.4% in 2018 from 31.2% in 2010. In 2020 the share of eligible Hispanics (53.7%) and Asian voters (59.7%) who cast ballots hit records.

Also writing sensibly about election laws is Jason Willick. A slice:

Representative democracy isn’t about perfect fairness, which is impossible; it has various permutations, and all have benefits and drawbacks. In the decades leading up to this Supreme Court decision, American democracy was structured to increase the number of majority-minority districts, and therefore the number of racial minority members of the House of Representatives.

One trade-off was that Black politicians were steered toward Black constituencies, changing their political incentives and potentially making it harder to get elected to statewide or national offices requiring a multiracial support base. If Barack Obama had prevailed in his 2000 campaign for Congress in Illinois’ then-majority-Black 1st District, for example, it’s an open question whether he would have ascended to the Senate and the presidency. The Callais decision, by creating the conditions for more racially integrated political competition, could amplify rather than reduce Black political power over the long term.

Bob Graboyes offers further valuable reflections on Virginia’s recent gerrymandering escapade.

Phil Magness and Fabio Rojas discuss postliberalism.

My GMU colleague over in the Scalia School of Law Ilya Somin defends himself against knee-jerk, ignorant assertions of MAGA enthusiasts:

I filed The tariff case together with the conservative @LJCenter. And I’m the kind of liberal who was involved in legal challenges to Obamacare, advocates for vastly expanded protection for constitutional property rights, opposed affirmative action, and would roll back most of the New Deal-era expansion of federal power.

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Quotation of the Day…

… is from page 47 of philosopher Christopher Freiman’s excellent contribution, titled “Utilitarianism,” to the 2016 collection edited by Aaron Ross Powell and Grant Babcock, Arguments for Liberty [original emphasis]:

The great virtue of the market, from a utilitarian perspective, is that it leads us to promote the happiness of others without demanding that we prioritize their happiness or even know how to make them happy. No institution is perfect, but the market does the best job of extracting social benefits from people’s limited supply of impartiality and information.

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Some Links

George Will is no fan of the the “unitary executive theory.” A slice:

Presidents may unilaterally extend recognition to foreign governments, thereby establishing relations. Treaties, however, establish U.S. obligations. The president’s primacy in foreign policy does not entail the power to exclude Congress from involvement in implementing or renouncing these obligations.

Supporters of the unitary executive theory argue that the vesting of executive power in the president means a presidential monopoly of allpower connected in any way to executive duties. John Yoo, law professor at the University of California at Berkeley, brings to his advocacy of the unitary executive theory learning that is proportionate to his tenacity. He says:

“The Constitution only provides for the participation of the Senate in making the treaty; therefore, everything else regarding international agreements defaults to the president.” But his brassy “therefore” cannot disguise a non sequitur.

He says, “Unlike with legislation, where Congress can override a presidential veto, the Senate has no power to force the president to accept a treaty that he opposes.” But there is no such thing as a treaty the Senate opposes.

Yoo says leaving NATO “would certainly be a foreign-policy disaster.” But his theory insists that the Constitution relegates Congress to the role of spectator at the disaster. When a theory drags its adherents into such an intellectual cul-de-sac, the theory should be relegated to the ranks of ideas that need to be reconsidered.

Robert Bork Jr. and Mark Davis warn that Trump is trapping Americans further into the maw of excessive governmentalization. A slice:

For example, Trump’s Federal Trade Commission chairman, Andrew Ferguson, sent a “warning letter” to Apple CEO Tim Cook, threatening him over Apple News’ curation of news sources. “The FTC is not the speech police,” Ferguson proclaimed, saying he acted only because Apple News’ choice of sources violated its terms and conditions. Yet a close reading of those terms explicitly disclaims responsibility for content accuracy.

That’s an argument not too far removed from one made by Tim Wu, a major critic of Big Tech in the Biden White House, who recently penned a piece in the New York Times arguing that social media isn’t just speech but is instead “a defective, hazardous product.” As the Trump administration evolves, the arguments of Carr and Ferguson in favor of enforcing consumer protection standards against First Amendment activities dovetail with those of Wu. The right and the left are beginning to agree that speech is a product that should be regulated, not a fundamental right that must be protected.

The president has also attacked the First Amendment directly by leveling executive orders against law firms with former partners or associates who had worked against him. By threatening to cut off their access to security clearances and federal buildings, including possibly courthouses, the president has extracted promises of nearly a billion dollars’ worth of pro bono legal work for his favored causes.

In business, the administration is mixing public monies with private investment. Among other examples, the government obtained a minority stake in Intel and a so-called “golden share” of U.S. Steel, extracted cuts of international sales by Nvidia and AMD in return for relieving export controls, and crafted bespoke policies to guide the business strategies of corporations. The president has personally demanded the removal of the Intel CEO and a Netflix board member. At times, he has seemed to act as a sort of corporate director, laying the foundations for state capitalism. As we have seen from earlier incarnations of industrial policy — from U.S. Steel to Solyndra, and in China today — the politicization of capital always distorts markets and ends in tears.

