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Quotation of the Day…

… is from page 120 of George Stigler‘s 1965 paper “The Economist and the State,” as this paper is reprinted as Chapter 11 of the 1982 collection of some of Stigler’s writings titled The Economist as Preacher and Other Essays:

Smith’s first basis for his economic policies was his belief in the efficiency of the system of natural liberty. There can be little doubt that this tough-minded Scotsman, this close friend of that cool and clear thinker, David Hume, had a deep attachment to the natural law of the late enlightenment. But Smith did not propose natural liberty as a lay religion of political life. Instead he argued, as a matter of demonstrable economic analysis, that the individual in seeking his own betterment will put his resources where they yield the most to him, and that as a rule the resources then yield the most to society.

DBx: Yes. Stigler goes on to rightly criticize Smith for failing – in those rare instances when Smith allows some role for government intervention – to analyze the operation of the state with the same rigor that Smith used to analyze the operation of the market. This failure to analyze the state with rigor continues today among economists (and non-economists) – a failure made all the worse by the fact that today’s most of today’s economists are less rigorous than was Smith in analyzing the market.

Note also that Stigler’s accurate description of Smith’s reason for supporting the market order belies any claim that Smith’s support for free markets was based on “faith.” One of the favorite ploys of opponents of the free market is to assert that the case for the free market rests on “blind faith.” Obviously, the people who so assert are either unfamiliar with, or ignore, works such as (to name only six) F.A. Hayek’s “The Use of Knowledge in Society,” Armen Alchian’s and William R. Allen’s Universal Economics, Don Lavoie’s National Economic Planning: What is Left?,” Israel Kirzner’s Competition and Entrepreneurship, Douglas Irwin’s Free Trade Under Fire, and Deirdre McCloskey’s Bourgeois trilogy.

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Again, He Can’t Possibly Know What He Presumes to Know

Here’s a note to first-time correspondent:

Mr. H__:

Disagreeing with my criticisms of Oren Cass, you write

You commit the same wrong you accuse Dr. Cass of. Maybe Dr. Cass can’t be absolutely sure his tariffs will help the economy, but you market fundamentalists can’t be sure they won’t either. You can’t pull the ‘you can’t know’ card on Dr. Cass without someone else pulling it on you. So I am now pulling it on you. Even at its best the free trade case has the same problem.

With respect, you’re mistaken. While it’s possible that protectionism will outperform free trade at improving the economy, the appropriate question is this: Is this outcome plausible? The answer is no.

We “market fundamentalists,” as you derisively call us, have in support of our policy what Mr. Cass and other protectionists don’t have in support of theirs – namely, a theory of how the values of alternative uses of resources are generated, transmitted, and acted upon in ways that tend over time to displace uses of resources that produce less value with uses that produce more value. What’s more, our theory has stood the test of time and of empirical investigation.

Contrary to the claims of Mr. Cass and other protectionists, this theory isn’t based on “faith” in free markets but on sound, empirically supported reasoning about the formation and role of prices and other market signals. This reasoning reveals how these signals align with the interests of individuals to incite market participants to use resources in ways that take account of the relative scarcities of different resources as these relate to market-participants’ many different preferences – including, by the way, their preferences for different kinds of employment.

At no time does the market work perfectly (whatever that might mean). Errors are always being committed. But when individuals are free to spend their money as they wish, and entrepreneurs are free to compete for buyers’ dollars, there are sharp incentives to uncover these errors and to take corrective action.

Again, Mr. Cass has no such theory. He tells us literally nothing about how the decision-makers who he wishes to empower to protect these industries and to subsidize those firms will get and respond to the detailed, nuanced knowledge that they must have if their interventions are to improve the general welfare of people in the country. He simply assumes that the interventions he proposes will work as he imagines and without any negative unintended consequences. We are to take it on blind faith that Mr. Cass, somehow, has in his brain enough of the vast bits of knowledge dispersed throughout the global economy to equip him and his advisees to beneficially override the resource-allocation patterns that emerge in free markets. That’s not a faith to which I can subscribe.

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

Peter Earle warns of the dangers of the U.S. government taxing unrealized capital gains as income.

