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The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) held interest rates steady on Wednesday, keeping its target range at 3.5 to 3.75 percent. Chair Jerome Powell offered a sober but familiar assessment: the economy is expanding, the labor market is stable, and inflation remains “somewhat elevated.” A new wrinkle — supply disruptions in the Middle East — has joined tariffs as the latest explanation for why prices aren’t behaving. 

But the real story of this meeting isn’t what the FOMC did. It’s what its members’ projections reveal about their willingness to tolerate above-target inflation indefinitely.

Start with the numbers. The updated Summary of Economic Projections puts the median FOMC member’s PCE inflation projection at 2.7 percent for 2026. Back in December, the median member projected prices would rise just 2.4 percent this year. The median member’s projection for core PCE inflation in 2026 also rose, from 2.5 to 2.7 percent. These are not minor revisions. In the space of three months, FOMC members have concluded that inflation will run meaningfully hotter this year than they had previously thought.

And yet, the path for rate cuts did not change at all. The median projection for the federal funds rate remains at 3.4 percent at year-end and 3.1 percent at the end of 2027. The FOMC saw more inflation coming and decided it required no change in policy. This is a remarkable position for a central bank that has spent the last four years insisting it would bring inflation back down to 2 percent.

The latest revision might feel familiar. Exactly one year ago, at its March 2025 meeting, the median FOMC member revised up their 2025 projection for PCE inflation from 2.5 to 2.7 percent while continuing to project 50 basis points worth of rate cuts before year’s end. Then, as now, the FOMC projected higher inflation but saw no need to project a higher rate path to curb it. 

At some point, this stops looking like data dependence and starts looking like a central bank that has quietly accepted above-target inflation.

Powell’s explanation rests on a specific diagnosis. Elevated inflation, he said, “largely reflect[s] inflation in the goods sector, which has been boosted by the effects of tariffs.” Rising near-term inflation expectations, meanwhile, are driven by “the substantial rise in oil prices caused by supply disruptions in the Middle East.” In other words, higher inflation is due to supply disruption, not excessive spending in the economy. 

If that’s right, patience is appropriate: the price-level effects of supply disruptions will soon pass, and the Fed should wait them out. But there are reasons to doubt this diagnosis. 

The Fed has been attributing above-target inflation to transitory, non-monetary factors for more than a year now — first tariffs, then government shutdowns disrupting data, now Middle East oil shocks. The specific explanations keep changing, the general conclusion remains the same: inflation remains above target, but it’s not the Fed’s fault. 

Given the string of revisions to their inflation projections, FOMC members should consider the possibility that the problem isn’t a sequence of unfortunate supply shocks, but persistent excess demand in the economy. 

Ironically, the latter view would appear to be more consistent with their growth projections. The median FOMC member now projects 2.4 percent real GDP growth in 2026, up from 2.3 percent in December. For 2027, the median projection jumped from 2.0 to 2.3 percent. An adverse supply disruption temporarily raises inflation while reducing real GDP growth. Excess demand, in contrast, would increase both inflation and real output growth.

At the post-meeting press conference, Powell acknowledged that consumer spending is “resilient.” The labor market tells a more nuanced story. 

Unemployment held at 4.4 percent in February and has been stable since last summer. Job gains are low, but that partly reflects shrinking labor supply — less immigration and lower participation — rather than collapsing demand. Powell described a labor market that has “stabilized,” which is a welcome development after the softening seen last year. But a stable labor market alongside elevated inflation is not a case for further easing. If anything, it raises the question of whether the current stance of monetary policy is restrictive at all.

Chair Powell insists the Fed’s current rate is “within a range of plausible estimates of neutral” — the rate that is neither too restrictive nor too accommodating — and that this stance “should continue to help stabilize the labor market while allowing inflation to resume its downward trend toward two percent.” That’s a testable claim, and so far the data aren’t cooperating. 

Inflation isn’t resuming its downward trend. It’s drifting sideways — or, by the FOMC’s own revised projections, getting worse.

The danger is not that the Fed made the wrong call this week. Holding rates steady in the face of genuine geopolitical uncertainty is defensible. The danger is that the Fed has developed a habit of explaining away inflation while preserving the option to cut rates further. The dot plot for the federal funds rate still points to a 25-basis-point rate cut by December and another by the end of next year. Markets aren’t buying it. Fed funds futures point to no cuts until late 2027.

If inflation doesn’t cooperate, the Fed will eventually face a choice it has been deferring: acknowledge that its rate path is inconsistent with its inflation target, or give up on hitting its target.

A central bank’s credibility is not a binary thing. It erodes gradually, one upward revision at a time. Markets will only believe the Fed’s continued assurances for so long before concluding that its projections reveal the plan. Powell is right that monetary policy is “not on a preset course.” But the Fed’s actions tell a different story: it has repeatedly revised inflation upward while keeping its rate path unchanged. That sends a clear message — two percent is an aspiration, not a commitment.

Adam Smith’s An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations is a long book. But in its first twenty pages, Smith lays out a three-step path to prosperity. Chapter one introduces the division of labor. Chapter two explains people’s propensity to truck, barter, and exchange. Chapter three shows how specialization is limited by the extent of the market. The ideas in these opening chapters of Book I go a long way toward explaining differences in economic development across countries.

The division of labor leads to specialization, which improves productivity. Smith highlights three sources of these gains: “first, to the increase of dexterity in every particular workman; secondly, to the saving of the time which is commonly lost in passing from one species of work to another; and lastly, to the invention of a great number of machines which facilitate and abridge labor, and enable one man to do the work of many.”

People improve at tasks through repetition. They waste less time switching between activities and understand their work more deeply when they focus on fewer tasks. As a result, they are more likely to discover ways to improve their performance. Even small improvements can add up when repeated hundreds of times a day. A greater division of labor — more specialization — is one reason some countries have become far wealthier than others.

But the division of labor requires trade. What good is specialization if you cannot exchange what you produce? Smith notes that humans have a natural propensity to truck, barter, and exchange. We make offers and expect something in return: “give me that which I want, and you shall have this which you want… and it is in this manner that we obtain from one another the far greater part of those good offices which we stand in need of.”

Exchange generates wealth as people trade less valuable goods for more valuable ones. But this raises an important question: If people naturally want to truck, barter, and exchange, and if the division of labor and specialization lead to massive increases in wealth, why don’t we see extensive specialization everywhere in the world?

Smith answers this in chapter three: the division of labor is limited by the extent of the market. As specialization increases, so does output. His famous example of a pin factory shows how production can rise from hundreds to tens of thousands of pins per day. What applies to pins applies to countless other goods.

