≡ Menu

Here’s a letter to Jacobin.

Editor:

The mindlessness of so much allegedly cutting-edge thinking about international trade is nowhere more evident than in your introduction to an interview with Michael Pettis (“Remaking Globalization for an Era of Trade Wars,” December 7). You write:

Economist Michael Pettis argues that what is in fact distorting the US economy is global inequality, and that action needs to be taken to correct the imbalances that result from it. Mercantilist countries like Germany, Japan, and China, which aim to increase their wealth by increasing their exports, persistently consume much less than they produce and deal with the resulting excess by exporting goods and savings, principally to the United States.

Do people who express such thoughts ever pause to ponder what they express? Apparently not.

If the Joneses down the street stubbornly insist on spending their labor and resources producing goods in excess of what they consume and then supply these goods, along with the family’s savings, to other families in the neighborhood while declaring an intention to continue this practice indefinitely, everyone would realize that the Joneses are foolishly enriching other families at the Jones’s own expense.

And yet if Prof. Pettis replaces “Jones” with, say, “Germany,” he and many other people inexplicably see Germany as deviously enriching itself at other countries’ expense.

How, pray tell, are the people of a country enriched, rather than impoverished, when their government effectively compels them to produce and save in excess for foreigners? And how can the foreigners on the receiving end of this largesse possibly be made poorer by it?

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

{ 0 comments }

Some Links

Jason Willick writes insightfully about the U.S. military’s attack on boats that it alleges were used to smuggle drugs. A slice:

In other words, the middle ground in this controversy is evaporating. Either you oppose the campaign of summary killings of civilians allegedly running drugs in the Caribbean, or you endorse all of it. To endorse the policy but oppose its execution in this one instance is a politically thin reed. (Trump himself initially occupied that middle ground, saying he “wouldn’t have wanted” the second strike, but the White House has since flipped to full support of the operation).

Congressional oversight investigations often take the form of legal inquisitions. The allegations of illegality around the Sept. 2 strikes piqued Congress’s interest. But the military remains far more respected than politicians. Representatives second-guessing the good-faith judgment of men like [Adm. Frank] Bradley as to whether a particular target was legally legitimate seems like a dead end. Nor should the investigations prompt a tightening of the military’s rules of engagement. Efforts to make wars “humane” often fail, and can even extend conflicts. War should be fast and lethal — and rare.

The problem here is not any particular order in the chain of command. It’s that the Trump administration has defined war as something it isn’t. That rotten policy — that attack on common sense — needs to be the subject of any successful congressional response to what happened on Sept. 2.

Here’s GMU Econ alum David Hebert on housing.

Reflecting on the recent food-aid scandal in Minnesota, Saul Zimet correctly notes that “bigger government means bigger fraud.” A slice:

How are these fraudsters allowed to get away with so much for so long? The truth is, unlike spenders in the private sector, bureaucrats administering tax dollars are often not incentivized to care whether the money they send out is used well or not.

As the Nobel Prize-winning economist Milton Friedman famously explained, “Nobody spends somebody else’s money as carefully as he spends his own. Nobody uses somebody else’s resources as carefully as he uses his own. So if you want efficiency and effectiveness, if you want knowledge to be properly utilized, you have to do it through the means of private property.”

The Minnesota fraud cases are a good illustration of Friedman’s insight. The government bureaucrats who kept sending hundreds of millions of dollars to the fraudsters year after year had every indication of what they were enabling, but their incentives were to enable rather than prevent the theft.

Back in May, Neil Haley had Phil Gramm and me as guests on his podcast; we discussed Gramm’s and my book, The Triumph of Economic Freedom.

Derek Thompson reports that, with respect to AI, the Trump administration (thankfully) is pursuing a policy of free trade. (HT Andy Morriss) A slice:

    1. The administration raised tariffs to their highest level since the 1930s. Import duties have been notably high on agricultural products (e.g., coffee and bananas)1 and manufacturing inputs (e.g., steel and some copper).
    2. The industries most directly affected by Trump’s tariffs are doing poorly. Farmers are hurting, and some have been promised a bailout. The manufacturing industry is in a hiring recession, with employment falling steadily over the last six months.
    3. But the administration has carved out huge tariff exemptions for AI. The largest of these exemptions covers $34 billion per month of imports for computers and parts that AI companies need to build data centers to train and run AI programs.
    4. As the economics writer and The Argument contributor Joey Politano reported, computer imports surged in 2025, and the AI companies have saved billions of dollars on additional import taxes thanks to these exemptions. “The current AI boom would simply be impossible if tech companies had to pay the same tariffs that car manufacturers or homebuilders currently face,” Politano wrote.
    5. The AI sector is by far the strongest industrial contributor to the U.S. economy. The growth in AI infrastructure spending contributed more to GDP than the growth of consumer spending earlier this year.