The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) would first need to impose an annual (or periodic) valuation requirement on a wide range of assets. For some assets, like securities and derivatives, that calculation would be burdensome but at least possible. On others, in particular where valuations are subjective or liquidity is low, there would be considerable debate over the value upon which the tax assessment should be based. This would be the case with assets ranging from real estate to collectables to intellectual property. The IRS would need to be granted sweeping appraisal powers or the authority to hire/appoint nominally-independent consultants to handle the assessments associated with the massive broadening of assets subject to the new tax.

In light of the vast capital stock in the corporate and high-net-worth world, reporting obligations would increase several-fold. Ironically, the Constitutional guarantee of property rights has facilitated the massive accumulation of assets to which the Beltway bandits now seek to help themselves. Targeted taxpayers and their firms would be required to report the details of all of their assets annually, including their estimated market values, at their own expense. The compliance costs and reporting obligations would expand tremendously as compared with the current tax liability on sales transactions alone. Drawn into this process would be third-party entities such as financial institutions, insurance appraisers, art galleries, franchisers, marketing firms, auction houses, copyright and trademark registries, pawn shops, and countless other intermediaries involved in asset purchases, sales, and transfers. Even your local comic book store or baseball card shop will be enlisted to provide valuations and make detailed, periodic reports on customer activity to tax authorities. Most of us, at this point, will have been conscripted by the IRS.

Also warning of the U.S. government taxing unrealized capital gains is the Editorial Board of the Wall Street Journal – and Mark Cuban. Two slices:

Mark Cuban must know Kamala Harris better than she knows herself. The wealthy businessman and TV celebrity swears the Vice President would never tax unrealized capital gains. Yet Ms. Harris has endorsed a tax on wealth and shows no sign of having changed her mind.

The reality check surrounds the “billionaire minimum tax,” which would stretch the definition of income to include gains on unsold assets. Households worth more than $100 million would owe a minimum 25% on their “total” annual income, including any increase in their overall wealth. The new tax would also nullify the so-called step up in basis for many of these households—a policy that eliminates the taxable gain of an asset when it’s passed to heirs.

…..

“Some people think that there’s going to be an unrealized gains tax on capital gains. There is not, there is not,” he told the crowd. He said he “went ballistic” when he heard rumors of the billionaire minimum tax, calling it an “economy killer.” But he urged the crowd to relax because “Kamala knows that” and “you haven’t heard her talk about it.” He repeated his belief on Fox News Radio: “That is not going to happen.”

Yet the Harris campaign said in a statement Wednesday that she still supports the tax, according to Bloomberg News. She also declined to say whether she’d distinguish her billionaire minimum tax in any way from the Biden version. That means this wealth tax is on the ballot on Nov. 5.

Mr. Cuban is wrong about Ms. Harris’s plans, but it’s hard to blame him for his disbelief. Her proposal would shred a historic limit on taxation and open the door to tax more Americans’ assets. Taxpayers would be forced each year to hire accountants to work out the market value of their assets, and how much they’ve risen during the year.

George Will warns of the U.S. government – that is, genuine ignorance – trying to regulate artificial intelligence. Two slices:

At its best, normal, as opposed to artificial, intelligence is characterized by “epistemic humility”: modesty about what can be known, especially about a free society’s future. Such humility is scarce in the political class, which prospers by promising to shape, by foreseeing, the future. Progressives, especially, envision government peering over the horizon to plan a complex society shorn of unintended consequences of unexpected developments.

…..

Of course, AI requires regulations to protect us: Everything new expands government’s remit to enforce safety and equity, and save democracy, which government thinks is as fragile as Limoges porcelain. Apocalypse now — or by Tuesday at the latest. So, government must more robustly regulate.

Grumpy Economist, dissents, asking: From Johannes Gutenberg’s 15th-century invention of movable type to X in the 21st, have the chattering classes ever chattered accurately about a new technology’s consequences? Thomas Robert Malthus was wrong about late-18th-century technologies leading to mass starvation; Karl Marx was mistaken about industrialization producing the immiseration of the proletariat.

Today, ban fracking because, well, you never know. Despite no evidence of harm, ban genetically modified foods out of, as is said, an abundance of caution. As Cochrane says, worrywarts often want preemptive regulations to preempt the wrong things: harm from genetically modified corn rather than a pandemic probably due to a human-engineered virus.