But specialization only works if producers can sell their surplus. Workers need food, housing, and clothing, which means they must exchange their output for money. In a small market, however, demand is limited. A pin maker producing thousands of pins a day in a small village will struggle to find enough buyers. That is over-specialization.

In such cases, producers cut back. Fewer workers are employed, output falls, and remaining workers become less specialized — and therefore less productive.

Smith uses specialization and the extent of the market to explain economic development across time and place. A key implication is that large markets require low transportation costs. Access to trade routes is critical, and historically, water has been the cheapest means of transport.

It is no coincidence that the most developed regions have been located along rivers, lakes, and coasts. This remains true today: nearly every major city has easy access to water.

Smith’s framework also suggests that policies and technologies that expand markets increase productivity and wealth, while those that restrict markets do the opposite. Many poor countries face geographic barriers — being landlocked or having difficult terrain — that limit market size and reduce specialization.

Others suffer from artificial constraints. Even countries with access to global markets can restrict trade through policy. North Korea, parts of sub-Saharan Africa, and — until recently — China and India illustrate how policy can limit development.

This is one reason economists criticize tariffs. They effectively shrink the market by restricting the flow of goods, reducing specialization and productivity.

Smith’s three-part framework — specialization, trade, and the extent of the market — is powerful but not complete. Institutions such as property rights, the rule of law, free speech, and sound money also matter. Still, without large markets and specialization, sustained wealth is difficult to achieve.

Another implication is that helping poorer countries often means expanding their access to markets. Trade restrictions not only harm the country imposing them but also reduce opportunities for poorer nations by limiting their ability to specialize.

Smith’s insights apply domestically as well as internationally. One source of the United States’ economic success was the Founders’ decision to prohibit trade barriers between states, creating one of the world’s largest free-trade zones. As a general rule, expanding markets — by removing physical or political barriers — benefits nearly everyone.

These principles lie at the heart of The Wealth of Nations.

In late December, winter storms brought rain and snow that modestly improved California’s reservoirs and snowpack. Officials quickly cautioned, however, that this would not solve the water crisis. The message was clear: despite years of restrictions and emergency measures, policymakers still have no path to long-term water security.

California’s water shortages are routinely attributed to drought, climate change, and population growth, while residents are urged to ration water, shorten showers, and accept fines as a civic responsibility. Yet household behavior does not drive scarcity. California’s water shortage is essentially the product of government policy—decades of price suppression, subsidizing waste, and allocating water according to political rules rather than economic value.  

Until water is treated as the scarce resource it is—correctly priced and efficiently allocated—no amount of rain or restrictions will fix a crisis of the state’s own making.

Who Really Bears the Cost of Water Shortages

California’s response to water scarcity has followed a familiar and deeply misguided script.  State authorities repeatedly impose water-use restrictions that disproportionately burden ordinary citizens: limits on car washing, bans on filling swimming pools, mandatory reductions in household water use, surveillance of domestic consumption, and steep fines for exceeding arbitrarily defined thresholds.

What began as emergency measures has since become permanent policy for urban residents in 2025. Yet this approach functions mainly as a political distraction. 

Even if every Californian rationed water perfectly, the impact would be minimal: urban users consume only about 10 percent of the state’s water, according to the PPIC. The bulk goes to agriculture—largely wealthy, politically connected farmers—who use 80 percent while producing just 2 percent of economic output, largely shielded from restrictions and sustained by heavy subsidies.

This misallocation is reinforced by a price system that bears little resemblance to scarcity or cost. Across the Colorado River Basin, a significant source of California’s water, nearly a quarter of irrigation supplies are priced at zero or near zero. Water delivered through federal projects averages just $0.12 per acre-foot, compared with $853 per acre-foot from non-federal sources. Agricultural water districts pay about $30 per acre-foot, while municipal utilities pay approximately $512 for the same water. Households in coastal California cities, meanwhile, often face effective costs of $2,500 to $4,700 per acre-foot. In this system, those least responsible for scarcity pay the highest price for it.

“We can’t address the growing water scarcity in the West while we continue to give that water away for free or close to it. Without action, we risk depleting this essential resource beyond recovery,” said Noah Garrison, a water researcher at UCLA’s Institute of the Environment and Sustainability. 

Such pricing inevitably shapes how water is used. Artificially cheap water has reshaped agriculture in ways that defy both climate and common sense. It has made it profitable to cultivate highly water-intensive crops—alfalfa, rice, cotton, almonds, and pecans—in arid regions that receive less than 12 inches of precipitation per year, where such cultivation would be uneconomic under market prices. Research by scholars at the University of Chicago confirms this dynamic: when irrigation is subsidized, farmers are more likely to devote land to water-intensive crops. 

These policies are routinely justified in the name of food security and employment, but they obscure a basic economic reality: water-intensive production in arid regions persists because water is subsidized, not because it reflects comparative advantage—and it locks California into a path of chronic scarcity. If this model continues, the consequences will be severe: worsening water shortages, rising food prices, and growing vulnerability for households and communities.

When water is priced as if abundant, producers have little incentive to conserve or switch to less water-intensive crops. Research in Nature shows such a shift could cut water use by up to 93 percent—though profits would fall. Yet policies that shield producers from scarcity keep those savings out of reach, leaving households to pay.

Price Water Properly

California’s water crisis is a governance failure, not a natural phenomenon. As Amartya Sen famously observed, famines are rarely caused by absolute shortages but by institutional failure—and water scarcity follows the same logic. The problem in California is therefore not drought or rainfall, but the rules and incentives that govern water use. Decades of subsidies and distorted incentives have produced deep malinvestment—farms, cities, and industries built on the assumption of abundant, underpriced water. 

In functioning markets, scarcity is signaled by prices. As a resource becomes scarce, higher prices discourage waste and encourage conservation, innovation, and investment. California’s water crisis persists because this mechanism has been suppressed. When prices reflect the full cost of water, low-value uses naturally decline, and conservation becomes voluntary rather than enforced. With competitive pricing, droughts would lead to price adjustments, more efficient use, and incentives to expand viable supply.

Price reform alone, however, is not enough without exchange. Although California nominally allows water trading, markets remain tightly constrained by regulatory barriers, approval delays, and rigid water-rights doctrines such as “use-it-or-lose-it” rules. These restrictions reward consumption over conservation and prevent water saved by one user from being sold to another who values it more. In a genuine market, conservation would not require mandates or moral appeals; it would be rewarded through voluntary exchange, allowing water to flow from lower-value to higher-value uses guided by prices rather than bureaucracy.

As Ellen Hanak, director of the PPIC Water Policy Center, notes, “by compensating those with long-standing water rights for moving water to activities and places where the lack of water will be more costly, trading encourages cooperation in the sustainable management of this vital resource.” Yet existing rules often prevent such mutually beneficial exchanges.

