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Donald Newell’s letter – shared here in its entirety – in today’s Washington Post is as important and correct as it is succinct:

The national debt is a taxation without representation upon our future children. Put another way: It’s child abuse.

The Editorial Board of the Wall Street Journal reports that the Congressional Budget Office “shows again that the U.S. fiscal problem is spending, especially entitlements.” Two slices:

The Trump Administration is boasting about its success in reducing the deficit, and give it credit for curbing what had been ballooning growth in discretionary spending like climate pork. CBO reports a $1.8 trillion deficit in the 2025 fiscal year that ended on Sept. 30, which is $57 billion lower than in the prior year. But hold the apple-polishing.

CBO forecasts that deficits will total $24.4 trillion through 2036, largely because of entitlements on autopilot. Spending will increase to $11.4 trillion in 2036 from $7 trillion, while revenue grows more modestly to $8.3 trillion from $5.2 trillion. Medicaid is expected to grow 47%, Social Security 74% and Medicare 105% over the next decade.

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All told, spending is expected to increase to 24.4% of GDP in 2036 from 23.1% this past fiscal year and the pre-pandemic historical average of 20.1%. The U.S. has never before sustained such high levels of spending in peacetime. Revenue is expected to average 17.7% of GDP over the next decade, roughly the historical norm.

As the U.S. issues more debt, net interest payments are projected to double by 2036, increasing to 4.6% from 3.2% of GDP. This assumes the 10-year Treasury rate remains about 4.3% over the next decade. Some corporations have recently borrowed at lower rates than the U.S. Treasury, which suggests that monetary policy isn’t all that tight and the market appetite for U.S. debt isn’t inexorable.

That’s a warning to Congress, if Members want a legacy worth having.

Pierre Lemieux warns that protectionism justified on grounds of national security too easily turns not only cronyist but also absurd. Two slices:

In a petition (a “Tariff Inclusion Request”) to the federal government, American Pan, the largest manufacturer of industrial and commercial baking pans in the country, argues that national security requires a tariff on competing Chinese pans. Recall that, last year, the same federal government imposed tariffs of 50% (or 25% for a small number of countries) on steel and aluminum. This made derivative products, such as baking pans, more costly to produce in America. The government woke up and allowed manufacturers of derivative products to petition for protectionist tariffs on their products as well.

In its petition, American Pan explains that American tariffs on its inputs have increased their cost by 90% for aluminum and 40% for steel. As a consequence, the company argues, the increased supply of low-cost Chinese pans “is a threat to National Security by threatening the food security of the United States.” How so? If these Chinese imports bankrupt American pan manufacturers and if, in the event of war, the Chinese government imposes an embargo on the United States, there will be no pans with which to cook food.

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The fact that American Pan wants the government to impose a tariff to protect its products against tariffs on its inputs imposed by the same government points to the absurdity of it all. But more than just absurdity is involved. The phenomenon serves the interests of those who would benefit from the growth of Leviathan. It expands rent-seeking opportunities and multiplies obedient government cronies. Americans are getting more accustomed to petitioning for privileges and to being dependent on political authorities.

Here’s the abstract of a new paper by Tamar den Besten and Diego Känzig: (HT Scott Lincicome)

We study the macroeconomic effects of tariff policy using U.S. historical data from 1840–2024. We construct a narrative series of plausibly exogenous tariff changes – based on major legislative actions, multilateral negotiations, and temporary surcharges – and use it as an instrument to identify a structural tariff shock. Tariff increases are contractionary: imports fall sharply, exports decline with a lag, and output and manufacturing activity drop persistently. The shock transmits through both supply and demand channels. Prices rise in the full sample but fall post-World War II, a pattern consistent with changes in the monetary policy response and with stronger international retaliation and reciprocity in the modern trade regime.

GMU Econ alum Paul Mueller applauds the demise of ESG-obsessed proxy advisors. A slice:

For those who have been following issues related to environmental, social, and governance (ESG) and diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI), this is a major event. The two major proxy advisory firms, Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS) and Glass, Lewis, & Co. (Glass Lewis), have been criticized for using their recommendations on shareholder voting to push politically motivated ESG/DEI crusades (sometimes unbeknownst to the shareholders they represent). This has made the industry the target of a recent executive order aiming to increase federal oversight in the proxy advisory industry.

