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Here’s the abstract of John Veroneau’s new Maine Law Review paper, U.S. Trade Law and Policy at a Crossroads.

The past decade has witnessed significant changes in U.S. international trade policy. In his first presidential term, Donald J. Trump moved the United States away from long-standing policies of lowering trade barriers to facilitate global commerce and replaced them with a more restrictive version not seen since the early twentieth century. President Trump’s more trade-restrictive policies were largely extended by his successor, President Joseph R. Biden. The first year of President Trump’s second term has indicated a strong desire to restrict imports further in an attempt to create U.S. manufacturing jobs and reduce reliance on Chinese imports. This Article seeks to (a) situate recent changes in U.S. trade law and policy in a historical context, (b) argue that free trade policies are more consistent with America’s traditions of individual liberty than protectionist ones, (c) argue that free trade policies on balance better serve U.S. economic interests, (d) recommend changes to U.S. trade policies to enable their benefits to be more broadly shared, and (e) argue that changes in certain non-trade policies are needed to address real and perceived problems with post-World War II trade policies.

Vance Ginn reports from last week’s AIER conference, in DC, on trade.

In his contribution to a symposium, Benn Steil describes Trump’s tariffs as “made in America, paid in America.” A slice:

According to a recent study by New York Federal Reserve Bank economists, Americans bore 94 percent of the tariff cost in August 2025. In contrast, foreign exporters only bore 6 percent of the tariff incidence in the form of lower import prices. By the end of the year, that figure was up to about 14 percent—indicating that U.S. importers were having some modest success passing on a portion of their tariff burden to foreign suppliers.

According to the Yale Budget Lab, the pass-through of tariff costs to U.S. consumers has increased over time. By the end of 2025, it was about 76 percent, and as high as 100 percent for many consumer durables. At his press conference on March 18, Fed Chair Jay Powell said that tariffs were adding between half a percent and three quarters of a percent to the inflation rate. This accounts for much of the Fed’s overshoot of its 2 percent Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) inflation target. Estimated using another standard inflation metric—the Consumer Price Index (CPI)—the tariff contribution is slightly higher, averaging 0.87 percentage points in February.

Scott Lincicome explains that “like his tariffs on goods, Trump’s huge tax on overseas talent will harm the economy and fail its stated objective.” Two slices:

Last September, the Trump administration imposed a staggering $100,000 fee for new H-1B visas via presidential proclamation—up from just a couple hundred dollars previously. Subsequent guidance from the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services clarified that the $100,000 charge applies only to new H-1B petitions filed on or after September 21, 2025, for workers outside the United States and lacking a valid H-1B visa (so-called “initial employment” petitions). The fee does not apply to renewals, extensions, amendments, or visa holders already here and switching over to an H-1B—a significant carve-out that limits the fees’ damage but certainly doesn’t eliminate it. The fee also must be paid before a petition is filed, with no guarantee of a refund even if the application is denied. (This hints at a broader problem with many immigration-related fees today, as my Cato colleague David Bier just documented.

As one immigration lawyer put it: “The easiest way to think of this fee is as a tariff on the importation of labor.” The analogy couldn’t be more apt.

For starters, the fee’s rollout was a chaotic mess. The proclamation dropped on a Friday evening and was so vague that it created immediate panic among H-1B holders and their employers, with some confused workers demanding to deplane flights out of the U.S. or cutting trips abroad short to rush back here before the Sunday deadline. Clarifications about the fee’s coverage and implementation tumbled out over the following days, and they continued for weeks thereafter, generating needless legal costs and uncertainty and disrupting hiring plans for thousands of U.S. employers.

Those problems, unfortunately, were just the tip of the iceberg.

The most obvious issue is that, contrary to White House claims in September that “all big companies” were on board with the new fee and that it’d raise lots of money, almost no one has actually been willing to pay it. As Bloomberg Law reported in late February, in fact, only 70 U.S. employers have thus far paid the fee for just 85 workers—an 87 percent decline in these H-1B petitions versus the same period last year, representing thousands of workers not getting hired.

…..

