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Inflation ticked down in January, the latest data released Friday from the Bureau of Economic Analysis shows. But it still remains well above the Federal Reserve’s target. The Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index (PCEPI), which is the Fed’s preferred measure of inflation, grew at an annualized rate of 3.4 percent in January 2026, down from 4.4 percent in the last month of 2025. The PCEPI grew at an annualized rate of 3.5 percent over the prior three months and 2.8 percent over the prior year.

Core inflation, which excludes volatile food and energy prices, remained elevated. Core PCEPI grew at an annualized rate of 4.5 percent in January 2026. It grew at an annualized rate of 3.7 percent over the prior three months and 3.1 percent over the prior year.

Figure 1. Headline and Core Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index Inflation, January 2021 – January 2026

Breaking It Down

The conventional view is that tariffs have pushed up prices over the last year. If that were the case, we would expect goods prices to grow much faster than services prices. It is easier to import a hat than a haircut, and tariffs will generally cause both foreign and domestic hat producers to raise their prices. Foreign hat producers raise their prices to cover some portion of the tariff. Domestic hat producers raise their prices because they know foreign hat producers will not be able to underbid them given the tariff.

Goods prices grew at an annualized rate of 0.5 percent in January, and were up 1.3 percent year-over-year. For comparison, goods prices grew at an average annualized rate of -0.1 percent per year. That suggests goods prices have grown about 1.4 percentage points faster than usual over the last year.

Services prices grew at an annualized rate of 4.6 percent in January, and have grown 3.5 percent over the last year. Over the five-year period just prior to the pandemic, services prices grew at an average annualized rate of 2.3 percent per year. Hence, services prices have grown about 1.2 percentage points faster than usual over the last year. Moreover, the excess growth of services prices can no longer be explained by the housing component, which tends to lag broader price movements. Housing prices grew 3.2 percent over the last year, which is around 10 basis points slower than observed over the five-year period just prior to the pandemic.

Although goods prices have grown a bit faster than services prices, the difference — just 20 basis points — is relatively small. Recall that headline PCEPI inflation is around 80 basis points above the Fed’s two-percent goal. The available evidence suggests that inflation is relatively widespread. It is not primarily due to the tariffs.

Competing Objectives

Elevated inflation is just one of the concerns Fed officials will be discussing at this week’s Federal Open Market Committee meeting. They are also concerned about the relatively slow job growth observed over the last year. 

“There is no dismissing the weakness of job creation in 2025,” Fed Governor Christopher Waller said last month. Data released since then would seem to confirm his fears that the strong January “report may contain more noise than signal.” The economy lost 92,000 jobs in February, nearly wiping out the outsized gains in January.

Congress has tasked the Fed with delivering price stability and maximum employment. But it has largely left it to the Fed to determine what those terms mean and how to balance the two goals when they are in conflict.

The Fed explains how it will deal with diverging goals in its 2025 Statement on Longer-Run Goals and Monetary Policy Strategy:

The Committee’s employment and inflation objectives are generally complementary. However, if the Committee judges that the objectives are not complementary, it follows a balanced approach in promoting them, taking into account the extent of departures from its goals and the potentially different time horizons over which employment and inflation are projected to return to levels judged consistent with its mandate. The Committee recognizes that employment may at times run above real-time assessments of maximum employment without necessarily creating risks to price stability.

The so-called “balanced approach” would seem to suggest it will place equal weight on the two goals. But the “extent of departures” and “different time horizons” affords a lot of flexibility. And the special attention given to employment in the last line suggests the Fed might put more weight on employment in practice.

What Should Be Done?

My own view is that the economy is at or near full employment at the moment, with low job growth reflecting demographic changes and increased immigration enforcement. If I am correct, the Fed should not worry about the labor market. Instead, it should focus on getting inflation back down to target. The Iran conflict may complicate the Fed’s job, by adding temporary supply-driven inflation (which it should ignore) to the permanent demand-driven inflation seen in the January release (which it should address). If supply-driven inflation emerges, and I suspect it will, the Fed will need to parse the data carefully in order to determine the extent of the inflation problem and, correspondingly, the extent to which it should respond to above-target inflation.

