Their presumption is that a government can expertly run the economy if only staffed with expert businesspeople. In a recent episode of his podcast, tech investor and venture capitalist Joe Lonsdale talked with former private equity investor Ben Black, the new CEO of the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation (DFC), about the $205 billion budget he oversees “to invest in U.S. strategic interests, build new markets, and deliver real returns for taxpayers.”
While I appreciate the optimism, it reflects a fundamental misunderstanding of what makes private markets work. The government is not some company unluckily plagued by incompetent executives. It is a different institution entirely from those beholden to the market. In the private sector, competitively determined prices, profits, and losses reveal what works and what doesn’t. These signals are ruthless and, thankfully, clear. Good investments get rewarded. Bad ones get punished. The feedback is quick and the accountability personal.
A government operates on different—and worse—incentives, constraints, and feedback mechanisms. Injecting it with private-sector knowledge and ambition does little to change the dysfunctional features of political decision making. It has no prices set by supply and demand to guide its political decisions. It has no profit signals for strategic investments and no loss mechanism to punish faulty judgment. When a government agency backs the wrong project, nobody can be expected to lose a job or salary. When a sovereign wealth fund makes a bad bet, the bill is covered by taxpayers who had no say in the matter.
The provisions that became Section 122 were scrutinized as the bill moved through Congress. Witnesses at hearings before the House Ways and Means and Senate Finance Committees questioned the effectiveness of using tariffs to address fundamental BoP problems in light of the US adopting a floating exchange rate. Rep. Henry Reuss (D‑WI), who would later chair the House Banking Committee, approved of the bill yet described Section 122 as “superfluous and unwise” given the dollar’s floating rate. House Ways and Means Committee Chair Wilbur Mills (D‑AR) and Nixon’s Treasury Secretary George Schultz agreed that exchange rate adjustments, rather than tariffs, would be a more effective solution for a longer-term BoP problem.
The Trade Act of 1974 was enacted on January 3, 1975, meaning that Section 122 lay in disuse for more than 50 years until President Trump used it to impose the current 10 percent tariffs. In most of the intervening years, the US had run persistent trade deficits, yet presidents had not felt compelled to invoke Section 122. This issue came to a head in 1984, when the Senate Finance Committee asked the Reagan White House to determine the applicability of the statute for addressing the nation’s trade deficit. As [Phil] Magness explains, Martin Feldstein, the chair of Reagan’s Council of Economic Advisers, rejected this contention, arguing that because net private investment offset the US current account deficit, the country did not need to draw down its official reserves and thus the US was not experiencing a BoP deficit.
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Even though President Trump has tried to justify the tariffs as necessary “to deal with large and persistent balance of payments deficits” pursuant to Section 122(a)(1), the economics of the BoP today explain why the alternative justifications under the statute also do not hold up. Section 122(a)(2) permits tariffs “to prevent an imminent and significant depreciation of the dollar.” Measured against a basket of currencies, the US dollar indeed depreciated by 8 percent between January 21, 2025, and February 19, 2026 (i.e., the day before the Supreme Court’s IEEPA ruling), but this rate of change is not uncommon over the course of a year in the floating-rate era. (And in fact, the dollar has slightly appreciated since the ruling.)
More importantly, the depreciation since January 2025 is the result of other political and economic factors, not the US being unable to finance its current account deficit (which it does year after year through financial account surplus). Because these accounts practically offset each other, it is unnecessary to impose tariffs “to cooperate with other countries in correcting an international balance-of-payments disequilibrium” under Section 122(a)(3), notwithstanding concerns about excess surpluses and deficits across different countries’ current accounts.
I’ve been reading with horror about the Food and Drug Administration’s recent rejection of Replimune RP1 injection, one of the most promising drugs to fight metastatic melanoma in recent years. As a result of this decision, thousands of desperate patients have lost a chance at being among the one-third who have failed other courses of treatment and have already benefited from the drug in trials.
Numerous journalists, led by the Journal’s Allysia Finley, quote leading oncologists decrying the absurd and dysfunctional process that led to the FDA’s decision. Under the leadership of Marty Makary, who resigned this week under pressure from President Trump, the FDA twice moved the goalposts for approving Replimune RP1. One new requirement asked for an inhumane placebo control group, to which no physician could agree.
Mr. Trump reportedly lost patience with Dr. Makary and his deputy Vinay Prasad, who had been fired once already, for stalling on the approval of fruit-flavored vapes—no joke. But perhaps the FDA can revisit Replimune RP1. Replimune Group stock, which plunged after the rejection, rose with the news of Dr. Makary’s departure.
Time is of the essence. Replimune Group, a small biotech firm in Woburn, Mass., has laid off 60% of its workforce and is concentrating its limited resources on a treatment for an ocular uveal melanoma, a rare but also deadly form of the cancer.
GMU Econ alum Jeremy Horpedahl asked Google Gemini Pro to imagine a world without data centers.


Too often, people imagine that global value chains arise naturally, by themselves. In fact, such highly sophisticated structures do not come together by chance. Someone has to decide which of the many parts of the production process are best sources from where and from whom. Are there economies of scale if manufacturing is done by a single firm, for example, or is it better divided between specialist firms and countries – technical components being made in skilled-labour countries, say, and assembly done in cheap-labour countries? Whatever the answers, all the various elements in the production chain must be designed, financed, made, assembled, finished, packaged, transported, marketed and sold into a diverse array of countries with diverse rules and diverse consumers. That all takes conscious planning and management by practitioners who have an international reach and a deep, direct and up-to-date understanding of the markets in which they operate. TNCs [transnational corporations] have all these qualifications.

An equality of outcome, the brain surgeon paid at the finish line, or the tenth mile, the same as the street sweeper, certainly comports with an equality of souls…. But unfortunately in large groups the ignoring of a person’s marginal work product, and making payments according to the noble belief in the equality of human worth – in which all us monotheists and modern liberals do, I affirm yet again, fervently believe – does not work. Through gross misallocation in the short run, and the collapse of spurs to innovation in the long, such an enforced equality of outcome leads in a large group to a dismal equality of poverty, and then to tyranny. Such attempts fail every time at large scale, even when they are kindly and sincere and gentle.
When the state actively enters the commercial field, there is everywhere an accompanying increase of economic nationalism, no matter whether it is on the basis of socialism as in Soviet Russia or on the basis of capitalism as in Western and Central Europe.
[I]t can’t be stressed too much that capitalism is as much a cultural as an economic system. A new way of establishing political order emerged. People reversed how they looked at the past and the future. They reconceived human nature. At a very personal level, men and women began making plans for themselves that would once have appeared ludicrous in their ambitious reach.