Big companies, meanwhile, have more options than the little guys do, and that includes moving work offshore. As we’ve discussed here, research consistently finds that large firms respond to U.S. restrictions on H-1B visas not by hiring more Americans but instead by expanding their operations in India, Canada, and elsewhere. History appears to be repeating, with news of large U.S. firms in tech/AI, retail, finance, pharmaceuticals, and other R&D-heavy industries responding to the new visa fee by freezing or restructuring U.S.-based hiring and by increasing headcounts in India, Canada, and elsewhere. Increasing the cost of foreign hiring doesn’t automatically increase demand for domestic hiring, and it appears we’re relearning this lesson again.

Michael Bahnsen is correct: “The very prosperity created by capitalism can obscure its benefits, fueling discontent even when we’re much better off.”

The Washington Post‘s Editorial Board warns against government subsidization of sports stadiums. A slice:

The usual argument for stadium subsidies is that they bring new economic activity to cities and help create jobs and revitalize neighborhoods. This argument is usually specious; football stadiums are empty most days of the year, and the money people spend at stadiums probably would have been spent at other businesses anyway. Economic research consistently finds that stadium subsidies are terrible public investments.

Arnold Kling encourages us to think in terms of the moral-dyad model. A slice:

If you think of Meta and Google as unfeeling, all-powerful agents and you think of the woman as helpless and hurt, then you are seeing the case in Moral Dyad terms. In my opinion, the Moral Dyad is the most under-rated model in all of social psychology. I think everyone should know about this model, which is why I am writing yet another essay about it.

The Moral Dyad model was propounded by Daniel Wegner and Kurt Gray in their book The Mind Club, published in 2016. (I reviewed their book here.) Their research sought to determine how we view the minds of other human beings.

What they found was that there are two clusters of beliefs that we hold about other humans. One cluster concerns agency. We think of other humans as having the ability to make choices, form plans, and work toward goals.

The other cluster concerns feelings. We think of other humans as having the capacity to experience sensations. We are especially inclined to notice when other humans feel pain.

Gene Healy makes clear that “there are far too few checks left on executive power.”

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Quotation of the Day…

… is from page 125 of Thomas Sowell’s 1999 book, Barbarians Inside the Gates:

Ironically, both affirmative action and the argument for genetic inferiority of blacks use the same logic. They assume that statistical results not explainable by obvious gross differences must be explainable by the underlying factor they prefer to believe in.

DBx: Indeed. Affirmative action and other ‘woke’ policies are as well-grounded in science and logic as are astrology and eugenics.

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Some Links

Pierre Lemieux looks in detail at three new pieces of research into industrial policy. A slice:

The second area of concern that [Dani] Rodrik sees illuminated by mercantilism is the backlash against globalization. The so-called “China shock” in the United States (and other advanced countries) from the increase of imports from China between 1999 and 2011 led to “negative externalities” for “society at large” whoever “society at large” is—and eventually to the rise of the “rightwing populist movement.” I agree that this last development is worrisome, as would be the rise of a left-wing populist movement, but any industrial policy that could have prevented this economic adjustment would have entailed a very high cost in terms of general prosperity.

Consider the job losses attributed to the China shock. Change and creative destruction are a permanent feature of a free and dynamic economy responding to consumer demand. It is estimated that of the 5.8 million manufacturing jobs lost in the United States during that period, between 1 million and (at most) 2.4 million were due to the China shock. During the same period, so many new jobs were created in other industries that the net number of jobs increased by more than 6 million. Moreover, it is estimated that most of the decrease in manufacturing jobs was due to technological progress, automation, and higher productivity; it simply took many fewer workers to manufacture the same amount of goods as in generations past. An industrial policy to stop that would have hit other workers in industries not favored by the government.

John Puri wonders who benefitted from Trump’s tariffs punitive taxes on Americans’ purchases of imports. A slice:

When we broaden our view of employment to include all blue-collar jobs, not just manufacturing, the picture is even worse. Blue-collar employment numbers turned negative in 2025 after years of gains, driven by sudden losses in transportation and warehousing and stagnation in construction jobs.