It is highly unlikely that Fed officials will adjust their policy rate on Wednesday. The CME Group currently puts the odds at just 0.9 percent. But one should pay close attention to what Fed officials signal in their post-meeting statement and what Chair Powell tells the press. That may give us a better sense of how Fed officials are interpreting the incoming data — and what they intend to do about it.

In the technology arms race between the United States and China for dominance in artificial intelligence (AI), we are often told that the decisive factor will be computational power: who can build more data centers, secure more advanced chips, and train larger models more cheaply. Those are not irrelevant, but nor are they the crux of the competition. The true contest is one of political culture.

China is scrambling, by state initiative in a command economy, to close the remaining gap with the West in generative AI and foundational tech research. Yet it does so under a one-party Leninist dictatorship whose defining feature is the suppression of free inquiry. That fact raises a paradox at the heart of the AI race: artificial intelligence, the most daring attempts ever made to replicate human cognition, seems to require precisely the qualities that authoritarianism must crush — independence of mind, criticism of orthodoxy, and the freedom to dissent.

To borrow Czesław Miłosz’s phrase, how can the captive mind create a technology characterized by relentless innovation and the overthrow of orthodoxies? How can conceptual daring flourish in an environment where thought is ruthlessly policed?

For decades, those who understood communism predicted that the Soviet economy must fail not only for want of market economic calculation but for want of intellectual freedom — and fall behind the West in advanced technology. 

Fail it did, partly in the effort to save the system by loosening the totalitarian grip. China is different, we are told. Yet China’s selective experiments with markets have been accompanied, now, by even tighter enforcement of ideological conformity, with Xi Jinping repeatedly warning against a Soviet-type “disaster” (i.e., perestroika and glasnost).

Can the answer to this paradox be found in the story of how China rose from the ideological ruins of the Cultural Revolution to become a world force in AI — and how that rise illuminates both the power and the limits of innovation under constraint? The history is essential, but so too is the psychology: wounded national pride, collective ambition, and disciplined technical aspiration. Above all, perhaps, it is the story of a Chinese Communist Party that — driven by political necessity — risked infection by American freedom in order to claim the indispensable fruits of the free mind.

The Reopening of the Chinese Mind

When Mao Zedong died in 1976, China was devastated in every way — including intellectually. During his 27 years as China’s unchallenged ruler, Mao presided over catastrophes on a scale difficult to comprehend. The Great Leap Forward (1958–1962), with its forced collectivization and fantasy quotas, produced the worst famine in human history. The Cultural Revolution (1966–1976) followed, a decade of political hysteria in which universities were closed, professors humiliated and beaten, libraries destroyed, and the educated class scattered to labor camps or remote villages.

The combined human toll of starvation, political executions, purges, and abuse under Mao’s rule is routinely estimated by historians at 50–70 million deaths — devastation without precedent in peacetime. During the Cultural Revolution, the university system had been shuttered for ten years; professors and students alike had been sent to labor in the countryside; libraries had been pillaged; and ideological hysteria had replaced scholarship. China was, by the measure of intellectual infrastructure, one of the least prepared countries on earth to enter the information age.

Deng Xiaoping, often called “the architect of Reform and Opening Up,” reversed Mao’s autarkic doctrines. Deng famously declared, “It doesn’t matter whether a cat is black or white, as long as it catches mice,” a slogan that became the ideological warrant for pragmatism over dogma.

Deng’s reforms opened China to global markets with breathtaking speed. Foreign investment surged into the coastal provinces; Chinese students began studying abroad by the tens of thousands; and export-led manufacturing initiated what would become the fastest sustained economic expansion in human history. Between 1980 and 2010 China’s GDP grew at an average annual rate of 10 percent, lifting more than 700 million people out of extreme poverty. The opening to the world was not ideological; it was utilitarian — China would learn from the West whatever it needed in order to regain strength, wealth, and international status.