Trump is nominally pursuing a broadly protectionist agenda, but for the one industry the administration seems to really, really want to protect, it is not doing protectionism at all. At the very least, it raises the question of why, if globalism is so effective for AI, it’s apparently so bad for the rest of the economy.

Megan McArdle tweets to bust the zombie myth that over the past several decades the quality of goods and services abundantly available to ordinary Americans has fallen. (HT Scott Lincicome)

Tomatoes, raspberries, automobiles, televisions, cancer drugs, women’s shoes, insulin monitoring, home security monitoring, clothing for tall women (which functionally didn’t exist until about 2008), telephone service (remember when you had to PAY EXTRA to call another area code?), travel (remember MAPS?), remote work, home video … sorry, ran out of characters before I ran out of hedonic improvements.

On the fifth anniversary of his death, my late, great colleague Walter Williams was remembered at AIER by six of his former students.

{ 0 comments }

Darkhizer

It’s as if, for most people, encountering the term “trade deficit” castrates their brains’ ability to reason.

Mr. Ziad Haider
McKinsey & Co.

Mr. Haider:

Interviewed recently by you, former U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer gave you several opportunities to ask pertinent questions – opportunities that Lighthizer is undoubtedly relieved that you missed (“Robert Lighthizer on the future of global trade,” December 4).

Consider Lighthizer’s assertion that “the problem for the United States is that our trade deficit with Europe keeps increasing. It’s been decades since we ran a trade surplus with Europe.” You should have, but didn’t, ask: “Can you explain why you think that, in our world of nearly 200 countries, something is amiss if one country or region has a so-called ‘trade deficit’ with another country or region? Given that Americans can buy from Europeans, and Europeans can buy from (say) Australians and Brazilians, and Australians and Brazilians can buy from Americans, please tell us exactly why Americans’ ‘trade deficit’ with Europeans is even economically relevant and much less a problem. Do you believe, for example, that the Lighthizer household is in economic distress because that household’s trade deficit with dentists keeps increasing?”

You ought to have have pressed Lighthizer to explain why even U.S. trade deficits with the rest of the world are a problem. He routinely asserts that these ‘deficits’ are a problem. But why? You should have asked him this: “Sir, given that U.S. trade deficits represent net inflows of global capital to the United States – and given also that investment funds tend to flow to places that are economically promising, and also given that capital is an important fuel for economic growth – shouldn’t Americans be delighted rather than distressed at all the global investment that has been attracted into the U.S. by the dynamism and relative security of the American market? What makes you think that America’s economy is harmed rather than helped by net inflows of capital?”

I’m certain that if you had put the above questions to Lighthizer, he’d have spewed economic incoherence. It’s a shame that you missed the opportunity to reveal this emperor’s nakedness.

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

{ 0 comments }

Some Links

Clark Packard finds in the updated Beatles documentary “a fresh reminder of the power of cultural globalization.” A slice:

The Fab Four’s story is a groundbreaking example of the enduring benefits of cultural globalization and the tremendous reach of today’s truly global music market.

Watching the restored footage of four working-class young men from Liverpool, England—who cut their musical teeth playing in the port city of Hamburg, Germany—navigating screaming airport crowds and sold-out stadiums across continents, one is struck by just how revolutionary their global reach was, especially given the technological limitations at the time. When 73 million Americans tuned in to watch the Beatles perform on The Ed Sullivan Show in February 1964, they were witnessing something genuinely new: a British band achieving instantaneous cultural dominance in the world’s largest consumer market that had, until then, largely shunned foreign music. The Anthology captures these moments and many similar ones with remarkable intimacy, demonstrating how Beatlemania quickly transcended national borders.

The Beatles both benefited from and helped shape cultural globalization. Thanks to the penetration of American music into British radio markets, the band drew from American rock and roll, blues, and rhythm and blues—genres created largely by black musicians who had fused musical elements from the Americas, Europe, and Africa. John, Paul, George, and Ringo also absorbed French existentialism. After a long stay in 1968 in Rishikesh in Northern India to study at the ashram of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, meanwhile, they began incorporating Indian instrumentation and spiritual practices into their work. They brought Western attention to Eastern spirituality while channeling American musical traditions through a distinctly British sensibility.

