When Americans talk about inequality, they usually mean outcomes — who has more and who has less. But a deeper divide runs beneath those outcomes: the growing gap between states that enable economic mobility and those that quietly restrict it.
The Economic Freedom of North America report, from market-oriented think tank Fraser Institute, captures this divide. It measures how much freedom people have to make economic choices — where to work, what to invest in and how to build a life. It evaluates states across three areas: government spending, taxation and labor market regulation.
The results are striking. States like New Hampshire, Tennessee, South Dakota and Texas consistently rank near the top, thanks to relatively light fiscal burdens and flexible labor markets. States like New York, California, Hawaii and New Mexico rank near the bottom. Policy ideas like Mamdani’s proposed rent freezes and raising corporate taxes, along with higher minimum wages, threaten to keep New York perennially stuck at the bottom.
These rankings aren’t just abstract scores. They correlate strongly with real-world outcomes. States with higher levels of economic freedom tend to see faster income growth, stronger job creation and larger inflows of new residents.
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No state is perfect. But the pattern is clear. States that allow people to work, invest and build with fewer barriers tend to generate more opportunity — not just for some, but for everyone.
John Phelan warns the State of Minnesota not to impose a wealth tax.
[Noam] Scheiber’s “Mutiny: The Rise and Revolt of the College-Educated Working Class” is an overexcited presentation of a tragicomic phenomenon: a new, self-imagined proletariat’s revolution. The revolt is not against conditions akin to those in the “dark Satanic Mills” of early 19th-century industrialism.
“Mutiny” usually denotes a rebellion of soldiers or sailors against a military authority. Against what comparable hierarchy are Scheiber’s little Lenins waging insurrections? Against Apple and Starbucks stores, and Hollywood studios. These boys and girls are hardly horny-handed sons and daughters of toil.
Although some were, Scheiber writes, “straining their tendons as they churned out … Frappuccinos.” Really. Page 56.
An unhappy employee of an Apple store consulted with an organizer for the International Association of Machinists union who had been, Scheiber says, “trying to unionize a group of yoga instructors.” Think about that: What banner would yoga instructors brandish at the barricades? Meet our demands (what are yoga instructors’ demands?) or we will strike, inflicting pain. (On whom? Of what sort?)
[DBx: I quickly note that the students taught and trained by those of us at GMU Econ are cured of all such ignorance and of the arrogance that such ignorance breeds.]
Stephanie Slade is right: “Right-wing influencers don’t understand what makes America great.” A slice:
The Dissident Right is furious after Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch told Reason and several other outlets that America is a “creedal nation.”
“The Declaration of Independence had three great ideas in it,” Gorsuch said in a recent interview with Nick Gillespie. “That all of us are equal; that each of us has inalienable rights given to us by God, not government; and that we have the right to rule ourselves. Our nation is not founded on a religion. It’s not based on a common culture, even, or heritage. It’s based on those ideas. We’re a creedal nation.”
Anyone tempted to reject modernity in order to live the ‘simpler’ life on the pre-20th-century American frontier should listen to this engaging podcast. (HT Katherine Mangu-Ward)
Ocasio-Cortez argued that Airbnb’s business couldn’t exist without destabilizing housing markets and rapaciously evicting millions: “Now young people are planning for a future where they will never be able to afford to own a home while others have 20 and live off renting it out to them at extortionate rates with zero protections.” A few make billions while millions of Americans bear the cost, she insisted.
Airbnb has achieved impressive scale, but it’s nothing compared to the government. Fewer than 2 percent of American homes are listed on the platform. While there is some evidence it affects home prices in extremely high-tourism areas, it can’t come close to explaining the national rise in home prices.
The housing crisis visible around the country is a result of government simultaneously constricting supply while stoking demand.
For decades, federal tax law has subsidized demand with policies like the mortgage interest deduction and government-backed mortgage securities. Easy monetary policy from the Federal Reserve also contributed to home-price inflation.
Meanwhile, zoning laws and excessive regulations constrain supply much more than renting out a room on Airbnb ever could. Tariffs on building supplies and restrictive immigration policies drive up construction costs. Big cities like New York impose rent controls that discourage new construction or rehabilitation of existing units.
My former GMU Econ colleague Tom Hazlett remembers Ted Turner. Three slices:
Ted Turner, who just graduated from this earthly academy at age 87, was a bon vivant, Playgirl‘s man of the year, and a public embarrassment. He made billion-dollar deals when, you know, a billion was a really big number. He sailed the seas as a champion of the yachting crowd, winning the 1977 America’s Cup aboard the Courageous. He married a beautiful actress, made her do the politically incorrect Tomahawk chops to cheer his Atlanta Braves, and cycled through the ideological spectrum from Randian to Mouth of the South to globalist U.N. benefactor to environmentalist rescuing bison. Jane Fonda, his third wife, deemed him a “romantic swashbuckling pirate” and “my favorite ex-husband.”
The cartoon character he cultivated was for fun and to amortize the lithium load. His real role was Entrepreneur of His Age. Turner held the lead spear when the Late 20th Century Barbarians stormed the gates of the Old Order in American media. Meeting the moment at the perfect instant—when a “deregulation wave” was opening doors long shut—Turner flipped the script on “public interest” regulation concocted during the Progressive Era. Intellectuals largely bemoaned the passing of the administrative state, and the Cronkite audience it favored, devoid of controversy and offered as the “news from nowhere” (as a CBS executive bragged). But the closed-loop spoon feeding was inimical to freedom, open inquiry, and honest debate.
Even before he was finished, the creative destruction triggered by Ted Turner’s wild gambits had left the tyranny of licensed, bureaucratic TV in rubble. What came next may not always look pretty. But freedom of expression has a renewed life, as soon even the chatbots will discover.
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Before then, American broadcasting had been trapped in a pre-constitutional political model. Instead of open competition and robust debate, licensed media reigned. Radio and television were not only limited by regulations, such as the equal time rule and the fairness doctrine, but constrained to artificial scarcity by bureaucratic fiat and then subjected to license renewals under the watchful eyes of powerful congressmen and commissioners. Turner came along when a shard of light was about to shine; he spied the illumination and ran to it at a time when the conventional wisdom missed it.
Ted Turner arbitraged the past into the future. Buy low (UHF licenses regulated into oblivion) and sell high (satellite beams forming the new mass media). The regulated wasteland blossomed into a competitive cornucopia.
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Turner had a belief about the future and took a string of incredible gambles. He saw what others did not. And with it, he poked a hole in the 1952 TV Allocation Table and put American media on a new, less regulated path that seamlessly melded into the Internet of today: unregulated, unlicensed, and unleashed. It’s not nirvana. But it gives the First Amendment a fighting chance, and it beats the News from Nowhere. Nice work, Ted. You one crazy bastard.


Monstrously appalling things done by some peoples to others darken the history of every region on the planet, but descendants of peoples guilty of the worst or most extensive villainies of the past are by no means always the most prosperous peoples today. Conversely, few peoples have been persecuted for so many centuries, in so many parts of the world as the Jews, who today prosper and achieve. None of this suggests that persecution has no economic effects, but only that how much is an empirical question, not a foregone conclusion.

The Lerner Equivalence Theorem – that an import tariff is equivalent to an export tax – carries a powerful message: a country that tries to protect import competing industries from foreign competition may be able to help those industries expand, but it will also force other industries to contract. High trade barriers will harm export-oriented industries, erase some of the gains from trade, and reduce national income.
The chief evil is unlimited government, and nobody is qualified to wield unlimited power.