The Returnees and the Importation of Freedom

China’s true ascent in AI began not at home but abroad. In the 1980s and 1990s, waves of Chinese students were sent to study at Western universities — especially in the United States. Tens of thousands entered programs in electrical engineering, computer science, applied mathematics, robotics, and cognitive science. This cohort would become the seedbed of China’s scientific and technological elite.

The same regime that had destroyed China’s intellectual class now sought to rebuild it — but to rebuild it inside a cage. Science was to be liberated — up to a point. The mind could be free in the laboratory if it served national rejuvenation, but not in other realms — above all, not political thought.

Thus, was born what might be called the principle of segmented freedom: autonomy in STEM, obedience in everything else.

When many of these students returned to China in the late 1990s and early 2000s, they carried back not only expertise but the habits of scientific liberty. They founded or joined institutions that became pillars of the Chinese AI ecosystem. The most significant was Microsoft Research Asia, established in 1998. Within a decade MSRA was producing world-class research, rivaling major American and European labs. Alumni of MSRA would go on to lead AI efforts at Baidu, Alibaba, Tencent — and at Western labs including Google, DeepMind, and OpenAI.

What made MSRA extraordinary — and emblematic of the Chinese model — was its borrowed freedom. It operated with an autonomy unmatched in other sectors of China’s intellectual life. Political discussion remained off-limits, but scientific inquiry was encouraged, even celebrated. The state tolerated this exceptional zone of independence because it served a higher political objective: national technological power.

The paradox sharpened: China needed the fruits of the Western scientific mindset but not the mindset itself. It sought creativity without dissent, originality without heterodoxy, innovation without liberalism. Could such selective adoption succeed?

National Ambition (and a Useful Substitute for Freedom)

One reason China sustained rapid innovation in an unfree environment is that its scientific elite has been mobilized by a national narrative of grievance and restoration. Since the early twentieth century, Chinese political culture has been organized around the story of the “century of humiliation” — beginning with the Opium Wars and ending with the Communist victory in 1949. In that narrative, China was carved up, exploited, and belittled by Western powers and Japan, and the Communist Party’s historic role is to restore national greatness.

Xi Jinping has framed China’s mission explicitly in these terms. In a 2014 speech, he declared: “Realizing the great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation is the greatest dream of the Chinese people in modern times.” (That “Chinese Dream” theme is now central to Party doctrine.) He has linked national rejuvenation to the “historic task of complete reunification” — a clear reference to retaking Taiwan.

This helps explain why China’s scientific class has generated extraordinary achievements even under constraint. Patriotism, but especially patriotic grievance, can be a powerful intellectual stimulant. It becomes, in certain respects, a substitute for individual freedom: a channeling of ambition into socially sanctioned goals.

Technologies that would have faced legal and ethical hurdles in the West could be deployed overnight in China. Hundreds of millions of Chinese citizens moved their lives onto digital platforms: messaging, shopping, payments, entertainment, banking, mobility, and communication. Every part of daily existence passed through centralized commercial ecosystems. Facial recognition, logistics optimization, financial risk modeling, machine translation, and recommendation systems developed at astonishing speed. The government’s tolerance — indeed, enthusiasm — for surveillance created a sea of harvestable data and a vast market for real-time inference.

Borrowed Freedom — and Its Limits

In 2017, the ceiling of authoritarian innovation began to appear.

Foundational breakthroughs — those requiring leaps of conceptual imagination — continued to come disproportionately from the West. China’s strengths lay overwhelmingly in applied AI. Yet many of the deep architectural revolutions of modern AI — transformers, diffusion models, deep reinforcement learning — were developed elsewhere. When OpenAI, DeepMind, or Google introduced a paradigm shift, Chinese firms adapted and scaled it with astonishing speed, but the original leaps of abstraction were less common.