Perhaps more importantly, the Beatles established the template that global artists follow to this day. When Taylor Swift crashed Ticketmaster France’s website with overwhelming demand in 2023, she was walking a path laid out six decades earlier. The infrastructure of global stardom—international touring, coordinated album releases, a worldwide fan base united by shared devotion—was pioneered by the lads from Liverpool.

The timing of this restoration feels particularly apt. In an era when protectionist sentiment has grown louder, with politicians around the world questioning the value of international exchange, the Beatles’ story offers a powerful counter-narrative. Cultural globalization has long since escaped the bottle, and music demonstrates why that’s worth celebrating.

Consider what streaming platforms have done to accelerate musical globalization since the original Anthology aired three decades ago. Latin American artists now routinely top global charts. K‑pop acts sell out American stadiums. A teenager in Tokyo and another in Toronto can discover the same emerging artist simultaneously. Music has become more accessible and more diverse than at any point in human history, with services like Spotify (a Swedish company) exposing listeners to styles and sounds they might never have encountered in an earlier era.

Cato Trade tweets:

The direct tax burden that President Trump’s unilateral tariffs have placed on American companies is undoubtedly significant. The tariffs’ regulatory costs are arguably even worse.

In response to Scott Lincicome’s documentation of the enormous and enormously costly bureaucratic complexity of Trump”s trade ‘policy,’ Robert A. George tweets:

IOW, an administration that likes to champion the notion of deregulation actually imposes one of the most complex regulatory schemes in history!

In response to Trump’s and Mamdani’s recent display in the Oval Office of mutual affection, Steven Greenhut understandably fears “America’s ‘horseshoe theory’ nightmare.” A slice:

“What this episode truly reveals is that Donald Trump believes political rhetoric to be as real as professional wrestling, a work of kayfabe,” wrote Jeffrey Blehar in a sensible take at National Review. There’s some truth there, given the president’s knack for theatrics. But take a look at the president’s meeting with Vladimir Zelensky, where he tried to humiliate him. The president continues to blame the Ukrainian president for having the audacity to have gotten his country invaded.

Jack Nicastro is correct about Netflix’s purchase of Warner Bros.: “If antitrust regulators allow the deal to go through, consumers stand to benefit from a less expensive Netflix–HBO Max bundle.”

My Mercatus Center colleague Jack Salmon is no fan of a proposal offered by, among others, Thomas Piketty for an International Panel on Inequality in the mold of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. A slice:

I want to be generous and give the benefit of the doubt to some of the signatories of this proposal who have, for example, endorsed the economic agenda of the Chavez regime in Venezuela. But even setting those credibility concerns aside, the proposal itself suffers from several analytical flaws that make its conclusions difficult to take seriously.

First, inequality measures (Gini coefficients, top income and wealth shares, and similar metrics) are welfare-incomplete and highly sensitive to measurement choices and to missing non-income dimensions of well-being. For the poorest in society, income growth is the dominant driver of living standards. As a result, who is “better off” depends much more on overall development than on modest differences in inequality. Cross-country differences in living standards are best explained by institutions, property rights, the rule of law, levels of corruption, and broader economic freedom.

Second, it is important to recognize that global income inequality trends have been moving in a positive direction for decades. Global income inequality is now at a 50-year low, while global wealth inequality is at an all-time low. Yes, you read that correctly — but you might not hear this inconvenient truth from the advocates of this proposal.

Henry Olsen rightly criticizes the bigotry that is increasingly infecting the Heritage Foundation. A slice:

Yet Heritage’s problems are hardly limited to its handling of Fuentes. The think tank’s recent decision to hire Scott Yenor, a family-policy scholar, to lead the Foundation’s B. Kenneth Simon Center for American Studies poses serious questions about the institution’s beliefs concerning the equality of women in the workplace and perhaps even as citizens.

Yenor’s views are, to say the least, controversial. In a 2021 speech at the National Conservatism Conference, he labeled professional women “medicated, meddlesome, and quarrelsome.” He has echoed the online right’s use of the term AWFLs (for “affluent white female liberals”) in his writing, and had to step down from an appointment as the chair of the University of West Florida’s board of trustees when it became clear that the Republican-controlled state Senate would not confirm him.

Yenor has also criticized prominent figures on the right, such as Megyn Kelly, the former Fox personality who now hosts a popular podcast. She argued that it was wrong for conservative men, when looking for a spouse, to prefer women who don’t work full-time. Yenor responded that that’s precisely what conservative men should do, contending that “the heroic feminine prioritizes motherhood and wifeliness and celebrates the men who make it possible.”

