Tyler Cowen warns that “if the U.S. blocks AI companies from exporting their models, some countries may delay AI adoption, while others will lean toward China.” Two slices:
A new line has been crossed: The U.S. government has finally declared an AI model too dangerous for unrestricted use. It’s the kind of move that could cripple AI progress in the U.S. and around the world.
I had the chance to work with Anthropic’s recently released, high-powered Fable 5 model, a version of Claude Mythos (I am a member of Anthropic’s Economic Advisory Board). But now the plug has been yanked. A federal dispute with Anthropic led the government on Friday to order an export control that requires Anthropic to withhold the model from any non-U.S. citizens. The only practical way to comply with that order was to take down the model altogether.
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Another result is that some countries may opt for an alliance with China and Chinese AI models, rather than the U.S. At least some of these countries are fence-sitters anyway, when it comes to choosing sides, and so lesser American reliability could tilt a few over the edge. In East Africa, for instance, current commercial connections with China are strong, and China has a reputation for not interfering in internal affairs. In this scenario, America would lose some of its global reach and influence.
Finally, many countries and companies will opt for open-source AI systems, where there is no kill switch. That will also empower Chinese AI over American AI, since the best open-source models come from China. That might sound okay, but it is still a big geopolitical loss for America, and possibly for the nations buying Chinese AI as well, if Beijing decides to exploit their dependence. Even in the absence of a kill switch, when it comes to servicing, installation, applications, and upgrades, those countries would look to China rather than to the U.S. Furthermore, the open-source models typically are worse than the best American-made proprietary models.
In sum, the inability of the U.S. government to reach an agreement with Anthropic translates into a big geopolitical loss for the U.S. It also means slower and inferior AI adoption for companies, schools, and countries around the world.
The Editorial Board of the Washington Post also sounds the alarm: “The government’s export ban on Anthropic’s models is exactly the wrong approach.” A slice:
It’s difficult to overstate how counterproductive that was. Cybersecurity has always been a race without a finish line. Attackers are constantly probing to find vulnerabilities to exploit in software, and defenders are always rushing to patch them before it’s too late. AI speeds the race up considerably. But, crucially, it’s also both the tool that finds the flaw and the tool for fixing it.
The problem is that while Anthropic’s models are widely considered to be among the best available at this moment, its competitors are not far behind. OpenAI’s GPT-5.5 is nearly on par with Anthropic’s flagship in unearthing software vulnerabilities, according to the London-based AI Security Institute.
Much cheaper Chinese models, though still not on the frontier, just keep getting better. By whacking Anthropic, the government hasn’t pushed back the cyberthreat. It just took an important tool out of the hands of defenders.
Worse, the mistake was predictable. Only 10 days earlier, the Trump administration signed an executive order about AI guardrails. The administration created a voluntary review process for frontier models, with an explicit promise that nothing in it would create a licensing or preclearance regime.
The Editorial Board of the Wall Street Journal decries the GOP’s ever-tighter embrace of the ‘progressive’ agenda of labor unions. A slice:
The U.S. House is still run by Republicans, though it’s hard to tell based on recent results. The latest left turn came last week when the House passed the Faster Labor Contracts Act (FLCA), which forces binding arbitration on companies if they don’t reach a new collective-bargaining agreement quickly when new labor unions are certified.
The bill received a House vote after seven Republicans signed a discharge petition to override the Speaker’s control over the floor. It passed, 230 to 193, with 20 Republicans and all Democrats in favor.
The bill shifts the balance of power to labor unions in collective bargaining since they know an arbitrator will step in and dictate a settlement if the parties reach an impasse after 120 days. Arbitrators tend to use industry standards in their judgments, which may not be appropriate for an individual firm. That means less incentive for union chiefs to compromise, and less power for individual workers who will have no say in arbitration.
Scott Lincicome explains why “Whirlpool is a poster child for tariffs — and not in a good way.” A slice:
It would be difficult to construct a clearer cautionary tale of how US protectionism can harm not only American consumers but even its intended beneficiaries.
Whirlpool has been one of the nation’s most vocal proponents of US protectionism since at least 2011. That year, the company requested antidumping and countervailing duties (AD/CVDs) on imported refrigerator-freezers and washing machines from South Korea and Mexico, resulting in significant new duties on the latter products. When foreign production of washing machines moved to avoid the duties, Whirlpool asked Uncle Sam to target imports from those countries too, eventually winning from the Trump administration “safeguards” on washers from every country except Canada.
In the years that followed, Whirlpool was involved in essentially every available legal channel for import protection – more than a dozen interventions under six different laws – and was often successful. Its Ohio facilities also have been the backdrop for two separate Trump administration events touting the President’s “America First” trade policies.