This imbalance is not accidental. It reflects the constraints of a system that rewards technical prowess but discourages conceptual risk.

The strengths of innovation under authoritarianism are visible: abundant state funding, enormous pools of technical talent, a culture of disciplined study and fierce competition, state-created markets for AI surveillance and infrastructure, and a national mission that acts as a surrogate for individual aspiration.

The limits are less visible but, over time, decisive: fear of political missteps inhibits bold intellectual leaps; censorship creates blind spots and distorted incentives; interdisciplinary fields — such as AI ethics, cognitive science, and philosophy of mind — struggle under ideological control; innovation becomes incremental rather than foundational. Crucially, the most inventive and creative minds prefer to remain abroad.

AI poses a special challenge because it is a frontier field that depends on open debate, criticism of existing paradigms, and the willingness to explore controversial ideas. The mind does not easily compartmentalize its freedoms.

Authoritarianism Overshadows Innovation

China’s rise in artificial intelligence is real, not a statistical mirage. It demonstrates that human beings, even under the political constraint of dictatorship, can achieve extraordinary technical accomplishments when education, resources, and national purpose align. The mind seeks expression wherever it can find room to breathe. Even in unfree systems, it carves out local zones of competence, mastery, and ingenuity.

But the ceiling is real as well. Innovation under authoritarianism is conditional: adaptive but ultimately bounded. A society may import techniques created in free cultures, scale them with discipline and data, deploy them by centralized command. It may even tolerate islands of scientific autonomy so long as they serve national power. What it cannot indefinitely command are the wellsprings of innovation: the indivisible freedom of the mind to question all premises, raise all doubts, discard orthodoxies, and pursue truth without a political price tag.

Artificial intelligence arguably exposes the extent of this contradiction as did no prior technology. AI thrives on criticism, openness, conceptual risk, and the cross-pollination of ideas across disciplines — including philosophy, ethics, and cognitive science. A researcher who learns to fear political deviation may still optimize an algorithm, but over time intellectual and creative self-repression becomes automatic and seeps across boundaries. The mind committed to recognizing reality as an absolute does not have “no go” zones. Habits of obedience, once learned, migrate.

The paradox is not that China manages innovation despite repression, but that it does so by borrowing freedom — from foreign training, imported research cultures, and carefully fenced internal exceptions. Such borrowing can persist for years, even decades.

But AI, perhaps more than any previous science, achieves its “big” leaps when men of rare genius, independence, and self-assertion suddenly challenge the status quo. Such minds are not known to keep their genius to themselves when it comes to inquiry into politics, ethics, and history, but to let it soar everywhere — not only in the laboratory.

I recently used economist Albert Hirschman’s Exit, Voice, and Loyalty to explain why Jacinda Ardern, the former prime minister of New Zealand, quietly relocated her family to Sydney. When 43,000 mid-career Kiwis choose exit over voice, and a co-architect of the system joins them, something structural is broken.  

This framework is also visible in the United States. 

Hours after the Washington state House passed SB 6346 last week, a 9.9 percent income tax on earnings above one million dollars, “Coffee King” Howard Schultz announced on LinkedIn that he and his wife Sheri were moving to Miami. Schultz is 72. He bought Starbucks in 1987 and built it from a handful of Seattle coffee shops into one of the most recognized brands on earth. He is a lifelong liberal. He considered running for president as an independent. He is not fleeing blue-state politics out of ideological spite. He is making a calculation. 

That calculation is Hirschman’s, and in the American context it is sharper than the New Zealand version, because America has something New Zealand does not: competitive federalism. Fifty states, fifty tax codes, fifty regulatory environments, all competing for the same residents, the same businesses, the same tax base. When Ardern’s New Zealanders chose exit, they had to cross an ocean. When Schultz chose exit, he only had to book a flight to Florida. 