A sustainable transition, therefore, requires confronting reality head-on. Some water-intensive agriculture activities will have to contract—or disappear altogether. California should phase out water subsidies, allow prices to reflect scarcity, remove barriers to water trading, and embrace free trade in water-intensive food products. Letting comparative advantage guide production would reduce pressure on scarce resources, lower long-term costs, and improve resilience.

This view is widely shared among economists. A large majority of the IGM Economic Experts Panel agrees that Californians would be better off if all final users paid a uniform price for water, adjusted for quality, location, and time—even if some food prices rose and some farms failed. As Harvard economist Oliver Hart noted, “equal prices ensure efficiency; consumer rationing does not.”

Preserving politically protected water uses through subsidies does not create stability. It deepens misallocation, speeds depletion, and guarantees future shortages will be more frequent, severe, and complex.

Given the bluster and nonstop chatter of today’s political class, President Calvin Coolidge, or “Silent Cal,” might be viewed as a quaint relic. His ability to pack a lot of rhetorical punch in a few words seems to be lost on our current set of politicos. That’s a shame. 

Just as tragically, Washington has completely forgotten the path to prosperity that Coolidge clearly demonstrated. By signing the Revenue Act of 1924, he significantly improved the nation’s capacity for productivity. The particulars of that legislation could serve as a powerful lesson for how governments can get out of the way, minimize their economic footprint, and unleash untold value creation. 

While economic development is often viewed as complex, the institutional recipe isn’t. It requires sound money, unhampered property rights, and institutional clarity, coupled with a virtuous and vigorous people, deliberately acting to improve their lot in life. Whatever forms of taxation are imposed, they should be simple and light to prevent the stunting of would-be economic growth. When firms and households know they will keep more of what they earn, they create more economic value. That’s a lesson from the Coolidge era that seems to have been lost. 

In our day, the 2017 Trump tax cuts have been hailed as reviving economic growth, but with persistently positive inflation, real GDP growth may be lackluster when all final adjustments are made. Whatever good these tax rate reductions have done, they may eventually raise revenues, but they won’t reduce deficits. Instead, the Congressional Joint Economic Committee reports that for fiscal year (FY) 2025, total tax revenues grew by six percent from the previous year, reaching roughly $5.2 trillion. Spending also rose by four percent, hitting $7.0 trillion. The resulting $1.78 trillion deficit, added to previous debts, brings DC’s total to a staggering $39 trillion. 

When revenues grow, but deficits balloon more quickly, this raises the question: Is it even possible for tax rate cuts to lead to reduced annual deficits? In a word, yes. During Coolidge’s administration, budget years finished with persistent surpluses, including the largest ever recorded in FY 1927: $1.1 billion, in non-inflation-adjusted terms. That would equate to roughly $21.5 billion today. While this wouldn’t put much of a dent in the trillions that remain to be repaid — the interest on our debt consumes that sum every seven days — that sort of outcome would at least be a step in the right direction. 

The Revenue Act of ‘24 also went against today’s political grain by lowering the top marginal income tax rate from 73 percent at the beginning of the 1920s to 25 percent. To compensate, the Act also lowered the threshold for paying that 25 percent from $500,000 to $100,000, broadening the tax base. After enactment in 1925, those earning over this amount began contributing a higher share of overall tax receipts.

In fact, when it comes to the share of taxes collected, Coolidge was more progressive than his predecessors. By 1928, over 60 percent of annual income taxes paid came from those earning over $100,000, up from just under 30 percent in 1920 (Table 1, courtesy of Cato.org). Households earning that much in the 1920s would be earning about $1.8 million today, and are subject to a top marginal tax rate of 37 percent. That top rate now kicks in at $640,600 for single filers ($768,700 for married couples filing jointly).

Counter to the prevailing wisdom of our day, taxing more people at lower rates generated more revenue than taxing fewer people at higher rates. In the early 1920s, the top tax rate was 73 percent, but only for those earning $1 million or more (about $19 million today). Both tax rates and their application, led by determinations of how much each income level should contribute, impact total revenues. Indeed, during the 1920s, taxes paid by the poor were slashed. Taxes collected from the poorest Americans had made up 15 percent of total revenue, but that dropped to just over one percent by 1928. Those with “middle-income” status ($10-25,000 annually in 1928, $188-$818,000 today) saw their tax rates fall by over half over the same period (Table 1).

Income tax rates for the poor declined dramatically in the Coolidge period. But today, the lower half of US taxpayers contribute only about three percent of income tax receipts. By contrast, the top 25 percent of income earners contribute over 87 percent of total federal tax revenues. Those in the lowest 20 percent of income earners receive what economists call a negative income tax (Figure 2, courtesy of Cato.org). These households are net recipients of tax revenue, mostly via the earned income tax credit and the child tax credit. 

Whenever data points of these sorts are presented, questions are inevitably raised around issues of fairness and who is paying their “fair share.” Rather than small reforms around the edges of tax policy, more radical change is necessary in US fiscal matters. Congress has proven either unwilling or unable to get its fiscal house in order. Reducing spending has been made unnecessarily difficult, with automatic spending on entitlements now accounting for roughly two-thirds of the annual budget. So-called “mandatory spending” has come to dominate the federal government’s annual expenditures, growing from about 26 percent of outlays in 1962 to 66 percent by 2023.

Whether one favors abolition of the income tax, something that then-candidate Trump touted on the campaign trail in 2024, a flat income tax, or shifting towards nationwide consumption taxes, the deficit issue will persist as long as a profligate Congress continues to outspend revenues. 

To quote another US President, Thomas Jefferson, “I place economy among the first and most important virtues, and public debt as the greatest of dangers to be feared.” He wasn’t wrong. So, if our modern-day politicians won’t take on the personal qualities or heed the pithy wisdom of Silent Cal, and if they continue to ignore the earlier exhortations of eloquent Jefferson, it appears that no matter what tax reforms get made, we are a long way from any semblance of fiscal sanity.

Artificial intelligence has become the latest excuse for reviving one of the oldest bad ideas in economic policy: a universal basic income. Recent pieces in Newsweek, the LSE Business Review, and Fortune have all helped push the idea that AI may soon wipe out so many jobs that Washington will need to send everyone a check.

That makes for a catchy headline. It also makes for terrible economics.

The right question is not whether AI will disrupt work. Of course it will. The right question is this: after more than 100 local guaranteed-income experiments, what have we actually learned?

The answer is much less flattering to UBI than its promoters would like.