Scott Lincicome shares this quotation from The Economist:

“Since Mr Trump took charge, most of the comments from manufacturers that ISM has published along with its surveys have mentioned tariffs. Not one has been positive. Many of the unpublished ones are more forceful still.”

The Wall Street Journal – relying on new research by Stephen Rose and Scott Winship – reports that, in the United States, “ranks of higher earners have grown markedly over last 50 years, while lower rungs of middle class have shrunk.” A slice:

America’s middle class is becoming wealthier as more families scale the economic ladder into higher-earning groups. New research shows that the ranks of the affluent have grown markedly over the last 50 years or so, while the lower rungs of the middle class have shrunk.

In 2024, about 31% of Americans were part of the upper middle class, up from about 10% in 1979, according to a report released this year by the right-leaning American Enterprise Institute.

There is no single, standard definition of middle class, or upper middle class, and what counts as a hefty income in one city can feel paltry in another. The AEI report, by Stephen Rose and Scott Winship, classified a family of three earning $133,000 to $400,000 in 2024 dollars as upper middle class. Households earning more were categorized as rich. The analysis looked just at incomes, not assets such as stocks or real estate.

Arnold Kling writes insightfully about the role of financial intermediaries – and about some economists’ excessively simplified assumptions that hide reality’s reasons for such intermediaries. A slice:

What if individuals do not all have visibility into the risks of investment projects? In that case, I argue that firms and banks can add value as financial intermediaries. Individuals want to hold short-term, riskless assets. A firm that funds a data center can issue bonds that will pay off in most circumstances. This concentrates the risks of the data center project in the hands of shareholders, allowing some of the investment in the project to involve lower-risk bonds.

A bank can buy the bonds of the data center firm as well as debt from other firms. By owning debt with different maturities, the bank can issue short-term deposits to individuals and be able to handle occasional withdrawals by depositors.

The way that I like to put it is that households want to hold short-term, riskless assets. Borrowers, like the data center builder, want to issue long-term, risky liabilities. Financial intermediaries accommodate this by taking on long-term risky assets and issuing short-term, riskless liabilities. Intermediaries achieve this by being very selective in choosing their asset portfolios, by managing assets carefully, and by diversifying their assets and liabilities. A risky, long-term project like a data center ends up financed in part with riskless, short-term bank deposits.

The Editorial Board of the Washington Post reports on the success, at least so far, of Javier Milei’s freeing of many of Argentina’s markets. A slice:

The share of Argentines living in poverty was 28 percent at the end of 2025. That’s no small improvement. Since he entered the Casa Rosada in December 2023, one of the biggest criticisms of Milei’s free market agenda has been that poverty figures remained stubbornly high. Thenational poverty rate peakedvat 53 percent in the first half of 2024, but it’s been plunging since.

The self-proclaimed libertarian president has made a priority of tackling hyperinflation to kick-start economic growth. His reforms included slashing state subsidies and dramatically reducing the public-sector payroll to create Argentina’s first full-year fiscal surplus in effectively 123 years. Annual inflation fell from a staggering 200 percent when he took office to 33 percent on the year to February.

Formerly an economist — and a disciple of Milton Friedman and Adam Smith — Milei has long understood that socialism leads to poverty and capitalism leads to prosperity. He moved swiftly after his surprise win to break the socialist hold on Argentina, taking up the chainsaw he wielded on the campaign trail against a bloated bureaucratic state.

Chris Jacobs describes the effects Obamacare as “disastrous.” Here’s his conclusion:

After 16 years of seeing the failure of government-supervised healthcare in action, Democrats still want to convince voters that more spending, regulation, and government control will somehow solve the problems created by just those things.

Chelsea Follett reminds us of how very bad, by today’s standards, were the good old days in New York City.

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Quotation of the Day…

… is from page 162 of Richard Epstein’s magnificent 1995 volume, Simple Rules for a Complex World:

The entire regulatory process [of wrongful dismissal of workers] shows the constant preoccupation with the direct effects of decisions on named persons, without regard to the vastly greater indirect effects on other persons similarly situated. The effort to preserve a single job for one discrete, named individual results in the nonformation of numerous other jobs for other people.

DBx: Yes – or results instead in reduced pay for all workers covered by this regulatory doctrine.