To Hirschman, himself an impassioned social observer who fled Hitler’s Germany and found a career at Columbia and Harvard, exit and voice exist always in tension. The easier it is to leave, the less likely people are to stay and fight for change. In America’s federal system, exit between states is extraordinarily easy. No passport required. No work visa. No language barrier. No loss of citizenship. You hire a moving company, update your address, and you are done. This is the purest laboratory for Hirschman’s theory anywhere in the world. 

And the results are running exactly as he predicted. 

Washington’s new tax is framed as a modest correction. The governor calls it “rebalancing.” The sponsors say it affects only the wealthiest half of one percent of households. The projected revenue is $3.7 billion per year, earmarked for schools, healthcare, and a working families tax credit. It sounds reasonable. It always sounds reasonable. 

But Hirschman would not have looked at the revenue projections. He would have looked at the moving trucks. Schultz’s net worth is estimated at $4.3 billion. His annual tax liability under SB 6346 would dwarf the average millionaire’s. And he is gone. Not to negotiate, not to lobby, not to fund an opposition campaign. Gone. To a state with no income tax, warmer weather, and proximity to his grandchildren on the East Coast. He wrapped the exit in family language. They always do. The LinkedIn post mentioned sunshine and adventure. It did not mention 9.9 percent. 

It did not need to. Everyone can do arithmetic. 

Starbucks headquarters will remain in Seattle, for now. But the company announced this month that it is expanding its corporate footprint in Nashville, Tennessee. Like Florida, Tennessee has no state income tax. The pattern is not subtle. 

California wrote the playbook. In 2022, the state claimed a $97.5 billion surplus. By 2024, that surplus had inverted into a $55 billion deficit. What happened? The state’s revenue model depends heavily on income taxes from high earners and capital gains. When those earners leave, the model breaks. And they have been leaving. California posted net emigration of over 200,000 people in 2024 and 2025. The Tax Foundation ranks it 49th in business tax climate. Tesla moved to Austin. SpaceX moved to Starbase, Texas. Chevron, after 145 years in California, moved to Houston. Oracle went first to Austin, then Nashville. Palantir moved to Denver, then Miami. Hewlett Packard Enterprise moved to Houston. In-N-Out Burger, born in Los Angeles, moved to Tennessee. The list is long enough to fill a column by itself. 

And California is not done. A proposed 2026 Billionaire Tax Act would impose a “one-time” five-percent levy on the assets of residents worth more than a billion dollars. Congressman Ro Khanna, who represents Silicon Valley, endorsed it. When Peter Thiel and Google co-founder Larry Page began making arrangements to leave the state, Khanna channeled Franklin Roosevelt’s 1936 quip about wealthy friends threatening to move abroad: “I shall miss them very much.” But Khanna borrowed the sarcasm without the substance. Roosevelt’s argument depended on a premise: there was no viable exit. In 1936, no other country offered comparable institutions at lower tax rates, so the threat to leave the United States was empty. In 2026, zero-income-tax Florida is just a three-hour flight away, and Nashville is recruiting your corporate headquarters. The premise has collapsed. The threat is not empty. The moving trucks are real. 

The response from Khanna’s own donors was immediate. Martin Casado, a partner at venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz who had supported Khanna financially, wrote that he had “done a speed run alienating every moderate” who backed him. Palmer Luckey, the Anduril industrial co-founder, warned that the tax would force founders to sell large pieces of their companies. Khanna now faces a primary challenge from a tech entrepreneur. The congressman who represents the most productive square miles on Earth told the people who made those miles productive that their departure was a joke. Hirschman could not have designed a cleaner experiment. When voice is mocked, exit accelerates. 

The seen, as Bastiat would put it, is the revenue projection: $3.7 billion a year for Washington, earmarked for schools and working families. The unseen is the tax base walking out the door, one founder at a time. California’s Legislative Analyst’s Office now projects structural deficits of $20 to $30 billion annually through the end of the decade. The surplus is gone because the people who generated the surplus are gone. 