What 122 UBI-Style Pilots Show

A new AEI working paper by Kevin Corinth and Hannah Mayhew gives the best recent overview of the evidence. Per their study, there were 122 guaranteed basic income pilots across 33 states and the District of Columbia between 2017 and 2025. Those pilots allocated about $481.4 million in transfers to 40,921 recipients, with 61,664 total participants including control groups. The average recipient got about $11,765, the average pilot lasted 18.4 months, and the average monthly payment was $616.

That sounds like a mountain of evidence. It is not.

Of those 122 pilots, only 52 had published outcomes. Only 35 used randomized designs. Only 30 reported employment outcomes. So the case for UBI is not being built on some giant pile of clear, clean evidence. It is being built on a much smaller stack of studies, many of them weak, limited, or badly timed.

And here is the kicker. Among the 30 randomized pilots with published employment results, the average effect was a 0.8 percentage-point increase in employment. UBI fans will rush to wave that around. They should slow down.

AEI shows that the bigger and more credible studies tell a very different story. Among the four pilots with treatment groups of at least 500 participants, which together account for 55 percent of all treatment-group participants, the mean effect on employment was minus 3.2 percentage points. AEI also estimates a mean income elasticity of -0.18, which is consistent with standard labor-supply economics. 

In plain English, when people receive more unearned income, work tends to fall at the margin. Shocking, I know. Economics still works.

Credit: American Enterprise Institute

Why the Evidence Is Weaker Than the Hype

The AEI paper is useful not just for what it finds, but for how bluntly it describes the weaknesses in the evidence.

The average treatment group among those 30 studies was just 359 people, and the median was only 151. That is not exactly ironclad evidence for redesigning the American welfare state. Among the 26 pilots for which attrition could be measured, the average attrition rate was 37 percent. That is a giant warning sign. If enough people drop out, the reported results can become badly distorted.

The studies also varied widely in payment size, duration, sample composition, and even how outcomes were measured. The mean annualized payment was $7,177, equal to an average income boost of about 39.5 percent relative to baseline household income in the studies. Some pilots relied heavily on self-reported survey data. Some were conducted during or right after the COVID period — when labor markets, safety-net programs, and personal decisions were anything but normal.

AEI’s conclusion is appropriately cautious: these findings may not generalize to a permanent, universal, nationwide UBI under current or future conditions. That alone should cool off a lot of the AI-fueled policy hysteria.

AI Will Displace Jobs. It Will Also Create Them

None of this means AI will be painless. Some jobs will shrink. Some tasks will disappear. Some workers will need to retrain, relocate, or rethink their careers. That is what happens when productivity rises and technology changes how goods and services are produced. It happened with mechanization, with computers, and with the internet. It will happen with AI.

But displacement is not the same thing as permanent mass unemployment. That leap is where the UBI argument falls apart. Economies are not fixed piles of jobs. They are dynamic systems of discovery, adaptation, and exchange. When costs fall and productivity rises, resources move. Businesses reorganize. Consumer demand changes. New occupations emerge. Old ones evolve. Some disappear. That churn is real, but so is the adaptation.

The answer to technological change is not to pay people for economic resignation. The answer is to make adaptation easier.

UBI Fails the Economics Test

There is a reason Ryan Bourne at Cato has argued that UBI is not the answer if AI comes for your job. It confuses a transition problem with a permanent income problem. Worse, it assumes that writing checks can substitute for the incentives, signals, and institutional conditions that actually create opportunity.

UBI also crashes into the budget constraint. As Max Gulker at The Daily Economy has noted, UBI is often sold through small pilots and vague moral language, but the national arithmetic is ugly. And as Robert Wright in another AIER piece points out, “universal” quickly means sending money to many people who are not poor while piling enormous costs onto taxpayers. (Bear in mind, the national debt is already rapidly approaching $40 trillion.) 

That is before getting to the public-choice problem. In theory, UBI supporters sometimes imagine replacing the welfare state with one simple cash transfer. In reality, government programs rarely disappear. Bureaucracies defend themselves. Interest groups protect carveouts. Politicians promise more, not less. So a UBI would likely be stacked on top of much of the current welfare state, not substituted for it. That is not reform. That is fiscal delusion with better branding.

A Better Answer: Remove Barriers to Work

If AI means more labor-market churn, then policy should focus on mobility, flexibility, and self-sufficiency. That means less occupational licensing, lower taxes, lighter regulation, fewer benefit cliffs, less wasteful spending, and more room for entrepreneurship and job creation. The government should stop making it harder for people to pivot.

It also means reforming welfare the right way. My proposal for empowerment accounts is not a UBI. It would be targeted to people already eligible for welfare, not universal. It would include a work requirement for work-capable adults, not detach income from effort. And it would consolidate fragmented programs into a more flexible account that families control directly, reducing bureaucracy and lowering spending over time as more recipients move toward self-sufficiency.

That puts it much closer to the classical liberal insight behind replacing bureaucratic control with direct support, while avoiding the fatal error of turning the entire country into a permanent transfer state. As Art Carden reminds us at The Daily Economy, there is a long intellectual history behind cash-based assistance. But today’s UBI politics are not really about shrinking the state. They are mostly about expanding it because elites fear AI.

Don’t Make Bad Policy Out of Fear

The UBI revival tells us less about AI than it does about politics. New technology arrives, uncertainty rises, and too many policymakers reach for the federal checkbook as if it were a magic wand. It is not.

After 122 local experiments, the case for UBI is still weak. The best evidence does not show a jobs renaissance. The larger studies show employment declines. The broader evidence base is riddled with small sample sizes, high attrition, and limited generalizability. That is a flimsy foundation for a permanent national entitlement.

AI will change work. It will not repeal economics. The best response is not fear-driven universal dependency. It is a freer economy with stronger incentives to work, save, invest, adapt, and prosper.

President Trump’s conflicts with Chairman Powell and with Governor Cook have obscured real shortcomings at the Federal Reserve and brought little useful change. These conflicts tend to focus on whether the Fed’s target interest rate is too high or too low. Meanwhile, institutional problems at the Fed have been largely overlooked.

But there is an opportunity here with Trump’s nominee for Fed chair, Kevin Warsh. His first task will be navigating a hostile Senate. But should he be confirmed, Warsh’s time would be best spent cleaning up the Federal Reserve system: its personnel, spending, and data.

The Federal Reserve System employs 24,000 people. The Board of Governors has about 3,000 employees, while the 12 district banks employ the remaining 21,000. That figure includes 800–1,000 professional economists. While the Fed has recently announced plans to reduce its workforce by 10 percent, that would still leave it with over 21,000 employees. But why shouldn’t the Fed cut headcount by 20–30 percent, or even more?

Does the Fed really need that many employees? After all, this isn’t the 1960s or 1970s when many things had to be done by hand. Not only have there been significant technological improvements and greater automation over the past fifty years, the development of AI will also accelerate this trend. As such, the new Fed chair should reevaluate whether the Fed needs so many employees.

