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South African gold producer Pan African Resources (LSE:PAF) has agreed to acquire Australian explorer Emmerson (LSE:EML) in an all-share transaction valued at approximately US$218 million.

The acquisition will be carried out through a scheme of arrangement under which Pan African will acquire 100 percent of Emmerson’s issued share capital.

Under the terms of the deal, Emmerson shareholders will receive 0.1493 Pan African shares in the form of ASX-listed Chess Depositary Interests for each Emmerson share held. Following completion of the transaction, Emmerson shareholders will own about 4.24 percent of the combined company.

The deal consolidates ownership of the Tennant Creek joint venture, where Pan African is currently partnered with Emmerson to explore and develop gold deposits across a large tenement package in Australia’s Northern Territory.

“This combination with our trusted JV partner represents a strategically logical consolidation of our Tennant Creek tenement package,” Emmerson chair Mark Connelly said in a company press release.

Tennant Creek, located between Alice Springs and Darwin, is one of Australia’s historic gold districts, known for high-grade deposits discovered during a mining boom in the 1930s.

Pan African chief executive Cobus Loots said the acquisition would allow the company to streamline development plans for new discoveries in the district, including the White Devil gold deposit.

The company currently operates a mix of low-cost surface operations and high-grade underground mines across South Africa and Australia. It is forecast to produce more than 275,000 ounces of gold in the 2026 financial year.

Pan African’s resource base totals approximately 42.9 million ounces of mineral resources and 13 million ounces of ore reserves, providing a long-term pipeline for production growth.

Loots said diversification is essential in the mining industry, where individual assets inevitably decline over time.

“In mining you are exploiting a wasting asset – so you’re either moving backwards or you’re progressing,” Loots told Currency in a recent interview. “We don’t want to move backwards.”

The transaction remains subject to several conditions, including shareholder approval and customary regulatory clearances.

A shareholder vote is expected to take place in mid-2026, with completion anticipated shortly thereafter if the scheme is approved.

Securities Disclosure: I, Giann Liguid, hold no direct investment interest in any company mentioned in this article.

This post appeared first on investingnews.com

Palo Alto-based startup Rhoda AI announced that it has raised US$450 million in a Series A funding round, valuing the company at about US$1.7 billion.

The company plans to use the capital to expand development and deployment of artificial intelligence systems designed to train robots using internet-scale video data.

The round was led by Premji Invest and included investors such as Khosla Ventures, Temasek Holdings, and venture capitalist John Doerr.

Rhoda emerged from 18 months in stealth while unveiling its robotics platform, designed to enable machines to operate more effectively in complex and unpredictable industrial environments.

Chief executive Jagdeep Singh said the method helps robots adapt to unfamiliar conditions that might otherwise disrupt traditional models.

“We believe the next era of robotics requires models that understand how the world moves — not just what it looks like or how it’s described in language,” Singh said in a recent press release. The goal is simple: robots that work in the real world, not just controlled lab settings.”

The company calls its system a Direct Video Action model, which continuously observes its surroundings, predicts how the environment may change, and translates those predictions into robotic actions in real time.

According to Rhoda, the system updates its decisions every few hundred milliseconds in a closed feedback loop, allowing robots to adjust as conditions evolve.

“We believe the next era of robotics requires models that understand how the world moves — not just what it looks like or how it’s described in language,” Singh said. “By learning from internet-scale video and operating in closed loop, our systems are designed to adapt to real-world variability in ways conventional approaches struggle to achieve.”

Traditional robotics AI models are typically trained using teleoperation data, where human operators remotely control robot movements to generate training examples.

While effective in controlled settings, this method can limit how much data is available for robots to learn from. Rhoda’s approach instead uses millions of publicly available internet videos to teach robots about physical movement, object interactions and real-world dynamics.

The company then combines this large-scale video training with smaller amounts of robotic data to refine how machines execute tasks.

The company said its technology has already been tested in industrial settings using off-the-shelf robotic hardware inside an automotive manufacturing facility.

Rhoda plans to license its software platform to industrial customers and is also developing its own robotics hardware, including humanoid robots, to ensure the technology can operate effectively in production environments.

Securities Disclosure: I, Giann Liguid, hold no direct investment interest in any company mentioned in this article.

This post appeared first on investingnews.com

Here’s a quick recap of the crypto landscape for March 11 as of 9:00 a.m. UTC.

Get the latest insights on Bitcoin, Ether and altcoins, along with a round-up of key cryptocurrency market news.

Bitcoin (BTC) was priced at US$69,624.27, down by 1.7 percent over the last 24 hours.

Bitcoin price performance, March 11, 2026.

Chart via TradingView

Ether (ETH) was priced at US$2,022.91, down by 1.6 percent over the last 24 hours.