The pattern is not merely American. Sweden ran a wealth tax for decades. Revenue never exceeded 0.4 percent of GDP. Meanwhile, the Swedish Tax Authority estimated that over 500 billion kronor in assets were transferred offshore, and Swedish billionaires accumulated fortunes of at least that size abroad. Sweden abolished the tax in 2007. France ran its Solidarity Tax on Wealth from 1988 to 2017. In that time, an estimated 60,000 millionaires left the country and roughly 200 billion euros in capital fled. Macron repealed the tax in 2018. Nine of the twelve European countries that tried wealth taxes eventually abandoned them. The irony is not lost on anyone paying attention. American progressives routinely point to Europe as a model for enlightened policy. On wealth taxes, Europe tried it, measured the damage, and walked away. Washington state is now adopting the policy that Stockholm repealed. The lesson is always the same: the projected revenue assumes the tax base will sit still. It never does. 

This is where competitive federalism turns Hirschman’s framework into something close to an iron law. In a single-country system like New Zealand, exit is expensive. You leave your networks, your family, your culture, your professional credentials. Loyalty holds. People stay and use voice far longer than the economics would suggest is wise. But in a federal system with fifty jurisdictions and no barriers to movement, the cost of exit drops to nearly zero for anyone with capital. Voice becomes irrational. Why spend years lobbying your state legislature when you can spend an afternoon on Zillow? 

The politicians know this. That is why SB 6346 does not take effect until 2028, with first payments in 2029. The delay is not administrative. It is strategic. It gives legislators two election cycles before the bill comes due. By the time the revenue shortfall becomes visible, the people who voted for the tax will be running for reelection on other issues. This is the political version of what Hirschman described: exit and voice operate on different timelines. The vote happens today. The moving truck arrives next quarter. 

Schultz, to his credit, said the quiet part almost out loud. In his LinkedIn post, he expressed his hope that Washington would “remain a place for business and entrepreneurship to thrive.” That is voice. It is also, recognizably, the last voice of a man who has already chosen exit. He is speaking from the departure lounge. 

What makes the American case so instructive is the receiving states. Florida, Texas, and Tennessee are not just benefiting passively from other states’ policy mistakes. They are actively competing. No income tax. Lower regulation. Recruiting campaigns aimed at exactly the professionals and entrepreneurs that California and Washington are taxing away. This is competitive federalism working as designed: not as a theoretical abstraction, but as a sorting mechanism. States that tax heavily lose their most mobile residents to states that do not. The mobile residents bring their businesses, their employees, their spending, and their philanthropy to places where capital is productive and property rights are respected. 

Hirschman understood that this dynamic has a ceiling. At some point, the people left behind, the ones who cannot afford to move or whose lives are too rooted to relocate, comprise the entire constituency. They have no exit option. They can only use voice. But their voice is directed at a government that has already lost the tax base it needs to deliver what they are demanding. The result is a fiscal spiral: higher taxes on a shrinking base, which accelerates exit, which shrinks the base further. California is deep into this spiral. Washington just entered it. 

Ardern left New Zealand for Sydney. Schultz left Seattle for Miami. The frameworks are different. The calculus is identical. When the cost of staying exceeds the cost of leaving, people leave. The question is never whether they will. The question is how long loyalty delays the inevitable. 

For Schultz, it took until the House vote. 

For decades, economists have warned about the risk of fiscal dominance. Over the past year, the topic has graduated to news headlines. At first glance, the US’s deteriorating fiscal situation appears to be the culprit.

Kevin Warsh sees it differently: fiscal dominance is an outgrowth of Federal Reserve actions that enabled profligate federal spending, led the Fed to stray from its monetary mission, and ultimately undermined Fed independence.

In other words: the problem of fiscal dominance is actually one of monetary policy run amok. 

The usual fiscal dominance story goes something like this. In normal times, a central bank should adjust its interest rate target as needed to deliver low and stable inflation. Under fiscal dominance, however, a profligate government forces the central bank’s hand. Rather than adjusting its interest rate target to maintain low and stable inflation, the central bank must accommodate government borrowing. Inflation inevitably rises because the central bank is effectively committed to monetizing government debt.