Besides being wasteful, the high number of economists employed by the Fed has likely influenced the profession to unduly favor the status quo. Those who criticize the Fed or question whether it should even exist find themselves in the wilderness of monetary economics. Employing fewer economists will reduce the Federal Reserve’s gravitational pull on the economics profession.

Along with reducing headcount through reorganization and consolidation, the Federal Reserve is ripe for an audit of its spending. Ron Paul popularized the idea of auditing the Fed in 2008. The Federal Reserve is unique in that it can literally create money and in that it sets its budget independent of Congress. What would you expect the budget trend to be for a fully self-funding organization that can print money? If you said up and to the right, collect your prize.

The budget of the Board of Governors of the Fed has grown more consistently than the Federal budget for decades. In fact, why would any office or department at the Fed ever voluntarily reduce its spending? As such, we don’t see examples of significant retrenchment or budget cuts across the Board of Governors. District banks, on the other hand, operate with private-sector participation through their member-bank stockholders, yet they still suffer from bureaucratic bloat due to limited market competition.

By restructuring staff, streamlining operations, and auditing its spending, the new Fed chair can couch all of this change in terms of modernizing the institution. The Fed has largely failed to keep abreast of technological change when it comes to data, metrics, and execution. It still relies heavily on surveys and anecdotal conversations when it has access to millions of data points, nearly in real-time.

Consider the following key indicators that the Fed officials rely on:

They measure their key inflation target using the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) price index, as well as the Consumer Price Index (CPI) and the Producer Price Index (PPI). Yet these numbers only come out once a month. Rather than calling on business leaders to get a read on economic conditions, they could use real-time measures from sources like the Adobe Digital Price Index or Truflation that use millions of transactions to assess economic activity.

Similarly, most of the key indicators the Fed uses for assessing the strength of the labor market (the unemployment rate, nonfarm payrolls, labor force participation rate, and various measures of underemployment) tend to be released monthly as well.

The important measure of economic growth, the Gross Domestic Product (GDP), only comes out quarterly—though there are frequent estimates. Furthermore, the measures of GDP tend to be revised often, too. The Atlanta Fed produces a “GDPNow” number—but it also relies primarily on estimates rather than real-time data. Indicators like industrial production, retail sales, and business investment are not much better.

One area the Fed does make use of real-time data is in financial market conditions. Interest rates (e.g., federal funds rate, Treasury yields), credit spreads, and asset prices change in real-time and can be used to assess financial stability and the effectiveness of monetary policy.

In addition to the delays, most of these core metrics, particularly GDP and the unemployment rate, are lagging indicators. They reflect past economic performance rather than providing real-time insights into current or future trends. In a rapidly evolving global economy, relying heavily on backward-looking data can lead to policy decisions that address emerging challenges too slowly or exacerbate existing ones.

The FOMC’s framework often emphasizes aggregate demand management, assuming that inflation is primarily a demand-side phenomenon. But recent economic shocks (supply chain disruptions, energy price spikes) highlight the critical role of supply-side factors. Over-reliance on demand-side metrics can lead to inappropriate policy responses. 

In fact, many economists argue that the Fed should be less reactive in general. Friedman noted that there were “long and variable lags” between the implementation of monetary policy and its effects. Following predictable monetary rules will likely generate more stability and more growth in the long run.

Monetary policy (in terms of target interest rates) matters, but so does operational efficiency, utilization of technology, and access to good information. Institutional reform may also help the Fed rebuild public trust by reassuring people that its decisions reflect reality today rather than reality months ago – or not at all. Cleaning up the Federal Reserve will be a monumental task, but it will also be a legacy. Let’s hope Mr. Warsh is up for the challenge.

At a recent Senate hearing on the fiscal outlook, legislators and budget experts said the quiet part out loud: the United States is running historically large deficits in non-crisis times, and we need to stop pretending that we can grow our way out of it.

Washington’s problem isn’t ignorance. It’s that the only politically safe position is to acknowledge the debt crisis — and then do nothing to fix it. Congress lacks an effective mechanism to make politically difficult decisions possible.

The message from the hearing was stark: this is not a crisis caused by recession or war. It is the result of policy choices lawmakers refuse to confront.

The federal budget is increasingly tilted toward unsustainable promises made to older Americans, financed by borrowing that imposes the costs on younger Americans. Earlier CBO projections show that by 2029, the federal government will spend roughly 50 cents of every budget dollar on benefits for Americans 65 and older.

The long-term picture is even worse. According to the government’s Financial Report, more than 100 percent of long-term unfunded obligations stem from just two programs: Medicare and Social Security (their combined shortfalls reflect the difference between their dedicated taxes and projected spending, which exceed the total because the rest of the budget shows a small projected surplus over the same period).

Hosted by the Senate Subcommittee on Fiscal Responsibility and Economic Growth, the hearing featured Congressional Budget Office (CBO) Director Phillip Swagel, Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget (CRFB) President Maya MacGuineas, and Yale Budget Lab founder Martha Gimbel.

Sen. Ron Johnson (R-WI) offered a blunt assessment of the political stalemate during opening remarks. Democrats “insist the solution is simply making the rich pay their fair share,” he said, but then don’t follow through on meaningful tax increases. Republicans argue there’s a spending problem, yet “when they had the power to return spending to a reasonable pre-pandemic level, the One Big Beautiful Bill simply did not meet the moment.”

In other words, Washington’s fiscal debate is a performance: each side criticizes the other for choices it is unwilling to reverse when it has the opportunity.

The day of reckoning is no longer far off. Social Security faces financing constraints in just six years, triggering automatic benefit cuts of roughly 25 percent. Medicare’s hospital trust fund is not far behind. Whether Congress chooses slower benefit growth, means-testing, eligibility changes, higher taxes, or some blend, delay only increases the eventual scale of the adjustment.

One illusion common to both sides of the political aisle is the idea that tough choices can be avoided with faster economic growth. As CBO Director Phillip Swagel noted, stronger growth raises revenues but also increases interest costs on a truly massive debt. Interest costs are already higher than defense spending and rising quickly.

As debt rises to excessive levels, even good economic news can come with a fiscal price tag.

The hearing also highlighted a generational injustice that Washington tiptoes around: the budget increasingly redistributes from younger, poorer Americans to older, wealthier ones. Swagel (CBO) noted that children ultimately bear the cost of borrowing that today’s voters authorize. MacGuineas (CRFB) and Gimbel (Yale) underscored how the federal government spends far more on seniors than on children. What’s more, today’s elderly, as a cohort, are not the economically precarious group they once were: senior poverty has declined below that of the general population.