Altcoin price update

  • XRP (XRP) was priced at US$1.37, down by 2.0 percent over 24 hours.
  • Solana (SOL) was trading at US$85.39, up by 2.1 percent over 24 hours.

Today’s crypto news to know

Oil trading surges on crypto derivatives platform

Volatility in global energy markets is spilling into crypto trading platforms, where oil derivatives have suddenly become one of the most active markets.

On decentralized exchange Hyperliquid, an oil-linked perpetual futures contract tracking West Texas Intermediate crude generated about US$1.32 billion in trading volume over the past 24 hours.

The surge made oil the second-most traded contract on the platform after Bitcoin.

The surge followed the escalation of the US-Israel conflict with Iran, which sent oil prices briefly soaring above US$118 per barrel before retreating. Prior to the conflict, the contract typically saw about US$21 million in daily trading.

Data from Hyperliquid shows Bitcoin still dominates trading activity with roughly US$3.64 billion in daily volume, but the WTI contract has now leapfrogged assets such as Ether, silver, and gold.

Strategy adds nearly 18,000 Bitcoin in US$1.28 billion purchase

Strategy (NASDAQ:MSTR) continued its aggressive accumulation strategy last week, revealing it purchased 17,994 Bitcoin for about US$1.28 billion between March 2 and March 8.

According to a regulatory filing, the company paid an average price of roughly US$70,946 per coin. The latest purchase lifts Strategy’s total holdings to 738,731 Bitcoin, acquired at a combined cost of about US$56.04 billion.

China’s top court warns of tougher penalties for crypto crime

China’s Supreme People’s Court has signaled a harder line against cryptocurrency-related financial crime, pledging stricter penalties for individuals using digital assets to launder money or move funds overseas.

Chief Justice Zhang Jun issued the warning in the court’s annual report to the National People’s Congress, highlighting the growing role of crypto in cross-border financial offenses.

Authorities say the crackdown is part of a broader campaign against technology-enabled crime, which increasingly includes artificial intelligence-driven fraud and coordinated online harassment campaigns known as “human flesh search.”

Despite the ban, enforcement agencies say criminals have continued to exploit digital assets to bypass China’s strict capital controls, which limit individuals to transferring US$50,000 abroad each year.

Securities Disclosure: I, Meagen Seatter, hold no direct investment interest in any company mentioned in this article.

Securities Disclosure: I, Giann Liguid, hold no direct investment interest in any company mentioned in this article.

This post appeared first on investingnews.com

Republicans sharply criticized former President Joe Biden over rising prices at the gas pump, but a spike in energy prices amid the U.S.-Israeli conflict in Iran threatens to scramble the party’s affordability messaging.

The Iran conflict has led to a surge in gas prices for Americans, leading to an average 50 cents a gallon increase since Operation Epic Fury began on Feb. 28.

The average price of gas reached $3.54 per gallon on Tuesday, according to AAA. Diesel prices have also risen to $4.72 per gallon. The increases have been mostly fueled by volatility in oil prices, which rose above $100 per barrel on Monday as the Strait of Hormuz remained effectively shuttered.

The president characterized the gas price hike amid the Iran conflict as ‘a very small price to pay’ in a Truth Social post Sunday.

That statement represented a sharp break with Trump’s typical messaging touting low gas prices prior to Operation Epic Fury.

‘Gasoline, which reached a peak of over $6 a gallon in some states under my predecessor — it was quite honestly a disaster — is now below $2.30 a gallon in most states. And in some places, $1.99 a gallon,’ President Donald Trump said during his Feb. 27 State of the Union address. ‘And when I visited the great state of Iowa just a few weeks ago, I even saw $1.85 a gallon for gasoline.’

The surge in gas and diesel prices threatens to undermine the economic message of President Trump and congressional Republicans, who have touted low gas prices as a major win in the lead-up to November’s midterm elections. Cost of living issues are expected to be a key concern among voters as both parties claim to be laser-focused on making everyday life more affordable.

During the 2024 presidential contest, Trump frequently campaigned on ending Biden’s ‘war on American energy’ and pledged to reverse a surge in gas prices that occurred under his predecessor’s tenure.

Gas prices averaged $3.45 per gallon across all fuel grades during Biden’s four-year term, surging to a record high of more than $5 per gallon in June 2022 after the outbreak of the Russia-Ukraine war, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.

‘Starting on Day 1, we will drive down prices and make America affordable again,’ Trump said during a speech at the Republican National Committee convention in July 2024. ‘People can’t live like this.’

Democrats have seized on rising prices at the pump amid the conflict in Iran.

‘I wish the administration thought about this before they started this unnecessary war,’ Sen. Angus King, I-Maine, who caucuses with Democrats, said Monday when asked about the gas price hike.

‘Donald Trump’s war has sent gas prices skyrocketing through the roof,’ Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., wrote on social media Monday. ‘What contempt. What cluelessness.’