Ultimately, though, the proxy advisory industry was born out of regulation. Further government intervention could invite greater cronyism. If the proxy advisory industry wants to win customers back, it needs to focus on fiduciary obligations, not politics. If federal officials want greater transparency and accountability in the proxy advisory market, they should focus on rolling back unnecessary regulations and simplifying any regulations that remain to encourage a competitive proxy market.

Arnold Kling argues that, since 1980, “most of the gain in stock prices has come not from higher earnings but from investors willing to pay more for a given amount of earnings.”

A former police officer asks: “What the hell is ICE doing?”

Here’s the abstract of a new and fascinating paper – published in the Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization – by my GMU Econ colleague Vincent Geloso and co-authors Kelly Hyde and Ilia Murtazashvili:

We explore the institutional foundations of public health by distinguishing among three broad categories of disease: diseases of poverty, which are income-sensitive and decline with improved living standards; diseases of commerce, which are contact-transmissible and spread with mobility and exchange; and diseases of affluence, which are longevity-mediated noncommunicable conditions such as cancer, heart disease, and diabetes that become more prevalent as people live longer. This classification allows us to examine how economic freedom, through its effects on income, mobility, and survival, reshapes the mix of disease rather than health outcomes in aggregate. Using global health data, we find that economically free societies experience large reductions in diseases of poverty, modest changes in diseases of commerce, and a higher relative share of diseases of affluence even as total age-standardized mortality declines. These results reveal that institutional arrangements influence the composition of mortality more than its overall level: economic freedom enhances prosperity and resilience while shifting the burden of disease toward conditions associated with longer lives.

Andy Morriss reviews John Hasnas’s Common Law Liberalism.

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Quotation of the Day…

… is from page 203 of Matthew Hennessey’s superb 2022 book, Visible Hand:

[T]he notion that some petty bureaucrat knows your interests better than you do is both empirically false and philosophically unacceptable.

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The dozen or so people who regularly read Cafe Hayek know that I write a lot about trade and trade policy. Indeed, rarely a week passes in which I don’t get a friendly – and sometimes unfriendly – email entreating me to stop writing about trade. I reply that, for as long as I live, I will write about trade as long as protectionists continue to insist on their right to obstruct peaceful trade. As I live, I will stop writing about trade only when protectionists stop demanding protection. I regretfully, but with complete confidence, predict that that day will never come.

Even though my intelligence isn’t especially impressive, I detest having it insulted. Yet nearly every argument for protectionism is an insult to the intelligence of every thinking person. Even more, I despise having my and my fellow human beings’ freedom to act peacefully held in contempt – and nearly every argument for protectionism treats individual liberty with utter contempt.

……………

Because economists have been pondering and writing about trade for a quarter of a millennium – mostly in response to protectionists who, for all of that time, have insisted on making excuses for their schemes – there has been for decades (perhaps even longer) no new argument for protectionism. Economists have heard them all and have rebutted them all, countless times.

And yet I continue to experience occasional genuine surprise at just how elementary are some misunderstandings about trade and protectionism.

On a Facebook thread today, I was conversing with someone who is sympathetic to protectionism. This person, who admits to not being an economist, is polite and civil, and so I don’t mind engaging with him. At one point in the conversation I asked him to “please explain how a policy that intentionally obstructs a people’s access to goods and services – including goods and services that those people use as inputs in their production processes – makes those people richer?”

He responded with this question: “What goods and services have I been obstructed from?”

Reading his response filled me with despair sparked by the realization that the way that many people think about tariffs and trade is – I can find no good word for it – profoundly different from the way that I and most other economists and advocates of free markets think about trade.

How does someone not see that protective tariffs are designed to obstruct the access of people of the home country to tariffed goods and services? How can someone not see that the very essence of protectionism is obstructing fellow citizens’ access to imported goods and services? Here’s my response, of Facebook, to my interlocutor:

You have been obstructed, most obviously, from access to any goods and services the prices of which are raised by the tariffs. Because of these higher prices, you likely purchase fewer of these goods and services over time than you would have purchased absent the tariffs. If you don’t reduce your purchases of these tariffed (and tariff-competing) goods and services, you will necessarily spend a larger share of your income purchasing these goods and services. In turn, you will necessarily have less income to spend on other goods and services, so your access to these other goods and services is obstructed. That’s the whole point of protective tariffs: to obstruct your and your fellow citizens’ access to goods and services sold from abroad.