That’s because the budget doesn’t redistribute based on need. Spending favors the most politically organized constituency, while deficit financing shifts costs to those with the least political power.

And acting to fix the fiscal imbalance requires something that Congress would rather avoid: imposing concentrated political pain today to prevent much larger, but more dispersed economic pain tomorrow.

Every fix to the US debt path has identifiable losers — industries that benefit from tax preferences, higher-income retirees facing slower benefit growth, and special interests whose gravy train of federal taxpayers’ money might get cut off. Those groups show up, mobilize, and threaten to punish politicians at the ballot box. Beneficiaries of reform, however, including younger taxpayers, busy working families, and even future Congresses, rarely advocate on their own behalf.

As economist James Buchanan observed in Democracy in Deficit, fiscal restraint rarely produces political rewards. Voters immediately feel spending cuts or tax increases, but they never see the crises that responsible policy prevents — the inflation that never erupts, the interest rates that never spike, the austerity that never becomes necessary.

That is why the most valuable conclusion one can draw from this hearing is that the United States needs a process that can make economically necessary (but politically difficult) tradeoffs possible.

I have argued for exactly that: an independent fiscal commission, modeled on the Base Realignment and Closure process. BRAC allowed Congress to close military bases it knew were unnecessary but couldn’t politically touch, and succeeded because it created political cover for difficult decisions Congress knew needed to be made.

A fiscal BRAC would apply the same logic to the budget’s third rails and sacred cows. Congress would establish the commission, set specific guidelines and targets for what commissioners must accomplish, and reverse the status quo’s default of inaction. The commission’s recommendations could take effect automatically, with presidential approval, unless Congress voted to reject them. That shift — from requiring affirmative action to requiring affirmative obstruction — changes the political calculus.

Critics object that commissions are a way to dodge accountability. This commission would do the opposite: return spending accountability to a system built to evade it. Congress abdicated control when it put the largest entitlement programs on autopilot. An effective commission is our best shot at correcting these programs’ unsustainable and unaccountable growth.

Washington knows it has a spending problem. This Senate hearing made that clear. What it lacks is the will, and an effective mechanism, to do something about it. A BRAC-like fiscal commission won’t make tough choices easy. But it could finally make them possible.

Discipline will come eventually. The question is whether Congress chooses it or waits for a crisis to impose it.

Compare this argument from President Trump on Truth Social, in January 2026, to another (perhaps the same?) made by Pierre Joseph Proudhon in 1849.

I protest against your credit at five per cent, because society is able and ought to give it to me at zero per cent; and, if it refuses to do so, I accuse it, as well as you, of robbery…
– Pierre Joseph Proudhon, Bastiat-Proudhon Letter #5, 1849.

Some arguments, we think, have been won decisively. Logic has forever buried their adversaries. And yet, friends of freedom find themselves defending free speech and the Enlightenment itself (in an age of old socialism and new post-liberalism). I never thought I would have to rediscover the nineteenth-century arguments of Frédéric Bastiat in favor of free trade. But here we are, in an age of tariff wars.

I thought Bastiat would remain a wise portrait looking down on interns and scholars in AIER’s library, or perhaps a gem to be shared with my undergraduates as a witty illustration of basic economics. But the politicians are back to their economic sophistry, so I find myself re-reading Bastiat.

On January 10 of this year, President Trump posted a call for credit card interest rate caps of 10 percent, effective January 20. His announcement was not followed by an executive order, so the cap hasn’t been implemented (it would have been interesting to see what presidential authority he claimed, but that’s a different story). 

Last year, Representative Ocasio-Cortez and Senator Bernie Sanders introduced bills proposing 10-percent caps on credit card interest rates. The bills are stalled in their respective chambers, but President Trump’s announcement has revived lobbyist interest in moving the bills forward.

This year, there’s another twist. Instead of a national 10 percent interest rate cap, the Empowering States’ Rights to Protect Consumers Act would allow each state to cap interest rates within its borders. 

Interest rate caps are a bad idea (as are any price controls). My purpose here is not to explain why (John Phelan does so nicely in his recent column in these pages). Nor is it to explain the difficulties, economic and constitutional, with a hodgepodge of conflicting state-level regulations. Nor is my intention to worry about the effects of such short-sighted interventionism on the most vulnerable Americans. 

Instead, I propose to take a walk down memory lane, by returning to the Bastiat-Proudhon debate on interest of 1849-1850. 

The Bastiat-Proudhon Debate on Interest

The debate took place in the pages of La Voix du Peuple (“The People’s Voice”) between October 1849 and March 1850. It comprises a total of 14 letters.

Pierre Joseph Proudhon (1809-1865) was a French journalist, philosopher, and socialist. Proudhon favored peaceful social revolution, and called for a national bank to extend “free” credit. He is most remembered for coining the phrase “property is theft”.

Frédéric Bastiat (1801-1850) was a French lawyer, journalist, and economist. He is most remembered for his series of essays on “what is seen and what is not seen,” and his defense of free trade and limited government. A clever writer, Bastiat often used humor, as well as reductio ad absurdum, such as when he proposed banning sunlight (through mandatory curtains) to protect the candlemakers, and reducing the trade deficit by sinking ships returning with gold from export sales. He is most remembered for the broken window fallacy. Along with John Locke and FA Hayek, he presides over the learning in AIER’s library.

Bastiat argues that interest is compensation – both just and economically sound – for the forgone use of capital, but also for the service rendered by the loan of capital. Proudhon disagrees: capital is returned after the loan period, so any interest is mere exploitation. What is more, interest might once have been necessary to attract capital, but the economy is now sufficiently advanced that it can pool funds in a national bank and provide interest-free loans.

The Argument

Bastiat explains that a loan involves two parts (Letter 2): “1. the restoration, intact, at the expiration of the loan, of the object lent; 2. a service to be rendered the lender by the borrower as compensation for the service which the latter has received.”

Capital increases productivity, thus benefiting both the borrower and the economy as a whole. Bastiat argues that tools and capital can’t exploit workers, because by the borrowing of tools, the worker can produce much more than he could alone. So even if the lender of the tools claims some share of the greatly increased production, the worker is left better off than he would’ve been working only with his hands. “And because he surrenders to me, freely and voluntarily, one-twentieth of this surplus, you represent me as a tyrant and a robber,” Bastiat asks. “The workingman shall see his labor increase in productivity, humanity shall see the sphere of its opportunities enlarge, and I alone, the producer of these results, must be prohibited from participating in them, even by universal consent!” 

Capital, writes Bastiat, “in the form of wheel, gear, rail, waterfall, weight, sail, oar, plough, performs so large a part of the work,” that it should be considered “the friend and benefactor of all, and especially of the suffering classes.” Laborers should celebrate capital, “desire its accumulation, its multiplication, its unlimited diffusion,” because it multiplies the efforts of “nerves and muscles” and increases the value of workers’ productive contributions. 