Schumer has called on the president to release oil from America’s Strategic Petroleum Reserve to combat supply bottlenecks in the Middle East. The top Democrat notably opposed a Trump-led effort to replenish the stockpile in his first term when oil prices were much lower.

Republicans have voiced confidence that the rise in gas prices would be temporary. GOP lawmakers have frequently cited their efforts to roll back Biden-era energy regulations and boost domestic production as evidence that their policies are working to lower energy prices.

‘It’s going to be probably volatile for a period of time. I think what’s going to be key is ensuring we can get safe access to the Strait of Hormuz,’ Sen. Steve Daines, R-Mont., said Monday, adding that he was confident the disruption would be short-lived.

Daines, who abruptly suspended his re-election campaign last week, highlighted that average gas prices were under $3 per gallon prior to Trump’s State of the Union speech. 

‘That’s an important win for the American people,’ the retiring Montana lawmaker said. ‘Something you’re reminded of usually weekly when you’re gassing up your vehicle.’

Some Republicans and Trump administration officials are also arguing that a defeated Iran will ultimately spur lower gas prices, even if there is pain in the short run.

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt characterized the recent increase in oil and gas prices as ‘temporary’ during a briefing Tuesday.

‘Once the national security objectives of Operation Epic Fury are fully achieved, Americans will see oil and gas prices drop rapidly, potentially even lower than they were prior to the start of the operation,’ Leavitt said.

‘At the end of the day, we’re going to destroy this regime, and their ability to disrupt oil is going to be less, and we’re going to have more production, not less,’ Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., told reporters Monday. ‘Once you take the largest state sponsor of terrorism off the planet, who depends on oil for their revenue, that’s a more stable world.’

Nearly seven in 10 Americans — including 44% of Republicans — expect gas prices to keep increasing in the coming months, according to a Reuters-Ipsos poll released Monday.

Trump has threatened Iran with unprecedented force if the flow of oil through the Strait of Hormuz is further restricted.

‘Death, Fire, and Fury will reign upon them — But I hope, and pray, that it does not happen!’ Trump wrote Monday on Truth Social.


This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

A top Senate Republican wants answers on why the Biden administration drained the nation’s oil stockpile but did little to replenish it.

Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., charged that decisions under President Joe Biden to tap the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) could have a ripple effect as the U.S. continues its war with Iran and as the Iranian government continues its chokehold on the Strait of Hormuz.

Cotton, in a letter first obtained by Fox News Digital to Department of Energy Secretary Chris Wright, charged that the Biden administration released 180 million barrels from the nation’s reserves in 2022 ‘to suppress gas prices ahead of the midterm elections.’

‘That decision drained the reserve to a 40-year low,’ Cotton wrote. ‘The decision to drain the SPR was not a response to a supply emergency; it was a deliberate political act designed to protect Democrats from the consequences of their own failed energy policies.’

Biden tapped the reserve twice — once in 2021 to relieve soaring fuel prices as the nation still grappled with the economic fallout from the COVID-19 pandemic and again the following year to combat increased energy costs at the onset of the war between Russia and Ukraine.

The SPR has capacity for over 700 million barrels of crude oil, but currently, the reserve has far less following the drawdown under the previous administration.

At the end of Biden’s term, the reserve had about 415 million barrels of crude on hand, according to data from the Department of Energy.

Cotton said that it wasn’t ‘the first time Democrats undermined the reserve’ and noted that Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and congressional Democrats blocked President Donald Trump’s bid to refill the SPR in 2020, when barrels were cheap, with $3 billion from a colossal COVID-19 stimulus package moving through Congress.

He also said that in 2021, Biden signed an executive order that halted new oil and gas leases on federal lands and offshore, which Cotton charged ‘constrained domestic production while the administration was draining the reserve.’

Cotton demanded that Wright answer how blocking the $3 billion oil purchase and halting oil and gas leases impacted the nation’s overall domestic supplies that could have been used to replenish the SPR.

Meanwhile, congressional Democrats are demanding that Trump tap into the SPR after oil prices spiked to four-year highs over the weekend as the war in Iran intensifies.

Schumer said that the reserve ‘exists for moments exactly like this.’

‘The Strait of Hormuz is the world’s most important oil transit choke point, with roughly 20% of global petroleum liquids consumption moving through it in recent years,’ Cotton said. ‘That is precisely why the SPR must be treated as a strategic national security asset, not a political tool.’


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Jeremy Carl, President Donald Trump’s nominee for assistant secretary of state for international organization affairs, withdrew his nomination Tuesday after facing bipartisan criticism over past comments about race, religion and Israel.

Carl, a conservative commentator and senior fellow at the Claremont Institute, wrote on X that he lacked the unanimous Republican support needed to advance his nomination out of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. He was nominated to the State Department role by President Donald Trump and Secretary of State Marco Rubio.