Harris illustrates the progressive politician’s itch to have (in Cochrane’s mordant words) “farsighted, dispassionate, and perfectly informed ‘regulators’” impose “safety” measures “before we even know what AI can do, and before dangers reveal themselves.”

Cochrane wonders: Would preemptive “safety” regulators, warily contemplating airplanes in 1910, have been able to anticipate the long experience-based improvement that led to today’s airliners? They might have strangled air travel. Suppose professional worriers, anxious about James Watt’s steam engine or Karl Benz’s automobile (which, in the 1880s, was, in the development of vehicles, about where we are with AI’s development), prompted governments to pass “effect on society and democracy” rules about those infant technologies. Would the technologies have been allowed to mature?

The Wall Street Journal‘s Editorial Board decries Joe Biden’s lawless disregard of court rulings. Two slices:

“That didn’t stop me,” President Biden declared after the Supreme Court blocked his $430 billion student loan write-off in 2023. It sure didn’t. After striking out in court with three debt forgiveness schemes, the Administration on Friday unveiled another. Take that, judges.

…..

Such lawlessness is one reason so many Americans discount the left’s assertions that Donald Trump endangers democracy. Mr. Biden acts like he’s king, and Democrats and media voices cheering him on have no standing to object if Mr. Trump follows the Biden precedent.

Jack Butler writes that “our long ‘national emergency’ emergency could soon be over.”

Who’d a-thunk it?! A new report shows (as Eric Boehm reports) “that politically connected companies were better able to navigate the exclusion process and avoid paying tariffs during the Trump administration.”

The interest-payment burden of U.S. government debt is exploding.

The great law and economics, and public-choice, scholar Charlie Goetz has died at the age of 85. [DBx: Charlie – who studied at UVA under Jim Buchanan, Ronald Coase, Warren Nutter, Gordon Tullock, and Leland Yeager – produced much excellent scholarship, including his brilliant 1980 Yale Law Journal paper with Bob Scott titled “Enforcing Promises: An Examination of the Basis of Contract.”]

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Quotation of the Day…

… is from page 52 of my GMU Econ colleague Mark Koyama’s, and his co-author Jared Rubin’s, excellent 2022 book, How the World Became Rich:

Noting which institutions are necessary [for economic growth] is one thing. Figuring out how we get there is another.

DBx: Yes.

Because institutions are downstream from the prevailing ideas of right and wrong, possible and impossible, prudent and imprudent, institutions are not easily changed by force of will – or by force of arms.

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The familiar question is appropriate: If you’re so smart, why aren’t you richer than you are?

Editor, AmericanCompass.org

Editor:

Writing about troubles at (subsidized and protected) Boeing and Intel, Oren Cass avers (“The Case of the Disappearing Industrial Crown Jewels…Cracked.” Oct. 25):

One can argue that tariffs and subsidies won’t work in the sense that they won’t succeed in altering investment incentives. I disagree, but it’s an interesting and important argument. What you can’t say is that tariffs and subsidies don’t address our loss of manufacturing expertise—the loss occurred because other countries were using these tools and we were not, it will be reversed if and only if we counter those distortions and restore the incentives to invest in making things here.

This paragraph begins with a straw man and ends with hubris mixed with blindness to what economics reveals.

First to expose the straw man: No serious opponent of tariffs or subsidies has ever argued that these “won’t succeed in altering investment incentives.” Indeed, crucial to the case against tariffs and subsidies is the very fact that they succeed in altering investment incentives. Specifically, tariffs and subsidies incite the creation of production capacity that ought not exist by drawing resources away from uses that are more productive than are the lines into which they are drawn.

This reality brings us to the second point: Whatever additional manufacturing expertise is created at the likes of Boeing and Intel by more heavily subsidizing and protecting these firms reduces the expertise available at U.S. firms that are less heavily subsidized and protected. Mr. Cass writes as if government can engender more expertise at Boeing and Intel for free. But of course it can’t; any such additional expertise created at these companies must come from human minds and other resources drawn away from other companies.