Economists have proposed a host of institutional constraints to guard against fiscal dominance, including central bank independence, conservative central bankers, optimal contracts, and monetary rules. These institutional constraints all function to insulate monetary policy decisions from the influence of short-term politics — that is, to preserve monetary dominance.

That, at least, is the conventional view. But Kevin Warsh, President Trump’s nominee to chair the Federal Reserve, has flipped the script. 

In a talk delivered at the International Monetary Fund last year, Warsh said, “monetary dominance — where the central bank becomes the ultimate arbiter of fiscal policy — is the clearer and more present danger.” Rather than restraining fiscal excess, he argues, the modern Fed has enabled it. And, in doing so, it has undermined its own legitimacy.

Warsh on Monetary Dominance

Warsh traced the roots of today’s predicament to the 2008 financial crisis, when the Fed cut rates to zero, engaged in emergency lending, and pioneered large-scale asset purchases. He accepted that the Fed might use these tools to stabilize markets and prevent collapse in exigent circumstances. “But when panics subside,” Warsh said, “the Fed is duty-bound to retrace its steps.”

The problem, in his telling, is that the Fed never fully retreated. “Since the panic of 2008, central bank dominance has become a new feature of American governance,” Warsh observed. Crisis management hardened into a permanent practice, with the Fed maintaining a nearly $7 trillion balance sheet today. Warsh noted it was “nearly an order of magnitude larger” than when he joined the Fed Board back in 2006, and has made the Fed “the most important buyer of US Treasury debt — and other liabilities backed by the US government — since 2008.”

By suppressing borrowing costs, Warsh argued, monetary policy quietly subsidized fiscal expansion. “Fiscal policymakers…found it considerably easier appropriating money knowing that the government’s financing costs would be subsidized by the central bank,” he said. 

The predictable result was more debt.

Independence as Shield and Sword

Warsh also offered an important corrective on central bank independence, which is usually cast as a safeguard against fiscal dominance. “Independence is not a policy goal unto itself,” he said. “It’s a means of achieving certain important and particular policy outcomes.” Its purpose is instrumental: to deliver low and stable inflation.

In practice, however, central bank independence has become a rhetorical sword, enabling the Fed to cut a path well beyond its remit. “‘Independence’ is reflexively declared when any Fed policy is criticized,” Warsh said.

That approach is ultimately self-defeating. When the Fed strays beyond its congressionally assigned mandate — venturing into climate policy or social justice — it weakens its claim to independence in monetary policy. And when it dismisses legitimate oversight as political interference, it further erodes the credibility it depends on.

Perhaps even more damaging to the cause of independence is the Fed’s recent performance on inflation. The “intellectual errors” that contributed to high inflation over the last few years — overconfidence in models, complacency about inflation risks, and downplaying the contributions of monetary and fiscal policy to high inflation — have exposed the limits of technocratic authority. The widespread recognition of those limits, in turn, has left the case for independence on shakier ground.

Warsh said independence is “chiefly up to the Fed.” It must be earned through competence, restraint, and accountability. When outcomes are poor, “serious questioning” and “strong oversight” are not threats to independence. They are prerequisites for its survival.

The Case for a Narrow Central Bank

If monetary dominance and abuse of independence are the disease, Warsh’s prescription is institutional modesty. He called for a narrow central bank focused relentlessly on its core mandate.

The Fed, Warsh argued, has come to resemble “a general-purpose agency of government.” A narrow Fed, in contrast, would eschew fashionable causes, limit discretionary interventions, and operate within well-defined and clearly-articulated frameworks. It would abandon performative transparency — shifting metrics, maintaining data dependence, revising forecasts, and offering forward guidance — in favor of quiet consistency. 

“Our constitutional republic is accepting of an independent central bank, only if it sticks closely to its congressionally-directed duty and successfully performs its tasks,” he said.