‘I am withdrawing my nomination for consideration as Assistant Secretary of State for International Organization Affairs,’ he wrote Tuesday afternoon. ‘I am tremendously grateful to President Trump for nominating me and then (upon expiration of my original nomination) renominating me for this role, and I am also grateful to Secretary Rubio and his team for their continued support throughout this long and time-consuming process.’

Republicans hold a 12-10 majority on the panel, meaning a single GOP defection would result in a tie vote and block the nomination from moving to the full Senate.

‘Unfortunately, at this time this unanimous support was not forthcoming,’ Carl wrote, adding that he did not want the administration to ‘waste valuable time and energy’ attempting to change the outcome.

During his confirmation hearing last month, senators pressed Carl on previous remarks concerning ‘white identity,’ immigration and Israel. Sen. John Curtis, R-Utah, specifically pressed him on an October 2024 podcast, in which Carl said, ‘the United States spends too much time and energy on Israel, often to the detriment of our own national interests.’ Curtis challenged Carl on what American interests were harmed, and asked if he recognized the benefits that the U.S. gains from the relationship with Israel. Carl dodged the questions, but did say that he wishes that ‘the UN would stop being antisemitic all the time.’

Curtis also cited the same podcast, in which the host accused Jews of claiming a ‘special victim status’ over the Holocaust, and said, ‘Israel is not a victim, but instead a perpetrator,’ to which Carl responded, ‘Right, right. Yeah, no, I mean, I think that’s true.’ Carl at first said that he would have to review the question, but when Curtis noted that he gave Carl’s exact words, Carl admitted, ‘I’m sure that they’re accurate.’

Curtis said afterward that Carl was not the ‘right person to represent our nation’s best interests in international forums.’

Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., questioned Carl about his references to ‘white identity’ and what he believed was being ‘erased.’ Carl responded that he was concerned about the erosion of what he described as a majority American culture due to mass immigration, saying he stood by those comments. Murphy later called him a ‘legit white nationalist’ on social media.

Congressman questions State Department official who said Biden tried to make maps

Carl rejected that characterization, saying he is ‘not a White nationalist’ and that his remarks referred to a broadly shared American culture that people of all backgrounds could embrace.

‘Unfortunately, for senior positions such as this one, the support of the President and Secretary of State is very important but not sufficient,’ Carl added on X. ‘We also needed the unanimous support of every GOP Senator on the Committee on Foreign Relations, given the unanimous opposition of Senate Democrats to my candidacy, and unfortunately, at this time this unanimous support was not forthcoming.’

The position Carl was nominated to oversees U.S. engagement at the United Nations and other multilateral organizations. He previously served as a deputy assistant interior secretary during Trump’s first term.

Trump, Netanyahu have a ‘common view of the world’: Israeli ambassador

‘I remain extremely confident in President Trump, Secretary Rubio, and the rest of the outstanding team at State (a group of leaders that includes many close friends),’ Carl concluded on X. ‘I know they will continue to pursue a foreign policy that puts America first, and that they will work to ensure America is able to exercise its power and influence in the world like never before.’

Fox News Digital reached out to the White House and the State Department for comment and has not heard back.

Reuters contributed to this report.


This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Discussions of money frequently slide beyond economics into looser forms of argument, especially when inflation or central banking are the topic. In that context, labeling fiat currency “counterfeit” has become a common charge, yet modern monetary systems operate through legally-sanctioned claims rather than intrinsic metal content, and treating that institutional structure as fraud mischaracterizes fiat money. The accusation resonates with those justifiably uneasy about discretionary policy or declining purchasing power, but it does not withstand even superficial analytical scrutiny. 

Fiat currency may be unsound, poorly managed, or politically abused, but it is not counterfeit by nature, and conflating monetary soundness with legal authenticity undermines any attempt at economic debate. Counterfeiting has a precise meaning: the unauthorized creation of money or financial instruments that falsely purport to be genuine. The defining features are deception and impersonation: a counterfeit bill pretends to be issued by an authority that did not, in fact, issue it. Counterfeiting is a crime under the legal theory that it undermines trust in the monetary system by introducing fraudulent claims that mimic legitimate ones.

Here is one such confident claim from the internet:

Fiat currency does not meet this definition. In much of the world today, including the United States, money is defined by legislatures and issued and managed by legally constituted monetary authorities — typically central banks — operating under explicit statutory mandates. There is no pretense involved. A dollar bill (a euro, a pound, a yen) does not claim to be gold, nor does a bank reserve pretend to be something other than what it is. Whatever one thinks of the regime under which fiat money is issued, it is not fraudulent in a legal or technical sense. It does not impersonate another issuer, nor does it masquerade as a different monetary good.