To not immediately see that tariffs necessarily obstruct the access of citizens of the home country to imported goods and services is akin to not immediately seeing that 10-2 equals some number less than ten. It’s baffling.

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Some Links

Daniel Hannan makes a powerful case that “the world still needs what America stands for” – and so, too, do Americans. Three slices:

The American Revolution was a rejection of British citizenship, not of British values. Indeed, it was a clamorous assertion of all the things that, in the eyes of the Founders, had made them British in the first place: personal autonomy, representative government, religious liberty, habeas corpus, jury trials, the sanctity of contract, the rule of law, and constraints on executive power.

As Winston Churchill was to put it in his History of the English-Speaking Peoples: “The Declaration was in the main a restatement of the principles which had animated the Whig struggle against the later Stuarts and the English Revolution of 1688.”

American visitors to London are sometimes surprised to find prominent statues of six U.S. presidents, including Abraham Lincoln in Parliament Square and George Washington in Trafalgar Square. Yet, even in 1776, the American cause enjoyed widespread support in Great Britain. The most brilliant parliamentarians of the era, Edmund Burke, Charles James Fox, and Pitt the Elder, all favored the patriots. So, as far as we can make out, did a majority of the population — though, with a more limited franchise than in the colonial assemblies, that majority was not replicated in the House of Commons.

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To put it more briefly, the foundational value of the United States is liberty. I feel slightly silly having to write that, as it would recently have gone without saying. But when lots of young American conservatives are disowning the Founders and writing excitedly about Catholic integralism or the jurisprudence of the Nazi lawyer Carl Schmitt, it bears repeating. Listen to the two presidents whose statues have pride of place in London.

“Interwoven as is the love of liberty with every ligament of your hearts, no recommendation of mine is necessary to fortify or confirm the attachment,” said George Washington in his Farewell Address. Abraham Lincoln at Gettysburg defined the nation as having been “conceived in liberty.”

What does liberty mean? It means that the people in power can’t boss others around. It means that politicians are servants and not rulers. It means that private property and free contract are respected, that the coercive force of the state is a last rather than a first resort, and that the people in charge don’t get to make up the rules as they go along. It means, in short, a government of laws and not of men — a phrase attributed to John Adams, although, demonstrating my point about the Founders’ British identity, Adams was quoting the 17th-century English radical James Harrington.

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How secure is that tradition at home? Both parties seem increasingly unwilling to accept results that don’t suit them. There is, again, something creepily un-American about personality cults, about the willingness to contract out your opinions to a father-of-the-nation type, to change your views when he changes his.

The Founders would have had Trump down as a “Caesarist,” meaning a man whose personal ambition outweighed his respect for the republic. They would have been appalled, less by his executive power-grabs or desire for a third term — they knew such men — than by the obsequious way in which others encourage him to exceed his authority. They designed America expressly to prevent arbitrary rule.

Eric Boehm decries the cowardice of most Republicans regarding Trump’s tariffs punitive taxation of Americans’ purchases of imports. Two slices:

Rep. Tom McClintock (R–Calif.) describes himself as a “tariff skeptic.”

In that regard, his judgment seems sound. President Donald Trump’s tariffs are hiking costs for businesses and prices for consumers. They are not delivering the promised boom in manufacturing jobs. Polls show that most Americans dislike them.

Unlike most Americans, however, McClintock was in a position this week to translate that skepticism into action.

Given that chance, McClintock (and the vast majority of his Republican colleagues) chose cowardice and voted to continue Trump’s unilateral executive control over American trade policy.

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Few other Republicans said it as openly as McClintock did, but he’s hardly the only coward in the crowd. The “baseline House Republican position” is tariff skepticism, an unnamed administration official told Politico on Wednesday.

That makes a lot of sense, because you don’t have to be an economist to be a tariff skeptic at this point. Consider the amount of bonkers tariff-related news that happened just this week:

Let’s dwell on that last item for just a moment. Faced with a possible Republican revolt over tariffs, the White House was reportedly trying to cut deals to reduce tariffs for certain parts of the country while maintaining them broadly.

First and foremost, that’s an admission that tariffs are being paid by American businesses and consumers (otherwise, there would be no relief to be offered).