Proudhon disagrees. He starts by claiming that the owner of capital wouldn’t lend it if he were using it, “does not deprive himself,” but “he lends it because he has no use for it himself.” Capital, by this argument, requires labor, and otherwise “this capital, sterile by nature, would remain sterile, whereas, by its loan and the resulting interest, it yields a profit which enables the Capitalist to live without working… a contradictory proposition.”

Bastiat counters that there is, in fact, an opportunity cost to lending, so the lender can command “a compensation for delay,” where the lender has forgone consumption. Interest on capital lent is, he says, “the price of time.” Real-world lending must also be priced to account for the risk of lost principal. 

Proudhon then calls for a national bank, which could lend at zero interest. He proposes to finance this bank through a wealth tax. He continues: 

a single tax should be established, not on production, circulation, consumption, habitation, etc., but, in accordance with the demands of Justice and the dictates of Economic Science, on the net capital falling to each individual. The Capitalist, losing by taxation as much as or more than he gains by Rent and Interest, would be obliged either to use his property himself or to sell it; economic equilibrium again would be established by this simple and moreover inevitable intervention of the treasury department.

To Proudhon, any interest is usury, because society owes him access to capital: “I protest against your credit at five percent, because society is able and ought to give it to me at zero percent; and, if it refuses to do so, I accuse it, as well as you, of robbery; I say that it is an accomplice, an abettor, an organizer of robbery.”

Bastiat counters with simple economic logic. Incentives matter. Without interest, there will be no capital to be lent: “in order that it may exist, it must have an incentive to birth in the prospect of reward offered to the virtues which create it.” Unless, he writes, “the time has come when houses, tools, and provisions spring into existence spontaneously,” then the capitalist is indeed laboring, and to continue to lend, will have to be compensated. If no one lends capital, productivity goes down, and prices go up. Indeed, by forgoing interest, we risk a “return to barbarism, to the time when a thousand days’ labor would not have procured a pair of stockings.” 

Pretending that lending isn’t a necessary and productive activity is “to say that capital ought to vanish from the face of the earth, is to say that Peter, John, and James ought to procure their transportation, their wheat, and their books by the performance of as much labor as would be necessary to produce these things directly, and with no other resource than their hands.” Our escape from subsistence living owes much to what we might today call the Austrian structure of production: “All Capital… is the result of prior Labor, and increases the power of subsequent Labor. Inasmuch as it is the result of prior Labor, he who lends it receives a reward. Inasmuch as it increases the power of subsequent Labor, he who borrows it owes a reward.” 

Interest Rate Caps Fail Every Time

Proudhon, in his debate with Bastiat, committed all the sins shared by socialists, from Marx to Zucman. His “economic theory” relies on wishful thinking, attempting to replace laws of economics with lofty sentiments and shoddy logic that falls apart under the simplest scrutiny.

Proudhon hoped his national bank would erase class conflict, despite its being funded by a tax on capital. Markets create spontaneous connections — economic harmonies — while nationalized capital lending would replace those natural balances of capital and labor with political agendas backed by force. 

Bastiat’s theoretical foreshadowing is astonishing, but we also have concrete examples of his prescience. The Durbin Amendment to the Dodd-Frank Act of 2010 capped debit card fees. Banks responded by ending free checking account programs and raising account minimums and maintenance fees. The effect, far from increasing affordability, was to push a whopping one million Americans out of the banking system.

Almost two centuries after Bastiat made his case, the principle (and the principal!) remain the same. Interest rate caps were a bad idea then, and they’re a bad idea now, because they ignore the value that lenders contribute economically and make it less attractive to lend. That punishes those who need to borrow, and whose labor would be made wildly more valuable through alliance with capital.

Freedom of speech is a natural right, not a privilege dispensed by governments when convenient. It precedes the state itself. Behind the vowels and consonants that leave our lips lie creative expression, communication, and ultimately liberty. As captured memorably in Good Will Hunting, “Liberty is the soul’s right to breathe.” Yet in the digital age, speech is increasingly treated not as something to be protected but as something to be managed, licensed, monitored, and punished when it produces discomfort.

Born in the 2000s, platforms like Myspace, Facebook (now Meta), Twitter (now X), and YouTube ushered in a new era of digital communication. The consequences of this digital creative destruction are still being uncovered today. Pew Research Center reports that “about half of US adults (53 percent) say they at least sometimes get news from social media, roughly stable over the last few years.” Members of Gen Z — born between 1997 and 2012 — spend up to three hours a day on these platforms, compared with roughly ten minutes for Boomers, born 1946–1964. Needless to say, Gen Z grew up with social media embedded in everyday life.

Over the past year, this generation’s digital reimagining of political life has moved from screens to streets. Across the world — from Nepal to Mexico to Iran — Gen Z protests erupted over lack of opportunities, corruption, and economic distress. Earlier this year, the Iranian government even shut off the internet for its entire population, roughly 90 million people. Digital speech has become more than commentary. It is now the infrastructure through which a dissatisfied generation challenges political authority and attempts to reshape political legitimacy.

At first glance, these events appear confined to fragile democracies or authoritarian regimes. However, the hardline approach to digital speech has spread to the very nations that first bore the idea against their tyrants over 400 years ago. 

England and France are the intellectual birthplaces of modern free expression. In England, John Milton (1608–1674) rejected prior licensing as incompatible with reason while promoting the free circulation of ideas in Areopagitica. As he famously wrote, “Give me the liberty to know, to utter, and to argue freely according to conscience.” Even John Locke (1632–1704), considered the father of liberalism, had to flee England for his outspoken defense of free speech as a natural right that exists prior to the state.

Across the English Channel, French thinkers developed similar arguments. Voltaire (1694–1778) defended the right to challenge authority and religious orthodoxy, while Montesquieu (1689–1755) treated open expression as essential to the preservation of liberty and the separation of powers. Whether expressed in English or French, the Western tradition viewed speech as pre-political: something inherent to the human person, often described as God-given, that governments recognize and protect rather than create.

Freedom of speech’s birthplace is no longer recognizable. In England and France, individuals have faced criminal convictions and even custodial sentences for online posts deemed hateful, harassing, or contributory to disorder. Freedom House reports that “According to an April 2025 Freedom of Information report filed by The Times, over 12,000 people were arrested, including for social media posts, in 2023 under section 127 of the Communications Act 2003 and section 1 of the Malicious Communications Act 1988. The report also found that the number of annual arrests had more than doubled since 2017.” 

Just a few weeks ago, French President Macron stated at an AI summit, “Free speech is pure bullsh*t if nobody knows how you are guided through this.” 