The administration’s antitrust policy also seems to be taking a statist turn. For almost half a century, antitrust policy has been guided by the “consumer welfare standard,” which takes the politics out of regulatory enforcement by evaluating mergers and acquisitions based on their impact on consumer prices, choice, and innovation. Inexplicably, President Trump’s antitrust regulators failed to restore this modest standard. Instead, they retained the merger guidelines of the progressive antitrust regime of Biden’s progressive FTC chair, Lina Khan. The result is a hybrid “America First” antitrust policy that sounds conservative but, like the approach adopted in the Biden-Khan era, embraces the use of antitrust to direct the economy from Washington.

Donald Trump could have been the restorer of free markets. Instead, his administration is institutionalizing mechanisms that Washington can use to meddle in the operations of private business.

The Wall Street Journal talks with Manhattan Institute president Reihan Salam, the “anti-Mamdani.” A slice:

Another disdainful Salam phrase is “immaculate conception leftism”: Mr. Mamdani “will allow the private sector to do something if it’s immaculate,” which means conforming to a host of politically correct constraints. Instead, the government should get out of the way: New York “has a lot of people who want to do the perverse, insane thing of building private businesses here, of building housing here, if only you let them do it. A zero-sum narrative can win you an election, but it can’t win you the future.”

The Manhattan Institute was founded in 1978, making it a year older than its president. “It is the reason why I came to my views,” he says. “I watched the city’s transformation under Giuliani unfold in real time, and the Manhattan Institute was part of my intellectual formation.” He encountered its flagship quarterly, City Journal, in high school, and it was “rigorous, urbane, and unafraid of heterodox conclusions,” unlike anything else he was reading. “By college, the arguments of Manhattan Institute scholars on crime control, housing regulation, school choice, and much else had become a lasting influence on me.”

New York City, of course, isn’t the only big American city whose government is now in the hands of politicians whose arrogance is in direct proportion to their economic ignorance – ignorance that is enormous. The Washington Post‘s Editorial Board here writes about one of those politicians, namely, Seattle mayor Katie Wilson. A slice:

Nine days after winning Seattle’s November mayoral election, Katie Wilson joined Starbucks baristas on a picket line and pledged to boycott the coffee conglomerate until their union got its way. The socialist will need to wait a while longer for her caffeine fix.

In March, after Wilson took office, the chain said it would close five additional stores in Seattle, including four that had unionized. Starbucks said they were selected because of poor financial performance and bad customer experiences.

Then, last week, Starbucks announced it will establish a new corporate hub in Nashville, investing $100 million and bringing up to 2,000 jobs.

The 43-year-old Wilson, who received a $10,000 allowance from her parents last year, is defiant about the consequences of her antagonism toward successful people who create value for society.

Speaking recently at a Seattle University event, the mayor brushed off claims that taxpayers respond poorly to higher taxes. “I think the claims that millionaires are going to leave our state are, like, super overblown,” Wilson said. “And if — the ones that leave, like, bye.”

C. Jarrett Dieterle makes the case that government efforts to curtail self-checkout machines at supermarkets are a cronyist attempt to please labor unions.

James Pethokoukis explains “why Europe produces Nobel laureates but not Elon Musks.”

Samuel Gregg reveals the statist heart of “abundance liberalism.” Two slices:

Despite these potential positives, I remain skeptical of the prospects for any long-term rapprochement between classical liberals and fiscal conservatives on the one hand, and supply-side progressives on the other. Tactical alliances in the name of realizing particular ambitions should never be off the table. Winning center-left politicians over to the cause of school choice is a good example of what can be achieved. Effecting a deeper and more strategic right-left realignment around an abundance agenda, however, is an entirely different exercise, not least because there is little alignment between the core principles of the abundance left and those of classical liberals and limited government types.

…..

It is exceedingly difficult to see limited government conservatives and classical liberals being willing to look past the difficulties with industrial policy. If anything, they have in recent decades become even more skeptical of industrial policy, along with the claims made by advocates of industrial policy. Smith suggests, for example, that “government-funded R&D that produces freely usable technology” produces great economic benefits, and argues that “the evidence Mariana Mazzucato assembles in The Entrepreneurial State—showing how late twentieth-century innovation often traces to government initiative—should dispel any complacent belief that government is too dumb to innovate.”

Alas, there is no shortage of scholars, such as Deirdre N. McCloskey and Alberto Mingardi in their book The Myth of the Entrepreneurial State, who have directly challenged Mazzucato’s thesis and, in doing so, have highlighted a long-standing critique of industrial policy: the sheer difficulty in establishing direct causality between industrial policy and the emergence of new technologies and industries. That puts into question the entire premise upon which the coherence of industrial policy relies. The apparent unwillingness of abundance liberals to acknowledge this point (including how it invalidates Mazzucato’s core arguments) demonstrates the depth of their attachment to 1) the use of state power in the economy and 2) a non-classical liberal conception of the nature of innovation and how economic change occurs.

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Quotation of the Day…

… is from page 33 of my emeritus colleague Richard E. Wagner’s and the late James D. Gwartney’s excellent 1988 essay “Public Choice and Constitutional Order,” which appears as chapter 2 in Gwartney & Wagner, eds., Public Choice and Constitutional Economics:

In effect, constitutional order is a mutually advantageous treaty among what would otherwise be warring factions – a treaty which promotes the substitution of wealth-creating trade for wealth-reducing plunder.

DBx: Yes. Yet constitutional order requires a constitutional morality and not only ink on parchment.

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