Wall Street Journal columnist Allysia Finley asks: “Why is the Trump administration continuing the Biden push for ‘inclusive’ credit scores?” Two slices:

A wrong-headed political drive in Washington to make housing more affordable fueled the 2000s housing bubble, which burst into the 2008-09 financial crisis. Now we’re seeing history rhyme as federal housing regulators create perverse incentives that are sure to lead to inflated credit scores that will let riskier borrowers take out lower-interest mortgages.

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At least the Biden FHFA required lenders to submit to Fannie and Freddie both a FICO and VantageScore for all loans. Mr. [FHFA Director Bill] Pulte, however, announced last summer to much fanfare that lenders would be allowed to choose which score to use when underwriting mortgages. The end of this story writes itself.

Lenders will always choose the higher score so they can make more mortgages to risky borrowers—and at lower rates. Fannie and Freddie charge higher fees to insure mortgages for borrowers with lower credit scores. That means Fannie and Freddie will guarantee riskier mortgages and charge less for doing so.

Chesapeake Risk Advisors’ Clifford Rossi estimates that severe-delinquency rates could increase by 18%. The consulting firm Milliman predicts default rates will rise by some 30%. The American Enterprise Institute’s Ed Pinto, Tobias Peter and Sissi Li estimate guarantee fees will fall by 10% to 13%, putting taxpayers at greater risk.

Reality isn’t optional even for charismatic, slogan-slinging east-coast socialists who win landslide elections. A slice:

Zohran Mamdani was happy to promise lower rent for New Yorkers on the campaign trail. But now that he’s the guy stuck with the bill, the mayor is having second thoughts.

The socialist seems to be walking back a campaign promise to expand the city’s billion-dollar rental voucher program. The City Fighting Homelessness and Eviction Prevention Supplement was launched in 2018 to help keep low-income New Yorkers out of shelters by subsidizing permanent housing. The program’s cost ballooned from $25 million in 2019 to more than $1 billion in 2025, making it one of the nation’s largest rental assistance programs.

Ditto for west-coast collectivists, as reported by Shawn Regan. A slice:

Los Angeles has a history of progressive housing policies that sound good in theory but prove counterproductive in practice. Measure ULA, the city’s so-called “mansion tax,” is the latest example, and it’s one of the most unreasonable.

Approved by voters in 2022, Measure ULA imposes steep taxes on real-estate sales worth over $5 million. The revenue is meant to fund affordable housing and tenant assistance. Advocates’ pitch for the measure was straightforward: tax luxury-property sales and use the proceeds to tackle homelessness and affordability. Supporters estimated that the measure could generate nearly $1 billion annually for housing programs.

Four years later, Los Angeles officials are beginning to acknowledge that the policy has not worked as intended. Last month, City Councilmember Nithya Raman—who supported Measure ULA when it was on the ballot—introduced a motion calling for changes to the tax, warning that it had produced “unintended consequences.” Measure ULA, she argued, “stalls housing production” and “ultimately undermines the very goals voters asked us to achieve.”

Raman is right. Measure ULA has both raised less revenue than promised and discouraged the kinds of property transactions that make new housing possible, including new multifamily units. In trying to tax its way to affordability, L.A. has worsened its housing shortage.

In response to people who today point with much fear – but with little knowledge of history – to lots of recent immigration to the U.S. from Latin America, Jeremy Horpedahl tweets: (HT Scott Lincicome)

15% of the population of Ireland entered the US between 1851 and 1860

9% of the population of Norway entered the US in the 1880s

6% of the population of Italy entered the US from about 1900-1910

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Here’s a letter to the Wall Street Journal.

Editor:

Hopefully Donald Trump will read Joseph Sternberg’s column describing the economic doldrums inflicted on that continent by E.U. economic interventions (“Hurrah! Europe Is Fighting Over Economic Policy,” February 13). Should he do so, the president might rethink his assertion that the E.U. has been “screwing us” on trade – a faulty conclusion that Mr. Trump grounds on the fact that the E.U. has consistently run annual trade surpluses with the U.S.

To describe real per-capita GDP in the E.U. since 2009 as remaining flat would be generous; in 2025 it was slightly lower than it was 16 years earlier.* In the U.S., in contrast, real per-capita GDP rose over these same years by 32 percent. And yet in each of those years the U.S. ran a trade deficit with the E.U., as well as with the rest of the world, while the E.U., with the exception of 2022, ran a trade surplus with the rest of the world.