Unable to deny this point – which, after all, is just arithmetic – Mr. Cass can try to save his argument only by insisting that the value to the country of the additional expertise created by government intervention at Boeing, Intel, and other U.S.-based manufacturers will be greater than the value of whatever expertise is lost as a result at other U.S. companies. But how can he know this? He can’t. If Oren Cass’s knowledge of the details of the unfathomably complex modern economy is such as to enable him to be sufficiently confident that forcibly transferring some amount of resources away from firms A, B, and C and toward firms, X, Y, and Z will yield net economic gains, he’s in the wrong business. He should immediately quit American Compass, become a player in the financial market that he so dislikes, and use his singular knowledge to improve the allocation of resources in America. In the process he would make himself one of the richest people in the world and he’d achieve the economic outcomes that he desires without having to bother with persuading politicians to heed his counsel.

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

My intrepid Mercatus Center colleague, Veronique de Rugy, argues persuasively that neither Donald Trump nor Kamala Harris is really interested in draining the swamp.

Draining the swap is all fine. As someone who’d like to see all government-granted favors to private businesses terminated either constitutionally or legislatively, I’m for it. How many Boeing-type scandals do we need before legislators are embarrassed to continue passing out subsidies (including through the Export-Import Bank, an agency many of us call “Boeing’s Bank”)? How many more reports like those showing that most Inflation Reduction Act subsidies went to projects that were already in the works?

These debacles, and others like Solyndra, are cautionary tales about how politicians waste your money to help their friends and political allies—that is, their cronies. Sadly, most Americans don’t realize government handouts don’t do what politicians tell you they do.

And so, during Trump’s first term, we saw him proudly announcing steel tariffs—essentially a tax paid by U.S. consumers—on national television, surrounded by all his steel CEO friends. He distributed subsidies and bailouts to various companies, as well as payouts to farmers who were hurt by his tariffs. Then, with several enormous pieces of legislation like the CHIPS and Science Act and the infrastructure bill, the Biden-Harris administration took corporate welfare to a level unseen before.

Bjorn Lomborg, noting that “as the high costs of green policies hit, it’s becoming a lose-lose issue for politicians of the left,” observes that Harris isn’t talking about climate change. Two slices:

You might think Ms. Harris could use the partisan divide on climate policy to her advantage. If she hammered Mr. Trump’s frequent recitations of “drill baby, drill,” it could drive turnout from liberal voters who fear the Republican would increase fossil fuel production. She has hardly been neutral on this issue in the past. The vice president personally made the most expensive U.S. climate policy in history into law when she cast the deciding vote for President Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act in 2022.

…..

Underlying this electoral problem for Ms. Harris is a tricky policy one: The climate policies she would offer promise huge costs for negligible benefits. It’d be one thing to ask for sacrifices that could save the planet. But even at a whopping official price tag of $369 billion over 10 years, the Inflation Reduction Act’s climate measures as written were likely to lower the projected global temperature in 2100 by less than 0.03 degree Fahrenheit. In reality, the IRA has turned out to be an even rawer deal. The cost has rapidly ballooned to somewhere north of $3 trillion over 30 to 40 years, even as emission cuts have been slower and smaller than predicted. No wonder Ms. Harris isn’t trumpeting it.

Ben Zycher makes clear that “both Harris and Trump pose problems for U.S. energy producers.”

Eric Boehm sensibly asks: “Where is Trump’s plan to cut spending?” A slice:

If you want to fund the government at 1890s levels, and using 1890s methods, you have to have a plan to cut spending to 1890s levels too.

GMU Econ alum Dominic Pino explains that the performance of Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. in Arizona is no evidence of the alleged wonders of industrial policy. Here’s his conclusion:

Though TSMC’s Arizona success is not a victory for the CHIPS Act, it is a victory for allowing corporations based in allied countries to invest in the U.S. economy — something politicians are currently in the process of blocking in the steel industry.

Bruce Yandle decries the hubris of the executive branch of the U.S. government. A slice:

The current conversation is much like fussing over the comfort of deck chairs on the Titanic. Let us hope whoever wins will turn their attention toward the wellbeing of the deficit-ridden vessel itself. It’s time to remind ourselves of what Adam Smith called the more fundamental duties of the sovereign, set forth in his monumental 1776 work, “Wealth of Nations.”