Beneath the surface, however, lie the mounting costs of Whirlpool’s advocacy. For starters, research shows that that the washing machine tariffs increased prices for both those units andcomplementary dryers, costing American consumers more than $800,000 per job created in domestic industry. Moreover, according to a 2023 US International Trade Commission report, the industry’s gains came from LG Electronics and Samsung Electronics’ new US facilities, while Whirlpool’s fortunes continued to decline.
“Leftists use Google Form to organize Stanford commencement walk-out against Google CEO.”
John Puri is correct: “Economic illiteracy is not unusual for progressives.”
Michael Strain makes clear that “sooner or later, America is going to have to reckon with the debt” – and he believes that such a reckoning won’t require a fiscal crisis. A slice:
The US hit a milestone this year. The size of the national debt eclipsed annual economic output. The ratio of debt to GDP is over 100 per cent for the first time since 1946, when the US had been borrowing to finance military spending during the second world war.
Today, debt service is the third-largest category of federal spending, behind only social security and Medicare — and, remarkably, ahead of national defence.
In Washington, analysts and politicians alike seem increasingly resigned to the idea that the only way the government will engage in fiscal consolidation is in the aftermath of a bond market crisis. But I am more optimistic that the normal democratic process could yet lead to deficit reduction.
A visitor – “Freddy” – from Germany to the U.S. is awestruck by America. Two slices:
Freddy found “the holy land” on his third day in America: a Taco Bell near Atlanta. When the German soccer fan landed in New York on June 5 to begin a six-week road trip with a couple of friends for the World Cup, he had about 11,000 followers on X. As he has traveled the country on a tight budget, posting about the wonders small and large he encounters along the way, his audience has grown to more than 600,000.
The camera-shy traveler posts as FreddyLA7, no last name given. As an enthusiastic, even awestruck, visitor, he has performed a public service by opening many Americans’ eyes, just weeks before the nation’s 250th birthday, to see clearly how much there is to savor and celebrate in America.
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“I love Americans,” he posted after arriving. “We were about to walk an hour to the stadium in the rain to save on an Uber, and the receptionist at the hotel we were parked in front of decided to drive us there.” From inside Auburn University’s 88,000-seat stadium, he posted, “This is the most ‘The European mind can’t comprehend this’ moment of my life.” Part of the spectacle: “There’s an eagle flying around the stadium.”
The night ended, naturally, with a run to a Buc-ee’s, where Freddy struggled to comprehend the world-within-a-rest-stop Buc-ee’s aesthetic, with gas pumps as far as the eye can see and slow-smoked Texas barbecue inside. Or as Freddy put it, with photos and three crying-face emojis, “DUDE LMAO THIS IS A GAS STATION.”
Quotidian American life has suddenly been made fresh when seen through a visitor’s eyes.
GMU Econ alum Paul Mueller is a careful student of Adam Smith. A slice:
The institutional failures Smith excoriated — supply restrictions, state-sponsored overproduction, and laws penalizing poor workers — remain rampant today. Modern government intervention sabotages efficiency through the exact same three channels.
In the United States, protectionist state power insulates incumbent industries from new competitors. Certificate-of-need laws permit existing hospitals to block the entry of new medical competitors. Exclusionary municipal zoning laws choke housing construction. Restrictive occupational licensing rules shackle professions ranging from hair stylists and plumbers to medical doctors.
As Smith observed, the state triggers massive inequalities by “restraining the competition in some employments to a smaller number than might otherwise be disposed to enter into them.”
Arnold Kling reviews Batya Ungar-Sargon’s new book, The Jews and the Left. A slice from Arnold’s review:
The labor movement had its moderates who wanted to work within the capitalist system, and its socialists who wanted to overthrow it. Jews could be found in both camps. In either case, they were on the left. Ungar-Sargon fails to mention that in this era, the Democratic Party appealed to urban ethnic groups, perhaps with patronage more than policy.
Franklin Roosevelt’s corporatist New Deal appealed to the moderate wing of the labor movement, including many Jews. In my opinion, support for the New Deal is where Jews began to go wrong. The statist impulse of the left is unfortunate. In Brian Doherty’s Radicals for Capitalism, the most prominent libertarians are Hayek, Mises, Friedman, Rand, and Rothbard. All but Hayek were of Jewish extraction. Too bad that their view of markets did not prevail among Jews at large. Ungar-Sargon takes the more standard view of New Deal good, libertarian economics bad.
Perhaps what clinched Jewish support for Roosevelt was the antisemitism of many on the right. My father always justified his enthusiasm for FDR by referring to Father Coughlin, a radio broadcaster who was vitriolic against FDR and against Jews. Father Coughlin occupied the space in Jewish heads that Tucker Carlson occupies today.