These data point to a reality that Mr. Trump stubbornly refuses to acknowledge – namely, a country or region runs trade deficits whenever it attracts more global capital than it repels, and it runs trade surpluses whenever it repels more capital than it attracts. The E.U. consistently runs trade surpluses, and the U.S. trade deficits, not because the E.U. is cheating or besting America at trade but, rather, because the E.U.’s growth-stifling policies are repellant to global investors while America’s more market-oriented policies are attractive to these investors.

Mr. Trump’s obsession with putting an end to U.S. trade deficits is an obsession with making America repellant to global investors and, hence, more like stagnant Europe.

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

* The nominal per-capita GDP dollars were converted into real dollars using this GDP deflator.

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Some Links

The Editorial Board of the Wall Street Journal reports on yet further evidence that nearly all of Trump’s tariffs punitive taxes on Americans’ purchases of imports are being paid, indeed, by Americans. A slice:

No matter how often President Trump insists his tariffs are taxing foreigners to enrich the U.S., economic studies keep showing that Americans actually pay the bill. On Thursday it was the New York Federal Reserve’s turn. In an analysis on the bank’s website, four researchers write that last year “nearly 90 percent of the tariffs’ economic burden fell on U.S. firms and consumers.”

They reach that conclusion by examining import data, to see whether foreign suppliers cut their prices in response to Mr. Trump’s added tariff costs. Over the first eight months of 2025, “94 percent of the tariff incidence was borne by the U.S.,” the analysis says, meaning “a 10 percent tariff caused only a 0.6 percentage point decline in foreign export prices.”

This outcome drifted as the year wore on, but only slightly: The figures for November suggest the tariffs had “an 86 percent pass-through to U.S. import prices,” the researchers say. “Our results show that the bulk of the tariff incidence continues to fall on U.S. firms and consumers. These findings are consistent with two other studies that report high pass-through of tariffs to U.S. import prices.”

This is a problem for both shoppers and Republicans, including Mr. Trump. Even if tariffs aren’t generally inflationary, they’re taxes that can push up prices on specific imported items, as well as on the products of the protected domestic competitors. Recent inflation reports, including the one that came out Friday, show some notable jumps, such as for furniture and bedding, which in January was up 4%, year over year.

Adam Miller tweets: (HT Scott Lincicome)

Part of my job is approving tariff invoices billed to the small manufacturing firm where I work. These tariffs are passed on to our customers (industrial utilities like electric power generation and water treatment facilities), who undoubtedly pass them on to consumers.

The Washington Post‘s Editorial Board draws an important lesson for us Americans from the Russian government’s authoritarian crackdown on social media. Two slices:

The Russian government’s decision this week to ban WhatsApp and throttle Telegram is not a surprise for an authoritarian regime. Yet it also serves as a cautionary tale for westerners clamoring to regulate social media companies.

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The very concept of “disinformation” implies the state gets to decide who may speak, to whom and on what terms. The machinery of control is the same, and more often than not, it’s used to protect a regime. This is the beginning of a road that ends where Russia now is.

C. Jarrett Dieterle decries Mayor Mamdani’s war on delivery apps. Here’s his conclusion:

Mamdani’s war on gig is getting a lot of press. But beyond the flashy headlines, it’s clear that both workers and consumers are likely to suffer.

Jeffrey Miron shares new research that finds that minimum-wage legislation inflicts more harm on black workers than it does on white workers. [DBx: As my late, great colleague Walter Williams often said: If the Imperial Wizard of the KKK were to make a list of that evil organization’s most-preferred government policies, minimum-wage legislation would be at or near the top. It’s sad that so many economically clueless progressives – many of whom, ironically, boast PhDs in economics – allow their addiction to social-desirability bias to blind them to the economic realities of government legislation that prices many low-skilled workers out of jobs in the formal economy, or that otherwise reduces the attractiveness of these workers’ employment options. These progressives would not argue that, say, legislated minimum prices for automobiles would improve the economic prospects of sellers of used cars. Yet they make an economically identical argument in favor of legislated minimum prices for human labor.]