Smith was describing a “system of natural liberty.” His earlier ideas had reinforced Thomas Jefferson’s ideas for the Declaration of Independence. Anticipating our modern White House expectations, it seems, Smith described his system this way: “Every man, as long as he does not violate the laws of justice, is left perfectly free to pursue his own interest his own way, and to bring both his industry and capital into competition with those of any other man, or order of men.”

Gary Galles makes a strong case against Proposition 2 in California.

Jeff Jacoby reports on the flocking of Hispanic voters in America to the GOP. A slice:

If Donald Trump wins the presidential election next month, he will almost certainly owe his victory in part to the Hispanic voters among whom his support has been surging. Yet even as he does so, he will doubtless still be raging that millions of migrants, most of them Hispanic, have entered this country as part of a plot to ensure the defeat of Republicans.

Samuel Gregg warns of the dangers lurking in Mario Draghi’s dirigisme. A slice:

These measures form part of Draghi’s ambition “to lay out a new industrial strategy for Europe” to overcome its waning competitiveness. One feature of this strategy is the extensive use of industrial policy. Draghi acknowledges the failures and drawbacks of industrial policy “such as defending incumbent companies or picking winners.” Nonetheless, he insists that Europe can overcome the problems inherent to industrial policy by adhering to “a set of key principles which embed best practice.” That involves, according to Draghi, focusing on sectors rather than companies and subjecting the process of allocating subsidies and other forms of assistance to “rigorous monitoring.”

What “rigorous monitoring” means is left undefined, but we have good reason to doubt that it would have any effect. Once set in place, industrial policies are notoriously hard to terminate, even when the failure is manifest. The recipients don’t want government assistance to stop, and no political leader or bureaucrat wants to concede failure.

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Quotation of the Day…

… is from page 51 of Robert Higgs’s 2012 book Delusions of Power:

Whatever promotes the growth of the state also weakens the capacity of individuals in civil society to fend off the state’s depredations and therefore augments the public’s multifaceted victimization at the hands of state functionaries. Nothing promotes the growth of the state as much as national emergency – war and other crises comparable to war in the seriousness of the threats they are believed to pose.

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Not Very Mindful of The American Mind

Here’s a letter to The American Mind:

Editor:

Dan McCarthy writes that “tariffs create opportunities for new domestic competition” (“What Trump Should Do If He Wins,” Oct. 23).

Nonsense.

Tariffs protect particular domestic producers from competition – that’s why the policy is called “protectionism.” By artificially protecting particular producers from competition, the rise in the prices those producers charge might well incite new firms to enter this domestic market, which must be what Mr. McCarthy means by “opportunities for new domestic competition.” But all resources and capital drawn into protected industries by tariffs are necessarily drawn out of other domestic industries. Among the results in these contracting industries are lower outputs and higher prices, which are precisely the baneful consequences that economic competition, when allowed to operate, prevents.

This outcome, however, isn’t a zero-sum expansion of protected industries and contraction of others. The outcome is a negative-sum expansion of industries at which domestic workers and capital have a comparative disadvantage and contraction of industries at which these workers and capital have a comparative advantage. Protective tariffs stifle, not stimulate, economic and real-wage growth by obstructing the competitive forces that alone ensure that workers and capital are used in their most productive ways.

It gets worse. The more ready is government to dispense protective tariffs the less ready are businesses to compete for customers by improving their outputs and enhancing the efficiency of their operations. Without protective tariffs, businesses engage in healthy and honest competition for the favor of investors and consumers who put their own resources on the line. With protective tariffs, businesses engage in wasteful and cronyist competition for the favor of politicians and bureaucrats who put other people’s resources on the line. In short, the chief “opportunities for new domestic competition” created by tariffs are opportunities to lobby government officials for special privileges that come at the greater expense of the general public.

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

George Will – inspired by Nicholas Eberstadt – warns of declining population and encourages more immigration. Two slices:

For the first time since the Black Death in the 1300s, he writes in Foreign Affairs, Earth’s population is going to decline. A lot. This will create social hazards that will challenge political ingenuity. Still, it will be, primarily, a protracted reverberation of a relatively recent, and excellent, event in humanity’s story: the emancipation of women.