Much of the confusion stems from an implicit equation of monetary soundness with monetary legitimacy. Sound money refers to a set of desirable properties: stability of purchasing power, resistance to political manipulation, predictability, and credibility over time. Counterfeit money, by contrast, refers to authenticity — whether a monetary instrument is genuinely issued by the authority it claims to represent. Yet these are distinct concepts. An unsound currency can still be perfectly authentic, just as a sound currency could, in principle, be counterfeited.

Historically, this distinction was well understood. When governments debased coinage by reducing precious metal content, critics accused them of debasement, not counterfeiting. The coins were real; their purchasing power was diminished by policy choice. The moral and economic objection was to dilution and redistribution, not to forgery. Modern fiat systems operate on the same principle, albeit without a metallic anchor. Inflationary issuance may erode value, but erosion is not fakery.

Another source of the “counterfeit” charge is the role of inflation. When new money enters the system, it redistributes purchasing power toward early recipients and away from later ones. This effect — often associated with Cantillon’s insight — can feel unjust, especially when money creation is aggressive or poorly explained. But again, injustice and illegality are not the same thing. Unauthorized dilution is counterfeiting; authorized dilution is inflation. One may object vigorously to the latter without confusing it with the former.

Another example, with identifying details removed to protect the ignorant.

Some critics also point to the absence of commodity backing. Fiat money is not redeemable for gold or silver, and therefore, they argue, it is inherently false or fake. But backing is a feature of a monetary regime, not a test of authenticity. A property deed is not counterfeit because it isn’t convertible into land at a redemption window; it is valid because the legal system enforces the title. Attentive readers will note that this is not a benchmark of relative value or desirability, only of legal standing. An instrument is not counterfeit because it lacks intrinsic backing, especially when it doesn’t promise to. Fiat money openly derives its value from legal acceptance, institutional credibility, and network effects. Whether that foundation is stable or desirable is a separate question.

Relatedly, money does not need “intrinsic value” to be money. What matters is not physical usefulness but expected acceptability — confidence that others will accept it in exchange, and consequently its general acceptance in dealings. Historically, commodity monies prevailed because their production costs and limited supply solved trust problems in weak institutional environments, not because intrinsic value was logically required. Gold’s non-monetary uses account for only a fraction of its monetary value, just as modern fiat money’s lack of direct consumption use does not disqualify it from functioning as money. Intrinsic value may anchor credibility, but it is not synonymous with authenticity, and its absence does not singularly render fiat money counterfeit.

The strongest intuition behind the counterfeit label is moral rather than technical. Central banking is frequently opaque. Monetary policy is inevitably politicized. Long periods of inflation quietly confiscate wealth without an explicit vote or tax bill. These critiques are both accurate and serious, and they deserve attention. But economics is a science, and calling fiat money counterfeit substitutes provocation for precision. It implies fraud where the real issues are incentives, governance, and restraint.

If the goal is clarity, better terms are available. “Monetary debasement” captures the historical trend of weakening purchasing power. “Discretionary fiat issuance” highlights institutional structure. “Inflationary redistribution” names the economic mechanism directly. These phrases describe what is happening without mislabeling it.

For example:

The debate over fiat money versus commodity-backed money is ultimately a debate about trust and limits: about whether political institutions can be trusted to discharge monetary policy prudently over long time horizons. (In this regard, I believe the verdict is solidly registered.) History offers more than sufficient reason for skepticism. But skepticism does not require misdefinition or emotional retort. 

None of this should be construed as a defense of central banking, the Federal Reserve, or the monetary hijinks that wreck lives and economies. Fiat money is virtually always unsound, relatively speaking. It is fragile and subject to manipulation. A long chain of precedent suggests that every fiat issue is inevitably destined to evaporate. Yet none of that makes it counterfeit. Soundness and authenticity are not the same thing. Confusing them weakens an otherwise strong critique and hands defenders of fiat money an easy technical rebuttal. And if fiat money truly is counterfeit, why burden yourself with it? I will happily take delivery of as much of your “fake” money as you are willing to part with.

In a recent Wall Street Journal piece, I argued that erratic tariff policy has alienated our allies and that the world is increasingly building trade relationships that don’t require American participation. Days later, a Letter to the Editor was published responding to it. 

I’ll confess that finding so much common ground with someone of Meizlish’s caliber is both flattering and, given the state of trade policy discourse, genuinely refreshing. We agree on the core argument, we agree on the facts, and we want the same thing: a more secure and prosperous United States. That said, there are differences worth spelling out. I’ll go through the letter paragraph by paragraph, which I recognize can look combative, but isn’t meant to be.

David Hebert writes that the world is growing tired of the US and “reglobalizing around partners who commit to rules rather than those who wield tariffs like a club” (“Everyone Else Is Trading Without Us,” op-ed, Feb. 27). It’s a fair observation, but his piece avoids addressing the threat from China.