The particular setting in which Epstein here warns of the unseen ill consequences of efforts to achieve a good seen result is an example of a more general phenomenon. Protectionism, for example. often wins the day politically because it saves the jobs of seen workers, while workers who, as a result of the protectionism, lose jobs or suffer lower wages – not to mention the consumers who pay higher prices – are unseen and, hence, ignored.

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On Bernie Sanders on AI

Here’s a letter to the Wall Street Journal.

Editor:

Seldom do I agree with Bernie Sanders, but I share his conviction that “the future of AI must be decided by the American people” (“AI Is a Threat to Everything the American People Hold Dear,” April 4). Mr. Sanders errs, however, in his preferred means of achieving this outcome. The senator wants control over AI’s future to be monopolized by himself and other government officials – meaning, he wants to deny to hundreds of millions of ordinary Americans the ability to vote with their own dollars on which particular features of AI, and which specific AI vendors, deserve support and which don’t.

In free markets, unlike in political elections, candidates – that is, suppliers – need not first win party support, and they may enter the contest to win public approval whenever they wish. Voting is daily and continuous, not once every few years. Further, voting in markets is done with one’s own, not other people’s, dollars, and is quickly followed for each voter by personal feedback that’s concentrated and reliable. Selection in markets allows the blooming of as many flowers as consumers wish, with no individuals forced to patronize firms they dislike. In contrast, even under the most ideal circumstances, selection by government denies satisfaction to voters with minority preferences, obliging everyone to deal only with the majority-preferred ‘winners.’

The only way to ensure that the future of AI is decided by the American people is to have that decision made in free markets unsullied by what the great economist Thomas Sowell calls the “rampaging presumptions” of politicians and bureaucrats.

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

Writing about the recent jury verdict against Google and Meta, George Will warns that “diluting democracy’s foundational belief in individual agency opens the door to governmental overreach.” A slice:

The plaintiff blamed large corporations for her adolescent sadness, body dysmorphia (dismay about her appearance) and other consequences of her obsessive consumption of the corporations’ products. Such blaming flows from this toxic idea: Individual agency is so flimsy and attenuated that accountability for an individual’s behavior must be located beyond the individual. This infantilizing premise leads to paternalism, then to domestic authoritarianism.

If human beings are soft wax, passively shaped by the promptings of the culture in which they are situated, then controlling the culture becomes an imperative and encompassing political project. Government must guarantee the wholesomeness, as government defines this, of everything said, read, heard, thought and taught.

A few years ago, a Senate committee approved legislation empowering government officials to force social media platforms to remove material that could “harm” minors. Harm, however, has become an elastic and metastasizing concept: Minors are said to be harmed by content that makes them “anxious.” Reducing the anxiety of adolescents will keep government busy.

Bryan Riley looks back on the year following “Liberation Day.” A slice:

The manufacturing sector suffered. According to Trump’s Liberation Day executive order, “The decline of U.S. manufacturing capacity threatens the U.S. economy in other ways, including through the loss of manufacturing jobs.” Here’s what happened next:

This, too, from Bryan Riley: A twitter thread challenging U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer’s inept attempt to defend Trump’s “Liberation Day” punitive taxes on Americans’ purchases of imports. (HT Scott Lincicome)

Also reporting on the economic damage done by Trump’s protectionism is Richard Stern.

The Tax Foundation’s Erica York and Emily Kraschel assess the consequences of “Liberation Day.” A slice:

President Trump predicted tariffs would “direct hundreds of billions of dollars and even trillions of dollars into our Treasury to strengthen our economy and pay down debt.” And his advisors, such as Peter Navarro, estimated that the new tariffs would bring in $600 billion a year.

The Liberation Day tariffs undoubtedly raised taxes for the US Treasury—but far short of what the Trump administration predicted. Before the Court ruled against the IEEPA tariffs in February, they generated approximately $166 billion in tariff payments. Altogether, tariffs brought in $264 billion in customs duties from January through December 2025, accounting for 4.9 percent of total tax receipts for the calendar year. The net revenue generated by the tariffs is less, because tariffs mechanically reduce how much revenue is raised by income and payroll taxes. Though the tariffs increased tax revenues while they were in effect, federal debt has continued to grow under President Trump.