Eberstadt, who is incapable of writing an uninteresting paragraph, is an economist and demography-is-destiny savant at the American Enterprise Institute. He says a large excess of deaths over births will be driven not by a brute calamity like the bubonic plague but by choices: those regarding fertility, family structures and living arrangements, all reflecting “a worldwide reduction in the desire for children.”

…..

Eberstadt is, however, tentatively cheerful: “Steadily improving living standards and material and technological advances will still be possible.” The Earth “is richer and better fed than ever before — and natural resources are more plentiful and less expensive (after adjusting for inflation), than ever before,” and the global population is more “extensively schooled” than ever. What is required is “a favorable business climate,” which is Eberstadt’s shorthand for allowing market forces to wring maximum efficiency from fewer people: “Prosperity in a depopulating world will also depend on open economies: free trade in goods, services, and finance to counter the constraints that declining populations otherwise engender.”

Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) is correct: “Trump’s tariffs won’t bring us peace and prosperity.” A slice:

Ronald Reagan knew what makes a nation prosperous. “Free trade serves the cause of economic progress, and it serves the cause of world peace,” he said in a 1982 radio address. That sentiment was in line with years of conservative policy. The Republican Party had long stood for free markets and free trade, principles that helped cement America as the world’s economic superpower.

Sadly, many in my own party seem to have forgotten these lessons. A populist faction insists on imposing more and higher tariffs that would raise the prices of everyday goods and services as well as destroy the commercial incentive for nations to live in peace.

Such advocates claim that tariffs protect American workers from foreign competition. In practice, they hurt the workers they purport to help. Consider Chinese-made electronics. When tariffs are imposed on products like smartphones and laptops, as Donald Trump is proposing to do, American consumers end up paying higher prices. A report from the Consumer Technology Association projects that Mr. Trump’s proposed tariffs could raise technology prices for U.S. consumers by as much as 21%. China accounts for more than 90% of U.S. laptop and tablet imports. Its manufacturers won’t bear the brunt of these tariffs—American consumers will, as the levy will be passed on to them in the form of higher prices.

Also warning of the dangers lurking in Trump’s protectionism is the Editorial Board of the Wall Street Journal. Two slices:

The evidence is clear that the tariffs had real costs and reduced the growth spurred by his other policies. Other countries retaliated, hitting U.S. producers of everything from apples to whiskey. The government paid farmers billions in compensation. Harley-Davidson had to shift production for its overseas customers to Thailand to stay competitive.

There was no great boom in manufacturing employment. More jobs involve using steel than making it, and one study said higher steel prices led to 75,000 lost manufacturing jobs. Consumers paid more for many products, as companies passed on tariff costs. The economic studies on these points are copious, and it’s worrisome that Mr. Trump and his advisers dismiss them.

…..

Mr. Trump sometimes says he sees tariffs merely as a means to gain trade reciprocity: If Japan had zero tariffs on U.S. goods, the U.S. would do the same. But the process of getting to zero is likely to be messy if it is even achievable. Once imposed, tariffs build business and union constituencies that won’t easily give them up. The current 25% U.S. tariff on foreign trucks was imposed in 1964.

Yet at other times Mr. Trump sounds like a true believer in high tariff walls for their own sake—as the way to return manufacturing to the U.S. and protect it from foreign competition. This seems to be the view of his chief trade adviser, Robert Lighthizer, and perhaps running mate JD Vance.

Known as import substitution, this model of economic growth kept India globally uncompetitive for decades. It would guarantee higher consumer prices and the slow erosion of U.S. business competitiveness. Our guess is that financial markets would signal their disapproval if Mr. Trump goes this far.

Scott Lincicome explains some of the economic damage would be inflicted by tariffs and industrial policy. Two slices:

Among the many Biden administration economic policies from which Vice President Kamala Harris stubbornly refuses to separate herself, industrial policy is near the top. In speeches and campaign materials, Harris has repeatedly and vocally championed the “targeted” tariffs, subsidies, Buy America rules, and other policy measures that have been implemented over the last four years to boost U.S. manufacturing, security, and the economy. Capitolism has addressed many of the storm clouds hovering over those policies, the success or failure of which is still very much TBD, but the toss-up 2024 presidential election provides yet another: the inevitable uncertainty baked into almost all American industrial policy, regardless of its form or merits.