“Avoid” is a strong word. I didn’t “avoid” addressing China because “addressing China” wasn’t relevant to the thesis of my piece: that inconsistent, erratic tariff policy and the sudden reneging on past agreements have alienated our friends. 

Meizlish continued, noting the collapse in imports from China — with a crucial caveat.

Recent Commerce Department data adds crucial context. American imports from China collapsed by nearly 30 percent in 2025 while European flows into the US grew. Notwithstanding the real potential of Chinese goods making their way into the US by way of Europe, that looks less like American isolation than the beginnings of a reorientation Washington has been trying to engineer.

It’s on the issue of transshipment where I part ways with Meizlish. He acknowledges that transshipment — for example, China routing goods to the United States through Europe — is a real possibility, then quickly moves past it. But this is a serious and well-documented problem, serious enough that the Department of Justice has created a Trade Fraud Task Force.

Transshipment is incredibly hard to protect against and enforce. It will almost certainly be fraught with minutiae and judgment calls. If China creates the steel that goes into engine components machined in Germany before ultimately finding their way into a Ford F-150, are those parts subject to Chinese tariff rates or German tariff rates? The answer, like beauty, “lies in the eye of the beholder.”

And therein lies the problem: in a world where tariff rates are determined by rules and long-standing relationships, the answer to this question is basically inconsequential for business-minded people. When tariffs are imposed whenever “the White House finds a new grievance,” they matter.

My suspicion is that Meizlish agrees with me on the transshipment front and that, if he had a larger word count, he could have elaborated on this. But the printed words give the impression that this is possible but not that big of a deal. But insofar as transshipment is happening, that’s an argument against the efficacy of tariffs to accomplish their stated goals and it should be counted as such.

Moving on, Meizlish points out some of the effects of the tariffs that have actually been implemented. On this, we are in total agreement. But when it comes to what to do moving forward, we differ.

Broad tariffs moved imports away from China without meaningfully closing the overall trade deficit or generating the export growth the administration needs. Finishing the job will require smarter tools — targeted tariffs, trade agreements and investment incentives — not a retreat from economic pressure.

The call for “smart policy” is a classic and technocratic move. The problem is that this argument is completely unfalsifiable. No matter what happens, proponents will always be able to say, “it would have worked if only we had used smart policy, instead.”

Targeted tariffs and other smart policies, however, aren’t some newfangled policy. They’ve been tried. President Obama did it in 2009 on Chinese tires, and President George W. Bush did it in 2002 on Chinese steel. The results weren’t great. Prices rose for American consumers and producers, retaliatory measures from countries around the world followed, and China didn’t meaningfully alter their behavior. But you don’t have to take my word for it: here’s a copy of the 2019 Economic Report of the President, signed by President Trump. From the report itself, “Rather than changing its practices, China announced retaliatory tariffs on US goods.” Targeted tariffs, on their own evidence, haven’t moved Beijing. If they had, we wouldn’t be having this conversation.

“Trade agreements and investment incentives” are genuinely good tools. But for them to be a viable strategy, the US must be seen as a reliable, predictable partner. And unfortunately, the US just is not as trustworthy as we once were, so our ability to make those trade deals or to provide investment incentives has been diminished and other countries are increasingly looking elsewhere.

Hebert also notes that so-called middle powers are expanding trade among themselves. That may be true, but whether it represents a problem depends entirely on if those relations are pulling countries toward Beijing or away from it.

First: it’s absolutely true (see here, here, here, here, here, here, and here for examples). And Meizlish is correct that the key question is whether these relationships pull countries toward or away from Beijing. The answer depends crucially on what kind of trading partner the rest of the world can expect out of Beijing (as compared to the United States). On this, we don’t need to speculate. China ended 2025 with a record $1.2 trillion trade surplus precisely because, as Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney pointed out, China is “more predictable” than the US.

Now consider the broader pattern. The Greenland episode, where the US openly discussed annexing the territory of a NATO ally and threatened tariffs against anyone who stood in our way, drew global condemnation. Then, consider what happened with Switzerland just a few weeks ago: in his own words, President Trump “didn’t really like the way [Swiss Finance Minister Karin Keller-Sutter] talked to us and so instead of giving her a reduction, I raised [Swiss tariffs] to 39 percent.” Finally, remember all the humiliations that Trump launched toward Canada in early 2025. None of this bodes well for the US in terms of generating the stability and predictability that other countries are looking for when signing new trade deals.

The Supreme Court may have struck down the ability of the President to use IEEPA, which is a meaningful check on the President’s power going forward. However, it does nothing to erase what the world now knows the US is willing to attempt. Businesses deciding where to locate and who to work with aren’t just assessing today’s legal situation but its broader views on trade and property. Checks and balances are important, but there are limits to how much comfort they offer to a business underwriting a decades-long capital investment.