David Inserra criticizes the Federal Trade Commission for using the power of the state to suppress free expression in the guise of protecting free expression. A slice:

Federal Trade Commission Chairman Andrew Ferguson recently addressed a letter to Apple CEO Tim Cook to suggest that the Apple News product may be in violation of the FTC Act.

Apple’s crime?

Its Apple News product, which curates news from a variety of sources, has “systematically promoted articles from left-wing news outlets and suppressed news articles from more conservative publications,” including recently not featuring “a single article from any American conservative-leaning news sources.”

The FTC’s allegations of bias, even if true, are ultimately irrelevant. The FTC has no authority to regulate the speech that Apple News chooses to curate. This is core First Amendment territory that even the FTC is forced to acknowledge. Ferguson writes that the “First Amendment protects the speech of Big Tech Firms” and that the “FTC is not the speech police; we do not have the authority to require Apple or any other firm to take affirmative positions on any political issue, nor to curate new articles based on the perceived ideological or political viewpoint of the article or publication.”

If Chair Ferguson stopped there, perhaps we could appreciate that the FTC recognized its limits and its respect for the First Amendment’s protections for platforms to exercise editorial control over the speech they collate and organize.

But Chair Ferguson did not stop there. Instead, the Chair attempts an end run around the First Amendment by accusing Apple News’ curation practices of violating the FTC Act for being an unfair or deceptive trade practice. But this attack is predicated on a highly flawed theory that somehow the FTC has the ability to determine when the curation and moderation decisions of platforms are “unfair or deceptive.”

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Quotation of the Day…

… is from page 63 of Thomas Sowell’s 1999 book, Barbarians Inside the Gates:

Promoting competition as a process is the opposite of promoting the survival of existing competitors. Unless and until public policy clearly and fully recognizes that fact, fanciful crusades and sinister theories will drive public policy toward the computer industry.

DBx: Yes. And nearly 30 years after these words were written, fanciful antitrust crusades and sinister ‘competition’ theories – such as those peddled by the likes of Lina Khan and embraced by many Trump administration antitrusters – continue to plague the American economy.

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Some Links

Ed Crane is remembered by the Editorial Board of the Wall Street Journal. A slice:

He rightly concluded that before you can change American politics you have to win the battle of ideas. So in 1977 he helped to found Cato, first as a small operation out of San Francisco, then growing it over several decades into a formidable think-tank promoting free-market principles and policies until his retirement in 2012. He was, if we may use an oxymoron, a libertarian builder.

In 1981 Crane moved Cato to the belly of the beast: Washington, D.C., where it continues to torment statists and elites who assume they know what’s best for everyone else. Cato isn’t as large as many other policy shops, but it continues to punch above its weight in engaging scholars, newsmen and politicians in the great ideas of the free economy. This mission is even more important now that both major political parties lack notable champions for free-market principles.

Also remembering Ed Crane is the Atlas Foundation. A slice:

A charismatic speaker, eloquent writer, and visionary leader, Ed played a greater role than perhaps any other in building a base of financial supporters who have prioritized the ideas of liberty. His involvement in the Presidential campaign of Libertarian Party candidate Ed Clark in 1980 allowed Ed Crane to develop a national network of generous friends of liberty, whose enthusiasm would go on to power the Cato Institute’s ascension to a top tier think tank in American life.

Ed’s vision extended far beyond any single organization. He believed deeply in a vibrant ecosystem of institutions advancing liberty from different angles, in different countries, and with distinct but complementary approaches. In that spirit, he was a valued friend and supporter of Atlas Network. His generosity toward our work manifested itself most dramatically when he helped arrange a transfer of programs and personnel, led by Tom Palmer, and funding to support them, in late 2008, to jumpstart Atlas Network’s evolution into a truly global enterprise.

Ed’s wife Kristina Crane began a long association with Atlas Network at this time, and our team has continued to benefit from her steadfast commitment to advancing liberty worldwide. Kristina’s dedication has reflected the same belief that animated Ed’s life: that the principles of liberty are universal and that they must be nurtured through strong, independent institutions that resist political fashions and partisan pressures.

The freedom movement is, at its core, a community of individuals who devote their lives to expanding opportunity and preserving the dignity of the human person. Ed Crane was among the most influential of his generation. The institutions he built, the leaders he mentored, and the ideas he championed will continue to shape debates for decades to come.

My intrepid Mercatus Center colleague, Veronique de Rugy, is – rightly – not starry-eyed about government regulation.