His rhetorical pugnacity, though, is merely a symptom of the challenge that he presents to the beleaguered Heritage Foundation. It’s his ideas, not just his words, that are the problem.

Michael Chapman celebrates the Wall Street Journal‘s selection of George Selgin’s brilliant 2025 book, False Dawn, as one of the ten best new books of the year.

{ 0 comments }

Quotation of the Day…

… is from page 225 of the 2021 35th anniversary edition of Steven Rhoads’s superb 1985 book, The Economist’s View of the World: And the Quest for Well-Being [footnotes deleted; link added]:

James Madison and Alexander Hamilton believed that the true friend of democracy would support representative institutions that could preserve democracy by guarding against its excesses. Lincoln, who saw and condemned “wild and furious passions” and “worse than savage mobs,” agreed completely.

{ 0 comments }

Another Open Letter to Oren Cass

Here’s another open letter to Oren Cass.

Oren Cass
American Compass

Oren:

I hope this email finds you well.

During a recent event at Harvard’s Kennedy School, you repeated your argument that “trade can be a wonderful thing if the trade is balanced, if we are trading with other countries that are committed to both buying and selling and therefore give us the opportunity to buy and sell” (“How the Trump administration is shaping world trade,” December 3). Your implication, of course, is that U.S. trade deficits harm America. And because the U.S. has run annual trade deficits for each of the past 50 years, in your view trade over these many decades for America has on net been a bad thing.

I’ve two questions.

First, why do you continue to describe America’s trade as being unbalanced? U.S. trade deficits (more precisely, current-account deficits) are matched by U.S. capital-account surpluses. These net inflows into the U.S. of capital balance out U.S. trade deficits. Because international commercial accounting is designed to have both accounts – the current account and the capital account – considered together, why do you ignore the capital account? After all, only by ignoring the capital account can you describe U.S. trade as being unbalanced.

Second, your belief that we Americans benefit from international trade only when foreigners buy from us as much as we buy from them means that you believe that we benefit from trade only when foreigners refrain from saving and investing any of their export-sales proceeds in order to spend all of these proceeds on American exports. Do you, then, also believe that domestic trade works well for us Americans only when each of us refrains from saving and investing any of what we earn when trading with each other in order to spend all of what we earn?

Asked differently, if, as you imply, we are harmed when foreigners save and invest in America, do you also believe that we are harmed when Americans save and invest in America? If not, why not? And also if not, can you identify the forces that make investment in America by people living in, say, Canada and South Korea economically harmful to us in ways that investment in America by people living in, say, Kansas and South Carolina are not economically harmful to us?

I don’t see why the nationalities of savers and investors matter economically. You, in contrast, apparently do. What am I missing?

Sincerely,
Don

{ 0 comments }

Some Links

Robert George issues a reminder that shouldn’t – but, alas, nevertheless today does – need issuing: conservatives should “draw a bright line against bigotry.” A slice:

The intrusion of fundamentally anti-conservative ideas into American conservatism is connected to the rise of illiberalism on the left. For over a decade now, “wokeism” has produced authoritarian groupthink — genuine cancel culture — in universities, in journalism, in law and business firms, in medical education and practice, and in the public square as a whole. Decent and honorable people lost educational and professional opportunities, jobs, careers, financial stability and reputations when left-wing outrage mobs came for them. Illiberalism laid the groundwork for the “groyper” backlash now in full swing.

Still, the reality is that although these bigots are an extremely noisy online presence, most conservatives, including plenty of young conservative men, still embrace what Abraham Lincoln called the “ancient faith” — the principles of the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution. By embracing these principles, conservatism can meet today’s political, cultural and economic challenges.

Mario Loyola and Derrick Morgan plead for the Environmental Protection Agency to “break the ethanol habit.” Two slices:

Gasoline prices are down, but the Environmental Protection Agency is about to push them up. President Trump is committed to affordable energy, but he is also under intense pressure from the corn-state ethanol lobby.

Ethanol in the U.S. is a $34 billion industry created by a hidden federal subsidy: the Renewable Fuel Standard, or RFS, a mandate that oil refineries blend a certain total amount of ethanol into the U.S. gasoline supply. The EPA has set the level far higher than the market can absorb. That pushes refineries near bankruptcy and compels them to plead for exemptions, which anger the ethanol lobby.