Reams of economics literature show a strong connection between the unpredictability of government economic policy—aka “economic policy uncertainty” or EPU—and corporate investment and activity in the United States. Studies have found, for example, that higher EPU causes firms to reduce short-term, long-term, and total investments. Negative effects are particularly pronounced for small businesses, bank credit supply, and in the manufacturing sector, and they can occur at the federal and sub-federal level. In one particularly interesting paper, state-level manufacturing investment was found to remain depressed after gubernatorial elections, as companies faced with pre-election EPU in one state shifted their investments to neighboring states with more stable and predictable policies.

One of the most widely cited and relevant studies on EPU, by economists Scott Baker, Nick Bloom, and Steven Davis, develops an EPU index based on thousands of newspaper articles and reveals that EPU spiked during not just major shocks like the Gulf wars or failure of Lehman Brothers, but also tight presidential elections when the future of monetary, tax, fiscal, trade, and other federal policies set, implemented or influenced by the executive branch could change dramatically depending on who wins. The authors further found that EPU, at the firm level, increases stock price volatility and reduces investment and employment in “policy-sensitive sectors like defense, healthcare, and infrastructure construction,” and, at the economy-wide level, foreshadows declines in U.S. investment, output, and employment. They’ve since updated the index to include other measures of uncertainty, as well as sub-indices for specific economic policy areas (trade, monetary policy, climate) and countries.

Given events here and abroad, economists have recently focused on trade policy uncertainty (TPU), again finding that higher levels correlate with less investment and economic activity in the United States, and that things that limit TPU—such as trade agreements—can mitigate some of these harms. During the Trump era—when agreements were sidetracked and major changes to U.S. trade policy were literally announced via tweet (repeatedly)—TPU was, on average, more than three times as high it was during the Obama years, nearly twice as large as TPU during Biden’s term, and the highest recorded under any president going back to 1960. This dramatic increase in Trump TPU was further found to reduce aggregate U.S. investment by 1 or 2 percent (i.e., between $23 and $47 billion in 2018).

…..

In the real economy, meanwhile, there’s growing evidence that heightened trade policy uncertainty is affecting business decisions. The New York Times, for example, in August interviewed “two dozen American manufacturers, retailers and shipping agents,” and found that “many said they were holding off on investments and expansion given the uncertainty over tariffs on imported products and parts — especially on those shipped from China.” A month later, the Times documented how some U.S. distillers, targeted by painful retaliatory tariffs during the Trump 1.0 years, were holding off on new investments out of fear that another trade war was about to begin under Trump 2.0.

My intrepid Mercatus Center colleague, Veronique de Rugy, shares evidence that Americans aren’t happy about paying the higher prices that are an inevitable consequence of ‘climate action’ and protectionism.

GMU Econ alum David Hebert draws lessons from China’s economic woes.

My GMU Econ colleague Vincent Geloso looks at historical data on income differences. A slice:

The problem is that the estimates that Piketty (and his co-author Emmanuel Saez) created for 1913 and 1917 are now known to massively overestimate inequality. In an article in the< a href=”https://academic.oup.com/ej/article-abstract/132/647/2366/6544663″ target=”_blank” rel=”noopener”>Economic Journal with Phil Magness, John Moore and Phillip Schlosser and in a companion article with Phil Magness in Economic Inquiry, we corrected for these errors. In fact, we showed that their entire series from 1917 to 1962 was flawed because of the way missing filers were treated, how net income was converted into adjusted gross income, and how they forgot that state and local governments (5% of the workforce with incomes well above the national average income) were not required to file federal taxes until 1938.

We also discovered that Piketty and his co-authors made an incorrect estimate of total income. They arbitrarily defined total income as 80% of personal income (as reported by national accounts) minus transfers. They justified this by claiming that “the ratio between total gross income reported on tax returns and personal income minus transfers in national accounts has been fairly stable since the late 1940s (around 75-80%).” However, according to their own datasheets, the actual average was 82.7%. While this difference may seem small, a higher proportion reduces the income shares of the rich. Using less arbitrary methods, we found a much larger denominator and, consequently, smaller income shares for the wealthiest groups.

Jeffrey Anderson rightly decries the evidence-free return of mask mandates in some of California’s most ‘progressive’ enclaves.

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