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Quotation of the Day…

is from pages 200-201 of Johan Norberg’s excellent 2023 book, The Capitalist Manifesto:

Politicians who fund a certain technology steer resources away from the innovation and industry that would otherwise have happened. And why would they know better than millions of financiers, companies, researchers, and consumers what will work?

DBx: Yes. And note that the point here isn’t that private market actors don’t make mistakes. They do, often. But not only do private market actors have powerful incentives to acknowledge their mistakes as quickly as possible (private market actors are, after all, spending their own money), the competition among simultaneously occurring market experiments – that competitive process itself – is a far better source of knowledge than are the ruminations and theories of politicians and pundits about what combinations of resources do, and which do not, improve human well-being.

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Some Links

My intrepid Mercatus Center colleague, Veronique de Rugy, explains “how Trump’s trade war undermines growth, trust, and conservative credibility.” A slice:

But today I want to address another issue – namely, the lies Republicans tell themselves in an attempt to normalize this behavior or dismiss it as a “negotiating tactic.” Trump’s erratic decisions aren’t strategic, they’re destructive. No matter how powerful the presidency has become (and it has grown excessively powerful due to Congress irresponsibly delegating authority), this is an abuse of power. It is not the president’s role to dictate how Apple and other private companies conduct their businesses. Threatening Apple with tariffs unless it relocates manufacturing to the United States is an egregious overreach, harmful to liberty and deeply damaging to the trust required for economic growth.

Trump’s unpredictable behavior undermines trust and economic stability both domestically and internationally. Trading partners increasingly view the U.S. as unreliable and unstable, recognizing that they cannot depend on agreements made by this Administration.

American families and businesses already face inflationary pressures and rising costs, and tariffs worsen these burdens by driving prices higher. Trump’s policies will continue that and no special interest policies like no tax on tips will make up for it.

Republicans who refuse to confront this damaging approach share responsibility for the long-term economic harm inflicted on our economy and nation.

Eric Boehm reports on Trump’s decision to make iPhones more expensive. A slice:

Trump sees himself as the country’s shopkeeper in chief who gets to set prices on all goods sold in America. That’s the sort of central planning that should scare all but the most hardened of socialists. Now, instead of setting prices for broad categories of products—by hiking tariffs on steel, aluminum, and so on—Trump seemingly wants to expand his purview to individual products.

Finally, let’s play with a hypothetical. Imagine that, one year ago, President Joe Biden had woken up in a bad mood, stumbled into the White House briefing room, and shouted into a microphone about a plan to make iPhones more expensive. That would likely put an end to any questions about the president’s mental acuity or his fitness for office. Republicans in Congress would be outraged about the president’s scheme to raise prices on products that Americans need for their daily lives, and maybe they’d even try to stop it from happening.

Why should Trump be treated any differently?

Tom Grennes writes wisely about Trump’s chaotic trade ‘policy.’ A slice:

However, Trump’s primitive method of alternately adding and subtracting tariffs has broader adverse economic effects beyond trade. Policy reversals increase uncertainty for all decision-makers whose costs and benefits are spread over time. His frequent reneging on initial executive decrees reduces his credibility to near zero. By ignoring the role of Congress in setting taxes, the constitutionality of his executive decrees is being widely challenged.

Wall Street Journal columnist Holman Jenkins justifiably complains that “from Trump tariffs to Biden and Obama electric vehicles, shockingly little thinking is going on.” Two slices:

The Trump administration rolled out a justification for its reciprocal tariffs that, as even a high school economics student knew, made no sense. Is this now, in fact, par for the course?

After all, Joe Biden’s signature climate law was similarly senseless. Three outside groups were dredged up to argue disingenuously that it would reduce emissions, leaving out the obvious, known ways subsidizing certain U.S. consumers to use less fossil fuel would cause others to use more.

These estimates were then cited (not endorsed) by the White House’s once-respected budget office in an unsigned, undated handout.

Voilà, Mr. Biden or his string pullers got what they wanted: an official-looking document upholding the false intuition that subsidizing green energy helps climate change.

…..

From Larry Summers comes the theory that Peronist hucksterism from Latin America has gradually crept north.

I’ve toyed with my own idea: Our elites have already quietly internalized the U.S. as a future failed state such that lesser boondoggles (like EVs) don’t matter.

One pattern, however, is faithfully replicated year after year. When Donald Trump or even a normal Republican talks policy nonsense, the media go ape whereas Democrats are fawned over.

George Leef reviews Nicholas Wolfinger’s new book, Professors Speak Out: The Truth About Campus Investigations. A slice:

It’s easy for any disaffected individual to lodge a complaint against a professor for a host of vague offenses, such as “discrimination,” “harassment,” or some other vaporous misdeed. The complaint then triggers procedures that are extremely one-sided, onerous, and potentially career-ending. As Wolfinger states, “An army of digital soldiers now stands ready to target faculty members,” and university officials usually take their side.