Jack Nicastro is – rightly – appalled by the FTC chairman’s threatening letter to Apple’s Tim Cook: “Chairman Andrew Ferguson continues the Federal Trade Commission’s crusade against free speech with an official letter to Apple CEO Tim Cook.” A slice:

Deliberately withholding certain perspectives from the public may not be especially ethical, but the First Amendment allows Apple to platform whatever it pleases.

Scott Lincicome responds – with this superb letter in the Wall Street Journal – to Peter Navarro’s evidence-free assertion that foreigners pay the bulk of Trump’s tariffs:

Peter Navarro’s “Foreign Countries Bear the Burden of Tariffs” (Letters, Feb. 11) on foreigners indirectly paying U.S. tariffs is correct in theory yet detached from reality.

If the U.S. actually had the market power he describes, foreign exporters would in many cases lower their prices to keep selling their goods here, thus offsetting the tariffs’ domestic costs. In practice, however, the U.S. hasn’t been hegemonic in global markets for many years, thanks to the proliferation of regional supply chains and growing economies outside our borders.

Given the relatively low and declining U.S. share of global merchandise trade, economists predicted in 2024 that producers abroad would respond to U.S. tariffs not by lowering their prices here but by diverting trade elsewhere and forcing Americans to bear the tariffs’ costs. This is exactly what’s happened. China, for example, saw its U.S. exports decline in 2025 yet had strong overall export growth and a record trade surplus thanks to higher sales in other markets.

U.S. nonfuel import prices, which include discounts and rebates but exclude tariffs, would show major declines if exporters were eating Mr. Trump’s tariffs, but they were slightly up in 2025.

Many studies—not only from Harvard and the Kiel Institute, which Mr. Navarro blithely dismisses, but also the St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank, the Tax Foundation, economists Gita Gopinath and Brent Neiman, and Goldman-Sachs, among others—have examined real-world transactions and found that U.S. companies and consumers are bearing almost all the tariff burden via higher retail prices or input costs. There are exceptions, but the data confirm they’re not the rule.

Mr. Navarro needn’t, however, read wonky economics papers to see that Americans are paying Mr. Trump’s tariffs (and the higher prices for U.S.-made alternatives that tariffs encourage). Instead, he could ask the thousands of American business owners and farmers who say they’re suffering under the weight of Mr. Trump’s ill-conceived trade wars. They have voiced these concerns in shareholder earnings calls, media interviews, court challenges, bankruptcy filings, regulatory comments and town hall meetings. Hundreds of small-business owners from across the country have even formed a coalition called “We Pay the Tariffs.” These good folks would jump at the chance to go to the White House and tell Mr. Navarro who, exactly, is paying these taxes—if, that is, they had enough lobbying clout to get through the front door.

Jennifer Huddleston and Christopher Gardner argue persuasively that government should not ban AI chatbots.

Timothy Taylor warns of rising U.S. government indebtedness. Here’s his conclusion:

The costs of excessive federal debt are gradually becoming apparent in various ways. The inflation spike a few years ago was, in part, driven by the spike in federal deficits. The arguments between the Trump administration and the Federal Reserve over interest rate policy are driven, in part, by the recognition that high federal interest payments are crowding out other possibilities for greater spending or tax cuts. Concerns over large US trade deficits are created, in part, because the very large US budget deficits are creating an ongoing surge of US demand for imports. Concerns over slow rates of US economic growth are driven, in part, by concerns that high federal borrowing is crowding out some opportunities for private-sector investment. The current trajectory of federal deficits and debt seems sustainable for awhile longer, in the sense that it doesn’t seem likely to cause a near-term crisis, but that doesn’t make it a desirable path for the US economy to follow.

Jeff Eisenach sheds no tears for the demise of the pre-transformation Washington Post. A slice:

The journalism practiced by the Post in recent years has mainly been of the sort lately taught in journalism schools. Woke, ideological, biased—a loyal ally of the Democratic party. It told us Russia-gate was real, ignored Joe Biden’s decline, hewed unquestioningly to the establishment line on Covid, and reportedly had at least a dozen reporters covering climate change, all reporting the same deeply flawed story as “settled science.” The death of that sort of journalism is something to celebrate, not mourn.

Bob Graboyes shares some interesting trivia about U.S. vice-presidents.

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