Finally, Meizlish argues something must be done about China.

A trading world organized around rules rather than coercion has an obvious antagonist — one whose industrial subsidies and currency manipulation destabilized the system Mr. Hebert wants to restore. Getting the rules-based order right requires naming who the rules are designed to constrain. That shouldn’t be too hard.

He’s right, it isn’t hard: China is a bad actor on the world stage. On this, we are in total agreement.

But the solution to China’s nefarious ways does not lie in tariffing Canada, the European Union, Japan, Mexico, and South Korea. Those countries have been our friends and allies for generations at this point. And they could have easily been the coalition partners we needed to build an effective multilateral response to Beijing. Instead, what we’ve done over the past year is pick trade fights with every potential ally simultaneously. 

The simple fact is that, relative to Beijing, the US looks unpredictable and chaotic. That’s a very big problem. The US cannot go it alone against China and get them to change their tune. This isn’t because we’re “too weak” or anything of the sort, it’s because that’s not how Chinese diplomacy works. It will take a coalition of willing and enthusiastic partners to accomplish the goals vis-à-vis Chinese trade policy that Meizlish and I recognize and share.

It isn’t too late to start rebuilding the relationships that have been damaged by the past year of US trade policy, but time is running out. Tariffs have been a rotten deal for the American people. If we don’t reverse course now, they’ll only make it more difficult for us to accomplish other, important goals.

Communicating economics to a general audience isn’t just about accuracy. It’s also about keeping people interested. In Useful Economics, AIER Founder Colonel EC Harwood aimed to engage “both student beginners and general readers” by grounding economics in “an area of the field where they at least have some familiarity with the principal matters discussed.”  

Making economics accessible often means finding relatable situations. Colonel Harwood used the example of making decisions in a supermarket. One such moment caught me by surprise while reading to my children. In the pages of Richard Scarry’s What Do People Do All Day? I found an illustration of Say’s Law of Markets. 

Scarry’s story offers a case that can help general readers — especially children — grasp the basic intuitions of economics.

The Busy World of Markets 

What Do People Do All Day? Is a collection of illustrated short stories set in fictional Busytown, a community populated by animal characters who go about their daily jobs, aiming to teach children about different occupations and how they contribute to the wider community. 

The story “Everyone is a worker” follows Farmer Alfalfa and his interactions with five other workers in Busytown. He grows food, keeps some for his family, and then sells the rest to Grocer Cat in exchange for money. With the money, Farmer Alfalfa buys a new suit from Stitches the tailor, a new tractor to boost his productivity, and presents for his wife and son from Blacksmith Fox. He then puts the remainder of his earnings into the bank. 

The story doesn’t end there. Grocer Cat sells the food to other people in Busytown, using the proceeds to buy a dress for his wife and a present for his son. Stitches and Blacksmith Fox first use the money to buy food, then new clothes, and then other goods. Stitches buys an eggbeater to make fudge while Blacksmith Fox buys more iron for his shop, reinvesting in his business. Any money left over, Scarry notes, is saved in the bank. 

Those familiar with Say’s Law may already see the connection. While Scarry does not include equations or a specific discussion of economic terms, he includes the core aspects of Say’s Law: exchange, money, and a division of labor. 

What Is Say’s Law? 

Say’s Law (named after nineteenth-century French political economist Jean-Baptiste Say) is often reduced to the phrase “supply creates its own demand.” Taken literally, that would mean any good or service automatically generates buyers. If that were true, I could get rich selling surfboards at the Continental Point of Inaccessibility in South Dakota (the farthest spot from any ocean in the continental US).  

Say himself wrote in A Treatise on Political Economy: “[I]t is production which opens a demand for products…Thus the mere circumstance of the creation of one product immediately opens a vent for other products.” Essentially, one’s ability to produce is the source of demand.  

Say’s Law means that one’s ability to do his or her job enables that person to demand all the goods and services he or she cannot personally produce (also known as “noncompeting” goods and services). Recall Farmer Alfalfa. Because he can grow his own food, he does not demand additional food. Instead, he trades his output for money and then uses the money to purchase goods that do not compete with his own labor. 

A more influential criticism comes from John Maynard Keynes. He argued that Say’s Law implies market economies cannot experience economy-wide gluts or shortages, because income from production should always be sufficient to purchase what is produced — in other words, that aggregate supply must equal aggregate demand. Critics then point to recessions and depressions as evidence that Say’s Law fails.

Economist Steven Horwitz explained why this critique misses the point. Say’s Law, he noted, “has nothing to do with an equilibrium between aggregate supply and aggregate demand.” Instead, it describes how production generates income, which then becomes demand. As each worker becomes employed, Horwitz explained, he or she can purchase goods and services from other noncompeting producers, creating opportunities for their employment as well.