In the book’s 18 chapters, we have cases of left-leaning professors in the crosshairs of conservatives and of right-leaning professors under attack from “progressives.” The common thread is that people who didn’t like them were able to abuse the system to hound and damage them, purely for vengeance.

Jack Butler reports that many U.S. public-health bureaucrats are so opposed to the scientific method that they refuse even to listen to a speech by Jay Bhattacharya.

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Quotation of the Day…

… is from my late, great colleague Walter Williams’s January 6th, 2011, column, “Settled ‘facts’ that just ain’t so“:

U.S. manufacturing is going through the same kind of labor-saving technological innovation as agriculture. In 1790, farmers were 90 percent of the U.S. labor force. By 1900, only about 41 percent of our labor force was employed in agriculture. By 2008, less than 3 percent of Americans were employed in agriculture. What would you have had Congress do in the face of this precipitous loss of agricultural jobs? Should Congress have outlawed all of the technological advances and machinery that cost millions of agricultural jobs and made our farmers the world’s most productive? Also, had Congress done something to save those agricultural jobs, where would we have gotten the workers to produce the millions of things we enjoy that weren’t even around in 1790? We would have been poorer.

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Complete Lunacy

This morning – upon announcing his threat to increase tariffs on imports from the EU punitive taxes on Americans who buy goods from Europe – Trump tweeted this:

Their powerful Trade Barriers, Vat Taxes, ridiculous Corporate Penalties, Non-Monetary Trade Barriers, Monetary Manipulations, unfair and unjustified lawsuits against Americans Companies, and more, have led to a Trade Deficit with the U.S. of more than $250,000,000 a year, a number which is totally unacceptable. Our discussions with them are going nowhere!

Sigh.

Trump’s belief that the concept of a U.S. trade deficit with an individual country or particular region of the world is economically meaningful is proof positive of his deep economic ignorance – an ignorance that would be hilarious if it weren’t motiving its politically powerful possessor to inflict huge damage on his fellow citizens and the world economy.

Although the example that I’m about to give is an old saw among economists, it’s worthwhile repeating: If you fall for Trump’s argument – if you think that his argument here deserves credit – if you cannot see that it is completely and unsalvagably bonkers – then you should stop trading with your dentist and your supermarket because you have large and growing trade deficits with each. In Trump-world, they are ripping you off!

Or rather, you have large and growing trade deficits with your dentist and supermarket assuming that you are not employed by your dentist and your supermarket – in which case, they have large and growing trade deficits with you and you are ripping them off. In Trump-world, they should fire you!

If even one-tenth of the ignorance that Trump displays about economics were displayed by a Democrat or a ‘progressive’ pundit, Trump fans would be the first to (rightly) criticize that Democrat or ‘progressive’ for his or her inexcusable ignorance. Yet with Trump, Trump fans allow themselves – sometimes even proudly – to be duped into excusing his lunatic trade policies.

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Here’s another letter to my long-time “proud Trump man” correspondent, Nolan McKinney.

Mr. McKinney:

You and many of the commenters on Phil Gramm’s and my piece in yesterday’s Wall Street Journal – a piece documenting that American voters throughout history haven’t been kind to political parties that impose steep tariff hikes – upbraid us for (in your words) “refusing to see Trump using tariffs to get governments to the bargaining table to lower tariffs.”

Several different features of Trump’s tariff ‘policy’ and pronouncements make your interpretation of Trump’s motives specious, including the fact that Trump refuses to use an existing bargaining table – the one at the WTO – that has long been in place for that very purpose.

But just this morning Trump provided yet more proof that he’s a dyed-in-the-wool protectionist with no interest in promoting free trade globally. His just-announced threat to raise tariffs on Apple products isn’t aimed at other governments but, rather, at a private American company for the purpose of bullying that company into doing more of its production in the U.S.

You and other people who, with all due respect, gullibly swallowed the line, peddled especially by Treasury secretary Bessent, that Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs are really an ingenious bargaining tool to pressure other government to reduce trade barriers surely must now finally see that that line is ridiculous.

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

On the evening of June 3rd, former Sen. Phil Gramm and I will be at AEI’s Washington headquarters to discuss our new book, The Triumph of Economic Freedom. Please attend if you can.

My intrepid Mercatus Center colleague, Veronique de Rugy, reflects on the downgrade of U.S. government debt. Two slices:

America’s debt-addicted government just lost its triple-A credit rating from Moody’s, as it previously had from fellow rating agencies S&P and Fitch. Many in Washington shrugged the move off as minor or as unfair treatment of the Trump administration. The truth is more sobering: a flashing red signal that the United States is no longer seen as a “perfect” credit risk and that politicians should stop pretending economic growth alone can bail us out.

…..

