In his review of “Red Dawn Over China,” (“A Maoist Myth Debunked,” Books, Feb. 14), Tunku Varadarajan asserts that China’s admission to the World Trade Organization in 2001 had “devastating consequences for every economy except China’s own. (Thank you, Bill Clinton.)” The facts say otherwise.
It’s true that the U.S. economy shed a net five million manufacturing jobs in the years that followed, but even the “China shock” analysis attributes only one million of those to expanding trade with China. Most of the rest were lost due to automation and productivity gains. Meanwhile, tens of millions of U.S. households gained from lower prices for shoes, clothing and other household necessities. The painful recessions of 2001-02 and 2008-09 were homegrown.
If Congress had rejected the accession protocol negotiated by the Clinton administration in 2000, China would likely have joined the WTO anyway, but U.S. companies would have lost out on the increased market access it required. From 2001 to 2017, before the Trump trade wars began, the average duty China applied to goods imported from the U.S. dropped from 25% to 7%. U.S. exports to China during that time grew eight-fold and sales by U.S. majority-owned affiliates in China soared more than 10-fold—totaling more than $500 billion annually.
Trade with China has been tough on certain U.S. companies, but for most Americans—including farmers, high-tech exporters and consumers—the consequences have been positive.
Phil Magness tells the tale of how a tariff fight gave rise to the U.S. federal income tax.
Intel selected New Albany for a large semiconductor facility that was supposed to begin making chips by 2025. But Ohio One, as the project is known, has faced repeated delays. Completion now isn’t expected until the early 2030s. “I’d be lying if I didn’t say I was a little disappointed,” Mayor Sloan Spalding said.
Local officials remain confident the project will come to fruition, but its struggles show that public-private partnerships, however welcome, can’t be insulated from market forces and politics.
State actors from economic-development groups to Gov. Mike DeWine worked to secure Ohio One. The state gave $2 billion in “public incentives,” according to U.S. Sen. Bernie Moreno, who in September 2025 released a letter demanding Intel prove this “investment” wasn’t a “charade” or even “potential fraud.”
States compete to land such projects in what Greg Lawson, a senior research fellow at the free-market Buckeye Institute, has called an “arms race.” Gov. DeWine speaks in similar terms, saying, “I can’t unilaterally disarm, and I’m damn well not gonna do it.”
No one disputes chips are essential. They’re in everything from consumer products to military hardware. For backers of Ohio One, they are too important for our supply ever to be in doubt. “There are a lot of things that we don’t make in America that we need to make in America. Chips are part of that,” says U.S. Sen. Jon Husted. As lieutenant governor, Mr. Husted played a role in securing the Ohio One deal.
Ohio leaders backed Intel, but the market has favored Nvidia and other chip makers, who took the lead as Intel’s stock fluctuated and its leadership changed.
Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-New York) and a dozen of his most liberal members introduced a bill on Thursday aimed at forcing meatpackers to process only one type of meat. In other words, a company that sells chicken can’t also sell beef. That arbitrary rule would force big firms like Cargill and Tyson Foods to shrink as they sell or spin off different divisions.
Four companies, including two Brazilian-controlled firms, currently process about 80 percent of America’s beef. The Democrats want to give power to the Federal Trade Commission to compel foreign-owned meat companies to divest U.S. assets, and President Donald Trump has made noises about investigating the industry.
Ground beef prices went up 17 percent last year, and Democrats see political upside where Trump senses danger. Yet it’s not market consolidation or dastardly foreigners keeping prices high. Big companies, on average, sell at more competitive price points than a shopper could get directly from a farm.
It’s already a notoriously difficult business. Tyson’s net profit margin last fiscal year was just 0.9 percent. Cargill’s estimated profit margin was just over 2 percent in 2023.
After breaking up the existing industry leaders, the Democratic bill envisions a host of government subsidies — including financial assistance and loan guarantees — to help small businesses acquire and operate meatpacking plants. Yet the real solution is expanding supply, not fragmenting the industry.
Jack Nicastro reports that “California billionaire wealth tax would cost the state $25 billion.” A slice:
In November, Californians will consider a ballot measure to implement a 5 percent wealth tax on billionaires, which proponents say will generate $100 billion in revenue. It turns out the tax would probably cost the Golden State nearly $25 billion.
That’s the result from a new study out of Stanford University’s Hoover Institution, which was published earlier this week. In this study, researchers analyzed the reported and unreported departure of billionaires from the state, as well as flaws in the tax proponents’ modeling, to find that the law would reduce revenue to the state’s coffers.
“Over 100,000 simulations with varying discount rates, wealth tax revenues, and lost income tax revenues associated with departures, we find that 71% of scenarios in which the Act is instituted yields a negative [net present value], signaling the Act would generate a net cost to the state of California,” the researchers wrote in a Thursday Substack post. The “average across these draws,” they say, “is –$24.7 billion.”
“‘Customs does have automated systems to process refunds,’ said David Cohen, a partner at Sandler, Travis and Rosenberg. ‘Yes, the magnitude is unprecedented, but the tariff refund process takes place routinely.'”
They just don’t want to do it.


The capitalist deal is: Let me make profits and I’ll make you rich.
It is just here, I submit, that the ultimate issue is joined, on the question of whether men shall be inviolable persons or as things to be disposed of; it is here that the struggle between barbarism and civilization, between despotism and liberty, has always been fought. Here it must still be fought.
Well, excuse me, but modern economic growth in its global form has done more for workers and the environment than any army of government inspectors, regulators, customs officers, or IRS accountants. We Americans are rich not because of unions or anti-trust or the Occupational Safety and Health Administration but because on the whole we have let capitalism work.