Farmer Alfalfa’s ability to grow and sell food allows him to demand the goods produced by others. Those workers, in turn, can demand food and other noncompeting goods and services. Production, not consumption, drives the process. 

Horwitz also noted that larger, wealthier communities support greater product variety, specialization, and competition, while smaller, poorer areas face fewer choices because they produce less. As Busytown becomes more productive — shown by workers reinvesting in their businesses — residents can offer one another a wider range of goods and services.

Money also plays a crucial role in connecting production and demand. The Busytown workers receive money in exchange for their productive actions, and the money serves as an intermediary good facilitating exchange. In a barter economy, if Stitches does not want Farmer Alfalfa’s vegetables, no trade can be made. Money makes exchange possible even when preferences do not align. 

Savings matter too. When Busytown’s workers deposit money in the bank, those funds become available for loans. When people delay consumption, spending power shifts to borrowers, whose purchases replace what savers set aside. So long as savings flow through the banking system, overall spending need not fall.

Economics in Ordinary Life

From the little I was able to read about Richard Scarry, he did not appear to have any economic training or particular interest in economics. Yet, intentional or not, Say’s Law shines through the ordinary interactions of Busytown residents.  

That’s the beauty of economics. Its core principles reveal themselves in everyday life. While young children may not grasp the great debates in economics, they can still see through a simple picture book that honest work, currency, and exchange help make communities prosper.

Three years ago, I came to the United States as a graduate student with the intention of studying public and international affairs at Columbia University, with a focus on public service. Like many who come here from across the world, I had a vision of the United States as the land of the free, a place where freedom of speech was cherished and where I could study freely. I thought it was a place where I could stand up for what I believed in without fear of retaliation from the government.

On March 8, 2025, that vision shattered. Multiple plainclothes ICE agents in unmarked cars grabbed me, without a warrant, from the lobby of my apartment building in New York and threw me on a plane to a federal detention center in Louisiana. As a green card holder with a U.S. citizen wife — who was 8 months pregnant at the time — I couldn’t believe what was happening. I had been targeted by the government because of my lawful speech in support of Palestinian rights, for protesting the use of my tax dollars and tuition fees to support the Israeli occupation.

Throughout my 104 days in federal detention, during which I missed the birth of my first child, I considered myself a political prisoner. The government had deprived me of my liberty, not because I had broken any laws, but because it didn’t like what I had to say.

Once I challenged my detention and Secretary Rubio’s determination that my political views posed a foreign policy threat, the government scrambled to add new accusations. They alleged, baselessly, that I had committed fraud on my green card application. Claims invented not out of evidence, but out of retaliation. Recent evidence in federal court revealed that DHS itself acknowledged, a day before my arrest, that there were no issues with the information I provided on my green card application because everything was complete, true, and correct. Yet I was arrested anyway.

I was not alone. Other students and scholars with valid immigration status were similarly targeted for detention and deportation despite having committed no crime. They were pulled off streets by masked agents, targeted outside of their homes, and tricked into arrests during citizenship appointments. What happened to us is exactly what the First Amendment is designed to prevent: the government deciding which speech is acceptable and which is not. Once that protection is weakened, everyone is at risk.

The Supreme Court recognized eighty years ago that the First Amendment protects all of us in the United States — citizens and noncitizens alike — from government persecution for our beliefs. If we allow that boundary to be violated for noncitizens, or when the government claims a foreign policy concern, a precedent is created that can be used against all of us. Even citizens. Even people who disagree with me vehemently about Palestine.

The government has argued that federal courts must let people sit in immigration detention for months or years before reviewing allegations of constitutional violations. They have argued that Pro-Palestine speech constitutes a foreign policy threat. They have argued that I deserve to be deported because they dislike my ideas. If they can do this to a lawful permanent resident with a U.S. citizen wife and newborn U.S. citizen child, there’s no telling who else they will come for.

The government isn’t allowed to control how we can speak and think. Attorneys representing me in my case, and others like me in similar cases, argued this point in court and secured our release from detention. But my case is still ongoing, and the executive branch’s immigration agency may soon order my deportation. So, I ask Americans directly: do you want to live in a country where you can be snatched off the street by plainclothes agents for your thoughts?

In Assad’s Syria, where I grew up in a Palestinian refugee camp, that was routine. Since the beginning of 2025, the United States, a country whose Constitution protects freedom of speech, has seen an increase in these actions that I once associated with Assad: abductions by plainclothes officers without warrants, forced detention of people who express views the government doesn’t like, and the targeted silencing of dissent.

I will continue to use my platform to advocate for human rights in Palestine. But I ask each and every person reading this to use their voice to defend our First Amendment rights. The right to speak our minds, no matter who holds power, is the foundation of our democracy, and it is in peril. Whatever you may think of me or my views, that foundation belongs to all of us.


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