The lesson from Moody’s, and from history, is that America cannot borrow its way to prosperity. That was former Treasury Secretary Andrew Mellon’s view in the 1920s, and it remains true today. Mellon quietly prepared for debt defaults by building budget surpluses, knowing that while international repayments might fail, American citizens still had to be paid. That was back when Treasury secretaries respected taxpayers.

National Review‘s Charles Cooke disabuses those conservatives who fancy that Trump differs from any of the countless other reckless-spending and economically clueless politicians who have had a hand (unfortunately) in crafting American economic policy. A slice:

To those who point out these shortcomings, an exasperated rejoinder is offered. “But,” the bill’s apologists will say, “given the nature of the party’s coalition, and the narrow majorities that it enjoys in Congress, this is really all that the GOP could do.”

This, in part, is true. But it is also extremely annoying to hear, given that, for nearly a decade now, Donald Trump’s takeover of the GOP has been explained and defended on the grounds that only he could put an end to the “failure” of the “establishment” to “fight.” Ask any MAGA-splainer for an account of the pre-Trump Republican Party, and you will be told some variation of the same tale: That, for decades, the GOP was run by a bunch of lily-livered, cocktail-party-loving moderates, who, despite saying all the right things come election season, invariably refused to make good on their promises. Sure, those people talked about cutting spending and repealing Obamacare and reforming welfare and limiting the ability of the progressive-run blue states to use the Treasury to prop up their failed models. But, when it came to it, they never actually delivered — and, worse still, they reserved the worst of their opprobrium for the right-wing hardliners who were trying to engender change. This being so, they ask, can it really be any surprise that Donald Trump was selected as a corrective?

I have never found this narrative persuasive. But now? Now, I think it’s a bad joke. Throughout the process that led to the House’s passage of the BBB, the Trump-led GOP has behaved in precisely the same manner as did the old guard that it claims to disdain. In his recent address to Congress, Trump promised that, “in the near future, I want to do what has not been done in 24 years: balance the federal budget.” And yet, just two months later, Trump did exactly the opposite, demanding the passage of a bill that massively increases our annual budget deficits, instructing Congress not to “f*** around with” Obamacare’s Medicaid expansion, proposing all manner of arbitrary and frivolous giveaways, and publicly attacking the handful of concerned Republicans who are serious about fiscal discipline.

Reason‘s Jack Nicastro is rightfully harsh in his criticism of Trump-appointed FTC commissioner Mark Meador. A slice:

Meador wondered aloud whether nonprofit employees and academics who advocate “for the interests of certain corporations or mergers in their white papers and their op-eds without ever disclosing that they’re being paid to do so” may also be guilty of deceptive practices. He did not state that the FTC would bring enforcement actions against academics but said it’s “worth investigating.”

While Meador may think “it’s an interesting question” whether he may prosecute his ideological opponents, the Supreme Court has already provided an answer. Eugene Volokh, professor emeritus at the University of California, Los Angeles School of Law, understands the ruling in NAACP v. Alabama (1958) as holding that, “when it comes to speech that is neither commercial advertising for a product…nor specifically election-related, broader First Amendment precedents would indeed preclude such disclosure requirements.”

Speaking of Mark Meador, my GMU and Mercatus Center colleague Tyler Cowen describes Meador – quite rightly – as “just flat out terrible.”

Zach Weissmueller and Liz Wolfe talk with Middlebury College economist Gary Winslett about the movement of U.S. manufacturing to the American south.

Farmers need free markets, not tariffs and welfare.”

Who’d a-thunk it: “Rare earth” materials are found in places outside of China. (HT Scott Lincicome)

Wall Street Journal columnist Jason Riley is correct: “Maryland Gov. Wes Moore did fellow Democrats a favor last week when he vetoed a bill creating a commission to study slavery reparations. He’s taking flak from the left, but the party ought to be thanking him.” Another slice:

Following passage of the 1965 Voting Rights Act, black leaders became increasingly convinced that political power was the key to upward mobility. Beginning in the late 1960s, black mayors were elected in big cities with large black populations—Cleveland, Detroit, Philadelphia, Washington—yet political integration didn’t improve outcomes for the black poor.

Sharpe James, the former mayor of Newark, N.J., who died on May 11, was a typical beneficiary of this strategy. James was first elected in 1986, and when he left office in 2006 after a record five terms, heavily black Newark’s unemployment rate was twice the national average, while the median household income was half of the statewide figure.

The three largest cities in the country—New York, Los Angeles and Chicago—have black mayors. If the black underclass has uniquely benefited from this arrangement, it isn’t obvious. Black people in all three cities continue to lag academically and economically and remain the primary victims of violent crime. Racial disparities have persisted under white politicians as well, so the takeaway isn’t that black people should steer clear of politics. This history, however, does highlight the pitfalls of electing black officials who are committed to racial favoritism, which is divisive and counterproductive.

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