Here’s a short piece that I wrote about Adam Smith’s Inquiry Into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations. A slice:

A second reason why it’s mistaken to conclude that Smith celebrated greed is that, when he identified actual instances of greed, he vehemently opposed it.

Smith despised above all the special privileges granted by the government. Most famously, he criticized producers who seek government protection from foreign competition. Because protectionism allows producers to extract more than their fair share from consumers, Smith denounced this greed with (as he described it) “a very violent attack.”

Smith understood that what people earn in competitive markets is just and honorable, even though motivated by self-interest. He also understood that grasping for more by seeking special privileges from the government is greedy and, thus, unjust and dishonorable.

David Henderson reviews Phil Gramm’s and my 2025 book, The Triumph of Economic Freedom. A slice:

One of the myths commonplace in the past few years is that free trade, especially free trade with China, has “hollowed out” out US manufacturing. Proponents of that view are numerous on the left and on the right. What these proponents often point to is the substantial decline in the number of jobs in manufacturing. Between June 1979, when the number of manufacturing workers reached its peak, and October 2024, the number of workers employed in manufacturing fell by 34 percent. But, note Gramm and Boudreaux, that doesn’t mean that we lost manufacturing. They write, “In inflation-adjusted dollars, manufacturing value added reached its all-time high in the second quarter of 2024.” This level, they note, was 34 percent higher than its level when China joined the World Trade Organization in 2000.

The reason output rose while employment fell is that worker productivity rose a lot. With more-productive workers, fewer workers are needed for a given output. This phenomenon is worldwide. Since the early 1970s, manufacturing employment as a share of total employment has fallen in Australia, Canada, France, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, and the UK. This has even happened more recently in China.

The “culprit” is not free trade. The authors cite a 2017 study by Ball State University economists Michael Hicks and Srikant Devaraj that found that about 88 percent of recent job losses in US manufacturing were due to productivity improvements rather than to imports.

What about the idea that in various trade agreements “we” have reduced our tariff rates more than our trading partners have? The opposite is true. Under NAFTA, the authors note, Mexico’s government reduced its tariffs on US imports from about 12.5 percent to zero, Canada’s tariffs on US imports fell from about 4.2 percent to zero, and US tariffs on imports from Canada and Mexico fell from 2.7 percent to zero. Moreover, after China joined the WTO, Beijing cut its average tariff rate from 14.6 percent in 2000 to 4.7 percent in 2014. The US government didn’t change its tariff rate on imports from China.

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Quotation of the Day…

… is from page 335 of the 5th edition (2015) of Thomas Sowell’s Basic Economics:

The fact that economic consequences take time to unfold has enabled government officials in many countries to have successful political careers by creating current benefits at future costs. Government-financed pension plans are perhaps a classic example, since great numbers of voters are pleased to be covered by government-provided pension plans, while only a few economists and actuaries point out that there is not enough wealth being set aside to cover the promised benefits – but it will be decades before the economists and actuaries are proved right.

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Some Links

On the first anniversary of “Liberation Day” – which was yesterday (April 2nd) – Jason Furman looks back on Trump’s tariffs and reports that these punitive taxes on Americans’ purchases of imports were unsuccessful even on their own terms. Two slices:

A year ago President Trump declared “Liberation Day,” unleashing the highest tariffs in more than 80 years in an attempt to end a system under which, he argued, “foreign leaders have stolen our jobs, foreign cheaters have ransacked our factories and foreign scavengers have torn apart our once-beautiful American dream.” To prove that he was turning the tide, he offered one impressive statistic: In one month, he said, “We created 10,000 — already, in a few weeks — new manufacturing jobs.”

Perhaps Mr. Trump should have knocked on wood because as more information became available, the Bureau of Labor Statistics revised that number downward. In a full accounting, during the first full month of his second term, the United States lost 2,000 manufacturing jobs. Losses continued almost every month, totaling 100,000 manufacturing jobs since January 2025.

…..