Furthermore, a French court recently convicted ten individuals of cyber harassment against public figure and French First Lady Brigitte Macron. Across these two nations, such restrictions on speech recall the warning of African dictator Idi Amin: “There is freedom of speech, but I cannot guarantee freedom after speech.” Once speech can be regulated, the next logical step is controlling the identity of the speaker.

As speech regulation expands, governments are turning toward something even more consequential: digital identity systems. The European Union is developing a Digital Identity Wallet that would allow citizens to authenticate themselves across online services. At the same time, governments are beginning to regulate who can participate in digital spaces at all. Similar proposals in the United States aim to require parental consent or identity verification before minors can access social media platforms. 

While these policies are often framed as protecting children from harmful content, they also steer digital communication toward systems that require participants to verify their identities. Social media has existed for more than two decades, yet it is only now — when Generation Z uses these platforms to organize and speak out against corruption, economic hardship, and government mismanagement — that governments are proposing new restrictions.

Anonymous speech, a cornerstone of Western civilization, is becoming increasingly difficult to maintain. When identity verification is required for participation, speech no longer stands alone. What once demanded only a voice now demands credentials and identification.

In his novel 1984, George Orwell imagined a society in which the state did not merely punish dissenting speech after the fact, but sought to prevent it before it could even be expressed. Through the “Thought Police,” citizens were monitored not only for their actions, but for any deviation from officially sanctioned ideas. Modern democracies are flexing similar muscles, where the goal is no longer just to punish speech, but to manage the conditions under which it can occur at all.

A right that exists only after verification, registration, or approval is no longer a natural right — it becomes a licensed activity. Freedom of speech was never meant to function by permission. Like breathing, it exists before government approval. A right that must first ask permission to exist is not a right at all.

My childhood (metaphorically speaking) ended in the early 2000s, when traditional, kid-focused, Saturday morning broadcast television was fading away. Being in my thirties at the time, it was probably overdue. Even so, the misguided government regulations that helped end a rite of youth now form a case study in the futility that often results when bureaucrats wedge themselves between producers and consumers.

The story begins in 1961, with a hectoring speech by attorney Newton N. Minow to a group of television executives. He had been appointed chairman of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) by President John F. Kennedy. Minow wasted no time challenging the executives sitting in front of him to stomach a full day of their own content. 

“I can assure you that what you will observe is a vast wasteland,” he said, calling out “a procession of game shows, formula comedies about totally unbelievable families, blood and thunder, mayhem, violence, sadism, murder, western bad men, western good men, private eyes, gangsters, more violence, and cartoons.” 

To me, it just sounds like art. But something about the term “vast wasteland” caught the popular imagination and entered the cultural lexicon like a situation comedy catchphrase. Not that everyone agreed with Minow’s assessment of the still relatively new entertainment medium. Many considered him out of touch and even elitist. Three years later, when the comedy Gilligan’s Island debuted, the boat by which the characters became shipwrecked on a deserted island was named the SS Minnow in the chairman’s honor. 

Though I wasn’t born until after Gilligan’s Island was canceled, its reruns were a favorite of mine growing up. But they played on weekday afternoons. The truly magical television time was Saturday morning. In the 1970s, my favorite shows included Scooby-Doo, Super Friends, and the live-action series Isis. Even in Waldo, Arkansas, where my television habit began, the latest episodes were beamed free of charge from broadcasting towers in Shreveport, Louisiana. 

As I grew up, the Saturday morning lineup evolved to include everything from Captain Caveman to Hong Kong Phooey to Fat Albert, broken up by Schoolhouse Rock educational shorts. It was an inversion of what kids experienced five days a week (six if you went to Sunday school), when learning came first and fun second. 

But little did I know that all this time, an activist group named Action for Children’s Television (ACT) was not happy about the situation and meant to change it. 

ACT had formed, ironically enough, in the town of Newton, Massachusetts, in 1968. The group opposed kids’ shows they deemed shallow or at all violent. They also villainized advertisers. Failing to ban advertising altogether, they pressured the National Association of Broadcasters to institute a variety of advertising rules on kids’ shows in the 1970s. But ACT achieved its crowning success in 1990, with the passage of the Children’s Television Act (CTA) by Congress. Among other directions, CTA mandated that stations begin reporting their steps to air programming that “furthers the positive development of children 16 years of age and under…including the child’s intellectual/cognitive or social/emotional needs.” Just like that, broadcasters and creators became part-time pediatric shrinks. 

Six years later, without additional legislation, the FCC expanded on the original CTA by requiring even more stringent reporting, forcing broadcasters to air at least three hours of content specifically geared to “educate and inform” children each week. This became known as “E/I” programming.

The 1990s was the era of popular Saturday-morning cartoons such as Doug and live-action series such as Saved by the Bell and Goosebumps. And I could still frequently be found sitting in front of the screen watching them, usually while eating cereal. It was some combination of nostalgia, bachelorhood, and just being immature for my age. At any rate, it allowed me to experience firsthand the continuing evolution of Saturday morning entertainment. 

As the millennium turned over, there were still a few popular Saturday morning broadcast cartoons, such as Recess. But the CTA regulations were helping remake the television landscape. Entertainment-focused programming was being squeezed out of the airwaves, often replaced by documentary nature and travel shows such as Sea Rescue and Born to Explore, with little “E/I” badges on the lower right of the screen. Some of these had award-winning runs. But kids voted with their eyes, many migrating to the less-regulated environment of cable to watch Kim Possible or SpongeBob SquarePants, increasingly at any day and time they wished. The cultural relevance of Saturday mornings was draining away. 

I’m proud to say I didn’t make the transition to these new shows in on-demand environments. I was finally outgrowing cartoons. But today I feel bad for kids who will never experience the once-a-week cultural touchstone my generation had.  

For the sake of argument, let’s say nothing would have played out differently in the absence of CTA rules. The rise of cable and streaming was bound to disrupt childhood viewing habits, after all. But there remains the question of what all the resources and efforts expended on the regulations accomplished. Are kids more intelligent or better adjusted today because of them? 

On a recent Saturday morning, I turned on the television to see what the major network broadcasts had become. What I found were branded-but-remarkably-similar news programs offering a mix of headlines, service journalism, and celebrity gossip. Just like during the week. 

But some aspects of the old era survive. Each year, all broadcast stations still have to file compliance reports for children’s programming with the FCC, which last summer settled multiple cases of CTA violations going back to 2018. Though Saturday morning television is gone, the regulatory complex it spawned remains, part of the unmappable, ever-growing land of rulings, interpretations, and government-empowered bureaucrats involved in American life.  

It makes you wonder what the real vast wasteland is.