The EPA proposes to make refiners take the hit for the exempted backlog of recent years in addition to the excessive mandates for 2026-27. That means higher prices, damage to car engines, and fewer good blue-collar jobs.

The RFS is a relic of the 1970s oil shocks. President Jimmy Carter warned of “catastrophe” and lavished subsidies on “gasohol.” Oil scarcity proved fleeting, but corn-state interests had discovered an entitlement, and in 2005 Congress discovered a new rationale: climate change. Congress set aggressive RFS targets, rising to 15 billion gallons of ethanol as U.S. gasoline consumption was projected to reach 150 billion gallons. The idea was to mandate as much as car engines could safely absorb: an ethanol content of about 10%. Thus E10 was born.

…..

The ethanol mandate is a deeply flawed policy. It does more harm than good for the environment, with an area the size of Michigan devoted to corn ethanol instead of something beneficial like natural habitat or food production—raising the prices of fuel and food as a result. If Congress could put the national interest above powerful special interests, it would repeal the RFS. That is unlikely to happen anytime soon, but there is an alternative.

In this new, short paper, Elaine Sternberg nicely explains the virtues of spontaneous orders. Here’s the summary:

 Spontaneous order is crucial for understanding fundamental human institutions (e.g., language and the law, morals, markets and money) and for defending individual liberty. But its operation is often overlooked.

 Spontaneous orders are self-generating, self-adjusting complex adaptive systems. They exist when a pattern that has not been arranged by any coordinator emerges from the interactions of multiple, dispersed individual elements.

 Characterised by Adam Smith as the ‘invisible hand’ and by Ferguson and Hayek as ‘the result of human action, but not of human design’, spontaneous order in human institutions is perhaps more clearly understood as the ‘unintended coordination of intentional action’.

 Spontaneous orders can integrate knowledge that is dispersed, dynamic, tacit and privileged. They can thus handle great complexity and arguably do so better than deliberately constructed orders.

 Spontaneous orders respect individual liberty: they are essentially non-coercive, prove that order does not require law, and only function properly if their component elements can freely react to changing circumstances.

 The power and pervasiveness of spontaneous orders show that government action, far from being essential, is seldom necessary and is often positively counterproductive. Spontaneous order justifies challenging regulation proposed for correcting market failure, promoting efficiency, or dealing with complex problems, including climate change, public health and welfare, and economic growth.

 Empirical studies have confirmed that spontaneous order has been better than coercive regulation at generating economic growth, managing natural resources and providing key public services, and better than imposed rules at detecting fraud and disease.

[DBx: Where Prof. Sternberg writes that “order does not require law,” she really means that order does not require legislation.]

Mike Munger beautifully sings the transaction-costs-reducing achievements of Uber and AirBnB. A slice:

The bright-line distinction between producer and consumer, a relic of the Industrial Revolution, dissolves in platform space. This has consequences for policy, taxation, labor regulation, and even our intuitions about property. When excess capacity is commodified, ownership becomes less a categorical state and more a bundle of transferable rights that can be partitioned and sold temporarily.

In this sense, the “sharing economy” is poorly named. Nothing is being shared in the gift-exchange sense. What is being shared is temporary access. What is being commodified is excess capacity. Fifty years from now, observers will look back on our era with incredulity. Why did people buy all their own tools? Why did cities devote up to 30 percent of their usable road area to storing empty cars? (In Manhattan, it’s more than 40 percent!) Why did we allow trillions of dollars of capital to sit idle for 95+ percent of its lifespan?

The answer we will give — “Well, transaction costs were too high!”— will seem quaint.

Platforms are revealing that much of what we think of as “ownership” is really just expensive access insurance. Once platforms reliably provide that insurance, the original rationale for owning evaporates.

Arnold Kling instructively comments – here and here – on Alan Macfarlane’s great 1978 book, The Origins of English Individualism.

My intrepid Mercatus Center colleague, Veronique de Rugy, continues to warn of the consequences of the U.S. government’s fiscal irresponsibility.

Scott Winship continues to explain that the U.S. economy “is not stagnant.” Two slices:

However, these perceptions of long-run decline are at odds with the facts. Certainly, Americans’ consternation about higher grocery bills and gas prices is valid, as are mounting concerns about housing costs, but it doesn’t paint a full picture of how financial circumstances have changed in just a couple of generations. Earnings trends over the past 50 years show that not only are middle-class earnings up significantly — by $23,000 among men working year-round and $34,000 among women — earnings growth among young men has been stronger during the past 35 years than in the previous 15. These findings belie many popular accounts of what ails the economy today.

…..