When governments try to reverse the trend, they mostly succeed only in shifting jobs from one industry to another rather than expanding manufacturing overall. Tariffs on steel, for example, may protect jobs in steel production, but they cost jobs in downstream industries such as automobiles by raising costs and undermining global competitiveness.

Subsidies for targeted industries — Mr. Biden’s preferred approach, particularly for microchips and green energy — have similar trade-offs. They help the favored industries but they also drive up construction and equipment costs across the board, making it harder for companies in other arenas to compete. So instead of creating more jobs overall, the subsidized industries just crowd out unsubsidized ones.

Efforts to revive manufacturing are rooted in nostalgia. Once upon a time, manufacturing jobs provided a reliable pathway to the middle class, offering a wage premium to workers without a college degree. In 1970,roughly 80 percent of manufacturing workers had no more than a high school education. Today that figure is closer to 40 percent.

Manufacturing jobs also used to pay more than nonmanufacturing jobs with similar skill requirements. Not anymore: Today people in nonmanagerial manufacturing jobs average $30 an hour as compared with $32 for truck drivers, $33 for wholesale trade workers and $38 for construction workers. Trying to push more people into manufacturing jobs is therefore more likely to harm the middle class than help it.

Also unimpressed with the economic consequences of Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs is Reason‘s Jack Nicastro. A slice:

Unfortunately for manufacturers, things could get worse before they get better. After his reciprocal tariffs were voided, Trump doubled down on his protectionist policies by levying more duties under a different statute. In some cases, these tariffs, which will expire in July, are even higher than the ones they replaced. Kacie Wright, one of the owners of Houghton Horns, a musical instrument retailer based in Keller, Texas, tells Reason her business was “paying a flat 15% on everything from the European Union” under the old regime, but is now charged a total of 16.5 percent.

Clark Packard justifiably calls April 2nd, 2025, “a day of economic lunacy, not liberation.” A slice:

Earlier today, my Cato colleagues Scott Lincicome, Alfredo Carrillo Obregon, and Chad Smitson published a terrific blog post providing data and analysis on what the tariffs have produced over the last year. It is not a pretty picture. They document a lobbying bonanza driven by companies desperate to secure carveouts, which helps explain why the supposedly sweeping global tariff regime has become riddled with exemptions. Trade policy uncertainty has increased dramatically. The US tariff system has grown significantly more complex and opaque. Rather than isolating China, the tariffs have accelerated a countertrend: other countries deepening trade and investment ties, including China, with each other as a way to reduce their exposure to erratic American trade policy, with tariffs changing more than 50 times in the last year, according to the Tax Foundation (rate increases, rate cuts, exemptions, inclusions, pauses, etc). Research has shown that American consumers, individuals and firms, absorbed about 90–95 percent of the tariffs’ cost, despite the administration’s repeated statements to the contrary.

Jacob Sullum reports that “Trump’s mercurial, constantly changing import taxes took American businesses on a wild ride.”

Eric Boehm argues that “a year After ‘Liberation Day,’ Trump’s tariffs will never be legitimate without a vote in Congress.”

My intrepid Mercatus Center colleague, Veronique de Rugy, decries the World Bank’s endorsement of industrial policy. A slice:

Industrial policy refers to government officials channeling resources to particular industries that the market would not. Arguments like national security or protecting “strategic” industries from competitors are often used to justify the policy. Whatever one thinks of these excuses, industrial policy is funded by taxpayers when the chosen instrument is subsidies, funded by consumers when the tool is tariffs, and always funded by the other domestic firms quietly crowded out as capital flows toward their politically favored competitors.

Every dollar directed by bureaucratic decree is a dollar that’s no longer directed by people spending their money on what most deserves it. Which, of course, is what makes markets work.

To be clear, the World Bank’s reversal wasn’t because a new generation of economists finally cracked open the historical record and discovered that state-led industrialization works. It’s because the World Bank’s most powerful shareholders, the United States and Western Europe, turned toward openly and aggressively practicing industrial policy.

With a cascade of green industrial subsidies during the Biden and Obama administrations, and protectionist tariffs and “golden shares” under the Trump administration, it became impossible to lecture developing countries about the dangers of letting governments pick winning businesses. In other words, the intellectual reversal followed the political reversal, not the other way around.

Jason Sorens tweets: (HT Scott Lincicome)

The tariffs failed, period. Investors know it. Economists know it. The American people know it. The only people who don’t know it are a few holdouts in the White House and @oren_cass.

Scott Winship warns of a prominent protectionist pundit’s recklessness with data.

My Mercatus Center colleague Jack Salmon explains why Jason Hickel’s “case against economic freedom doesn’t hold up.” A slice:

In 2024 sociology professor Tibor Rutar checked the robustness of these findings and analyzed additional sources and data that Hickel had not. Rutar concludes:

“The data mostly do not support the part of the critical narrative that suggests the spread of capitalist economic institutions was calamitous for living standards. Instead, they mostly corroborate a narrative, according to which living standards were poorer before the transition to capitalism and started improving afterwards”.

Before even considering causal empirics, correlational data is quite suggestive of what we already know about economic freedom and standards of living. Ample correlational data is available courtesy of the Fraser Institute’s Economic Freedom of the World report.

In countries with greater economic freedom, citizens enjoy substantially higher incomes. Those in the freest 25% of countries earn, on average, about 6.2 times as much as those in the least free.

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Quotation of the Day…

… is from page 195 of Arnold Kling‘s excellent 2004 book, Learning Economics:

Outsourcing is the basis of all economic activity. Every time we trade in the market instead of doing something ourselves, we are outsourcing.

DBx: Yes.

And the burden of persuasion lies heavily on those persons who insist that the economics of Jones’s outsourcing of tasks to persons outside of the political jurisdiction in which Jones lives differs categorically from Jones’s outsourcing of tasks to person within the same political jurisdiction in which Jones lives.

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“Liberation Day,” One Year Later

Just after the daily close of financial markets on April 2nd, 2025, President Donald Trump announced a series of high hikes in tariffs – that is, a series of high hikes in punitive taxes on Americans’ purchases of imports – that, had these tariff hikes been announced the day before, the announcement would have been dismissed as an April Fools stunt.

Financial futures immediately tanked, and on April 3rd, 2025, the major indices all registered huge losses, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average losing 1,679.39 points (a four-percent loss), the S&P 500 index dropping by 274.45 points (almost a five percent loss), and the NASDAQ shedding 1,050.44 points (a six-percent loss). Within days, the White House announced a delay in the implementation of most of these tariffs.

Challenges to the legality of these tariffs – which were imposed under the 1977 International Emergency Economic Powers Act (“IEEPA”) – were quickly filed. These challenges were successful in the lower courts. But the risk of these tariffs becoming permanent remained until, on February 20th, 2026 – in the Learning Resources case – the U.S. Supreme Court ruled 6-3 that the administration’s use of IEEPA to impose these tariffs was unlawful. (And of course, very soon after this court ruling, the Trump administration announced its attempt to reimpose the tariffs under different statutes.)

In today’s Wall Street Journal, former U.S. Senator Phil Gramm (R-TX) and I look back on the past year and offer evidence that, contrary to Trump administration’s assertions, there is no evidence that these tariffs were a boon to the American economy. Quite the contrary. A slice:

Domestic investment also grew more slowly in 2025. Real gross private domestic investment last year grew by only 2% after growing in 2024 by 3% and 4.4% in 2017. As the global trade diversion makes our trading partners less reliant on U.S. markets and reduces our trade leverage, many of the verbal promises to invest in America are unlikely to materialize. Promised foreign investments that do materialize, being the result of political pressure and not of market forces, will further divert American resources into less-productive uses.

Real U.S. gross domestic product grew by only 2.1% in 2025, compared with 2.8% in 2024 and 2.5% in 2017. It is therefore unsurprising that job growth in 2025, at 0.5%, was slower than job growth of 1.2% in 2024 and 1.6% in 2017. Importantly, given Mr. Trump’s fixation on manufacturing, in 2025 the pace of losing manufacturing jobs accelerated to 1.2%, faster than the decline in 2024 of 0.7%. In 2017 manufacturing jobs actually increased by 0.7%.

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