Social media is rife with unsourced charts depicting stagnant wages and internet memes lamenting the insecurity of “late-stage capitalism.” These posts are as likely to be shared by Tucker Carlson acolytes as by followers of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. But the best evidence on earnings trends presents two insurmountable problems for populists who blame supposedly stagnant living standards on economic developments and policy choices over recent decades.

First, nothing about the overall 50-year earnings trends for men or women indicates people had it better in the early 1970s. Earnings are essentially at all-time highs for both. And second, while the worst earnings trend over the past 50 years was for young men, the period that makes this long-term trend look unusually bad ended before the “China Shock” occurred, before immigration’s rapid acceleration in the 1990s, before the Great Financial Crisis, and before income concentration in the hands of “the top one percent” approached its peak.

The most powerful factions on the left and right today — both sides of the populist coin — start with the belief that we are in stagnation or decline, blame the usual targets, pronounce their favored policies, and then search for statistics to make their case. But for anyone who cares about workers rather than expanding their audience, that approach is counterproductive. The way to stronger earnings growth is to start by assembling the best statistics on the merits, assess their implications, determine the factors influencing them, and then craft policies consistent with those explanations. The typical worker is tens of thousands of dollars better off than in the past. We can and should do better, but it will do us no good to act as if we have made no progress.

David Henderson is thankful for freedom and the economic growth that it alone makes possible. A slice:

Maybe you’re skeptical of the idea that the CPI overstates inflation. Fine. Then do what economists Michael Cox and journalist Richard Alm did in their 1999 book, Myths of Rich & Poor: look at actual households’ consumption of goods and services. Cox and Alm showed that between 1970 and the mid-1990s, the average size of a new home increased from 1,500 square feet to 2,150 square feet, an increase of over 43 percent. They also looked at what was in and around the home. In 1970, only 34 percent of American homes had central heat and air conditioning; by the mid-1990s that had more than doubled to 81 percent. In 1970, 62.1 percent of all homes had clothes washers; by the mid-1990s, 83.2 percent had them. In 1970, only 29.3 percent of households had two or more vehicles; by the mid-1990s, that was up to 61.9 percent. That last statistic is even more impressive when you consider that over the same quarter century, the number of people per household fell from 3.14 to 2.64.

Cox and Alm even showed that by 1994 poor families did better on virtually every household item, from washing machines to color TVs to clothes dryers, than they had done in 1984. More impressively, what poor families had in their homes in 1994 was comparable to what the average family had in 1971.

Scott Lincicome tweets this telling diagram:

{ 0 comments }

Quotation of the Day…

… is from page 117 of the late Anthony de Jasay‘s brilliant 1997 volume, Against Politics [original emphasis]:

The hard part in political theory is to excogitate, not what we ought to want, but how to get it. It is easy enough to call for institutions “designed to” do this, that and the other. The puzzle and the pain begin when the institutions that will do these things have actually to be “designed,” and (even before the design could start) specified in hard engineering language that has a “falsifiable” information content.

{ 0 comments }

Here’s a letter of mine that’s just been published in the Washington Post.

The Trump administration announced that the prices it will charge foreigners to enter U.S. national parks will be higher than the prices charged to Americans, as was reported in the Nov. 28 news article “‘America-first’ upcharges to be levied on foreign visitors at national parks.” This plan is a continuation of the administration’s incoherent trade policy.

Foreigners who visit U.S. national parks are purchasing an American export: American tourism services. If foreign governments wanted to protect their own tourist industries from American competition, among the tools at their disposal would be tariffs on their citizens’ purchases of tickets to U.S. parks. This protectionist practice, which would indeed reduce foreign demand for an important American export, is one that President Donald Trump would probably denounce with cries of “ripping us off.”

And yet the Trump administration’s higher park fees for foreigners are economically very similar to foreign tariffs on an American export. With these higher park fees, Trump saves foreign governments from the bother of imposing tariffs to protect their tourist industries; he himself is protecting other countries’ tourist industries from American competition.

Donald J. Boudreaux, Fairfax

As I noted last week in this related post, there might nevertheless be a sound case for charging foreigners higher fees than are charged to Americans for admission to U.S. National Parks. That case would rest on the ability of price discrimination to yield more revenue than would be yielded by non-discriminatory pricing. In effect, the higher fees charged to foreigners would be revenue tariff on exports. Still, even revenue tariffs work protective effects, even if these effects aren’t their motivation. And the parties protected here are foreign suppliers of leisure and hospitality.

{ 0 comments }