A Test of Conviction

Warsh has sketched a high-level vision for reforming the Federal Reserve. Whether his vision can be transformed into a coherent plan that survives contact with power is unclear. 

Congress has learned to rely on accommodative monetary policy. Markets have grown accustomed to a Fed that intervenes early and often. Reversing course will not be painless.

If confirmed, Warsh will face a choice between rhetoric and resolve. He believes the Fed has weaponized the argument for central bank independence and drifted well beyond its mandate, thereby setting the stage for fiscal folly. But restoring genuine accountability and restraining Fed action will require resisting precisely the temptations he thinks led the Fed astray. 

If Warsh is serious about narrowing the Fed, his tenure could mark a genuine turning point. If not, monetary dominance will continue to run amok.

On February 20, the Supreme Court handed the Trump administration a stinging rebuke. In a 6-3 decision, the justices ruled that the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) “contains no reference to tariffs or duties,” pouring cold water on Trump’s claim that the IEEPA grants him unilateral authority to impose sweeping taxes on all goods entering or leaving the United States.

But where one road closes, Trump’s tariff regime finds alternate routes. Within hours, Trump signed a new proclamation slapping a 10 percent global tariff under Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974, with promises to ratchet it to 15 percent. While this new round of tariffs will require a higher legal bar to implement, the administration is falling in lockstep with those across the political aisle who are rejecting free trade. Once viewed as the cornerstone of the global trading system, the US is turning its back on the market forces that ushered in Pax Americana — an era defined by rising living standards and unprecedented economic growth.

That chapter has ended.

Let’s be clear about the true costs of tariffs. Rather than being used as revenue generators or geopolitical bargaining chips, as Trump likes to tout, they are heavy taxes imposed on Americans. By 2026, the cumulative effect of Trump’s trade measures amounted to the largest tax increase as a share of GDP since the early 1990s. The average household faced roughly $1,300 more per year in costs. Broader estimates suggest price levels jumped more than two percent in the short run — translating to thousands of dollars in lost purchasing power for a typical family.

American manufacturers, the biggest supposed beneficiaries of America’s protectionist walls, are not exactly celebrating either. These measures cannot revive declining industries from which workers and capital have already moved to more productive sectors. A tax on consumers simply can’t reverse long-run economic forces that have made some industries obsolete. It simply transfers wealth from households to narrow interest groups, while leaving factory floors empty and workers worse off. According to researchers at the Federal Reserve, Trump’s Section 232 tariffs on steel and aluminum resulted in 75,000 manufacturing jobs lost downstream — in auto plants, construction firms, and appliance makers that depend on affordable inputs like steel — while adding only 1,000 jobs in steel production itself.

And of course, the working-class Americans whom Trump purports to champion are absorbing the biggest economic blows. Tariffs have fallen hardest on low- and middle-income households that spend the greatest share of income on goods like furniture, clothing, and food. Steel and lumber tariffs drive up housing prices. Higher input prices drive down real wages. And deficit spending further erodes purchasing power through inflation, which has only worsened lately thanks to a misguided belief that tariff revenue will offset America’s spending spree.

While Americans suffer from self-inflicted wounds at home, the world moves on.

Across Asia, China’s meteoric rise as an economic alternative to the US could serve as the deathblow to Pax Americana. One survey found 56.4 percent of regional respondents identify China as the dominant economic force — a figure that has only grown as America retreats from the global stage. Nations across the region are deepening ties with Japan, the EU, India, and Australia, rather than gambling on Washington’s trade whims.

In Europe, the picture is even more stark. The EU’s trade commissioner flew to Washington 10 times in four months in 2025, seeking relief from US tariffs. Each time, he returned empty-handed. European capitals are quickly realizing that once-leader of Pax Americana is an unreliable partner, driven by self-defeating populist impulses that will make America and the world a lot poorer.

Accelerated by Trump’s tariffs, the EU has  signed or updated trade deals with  Mercosur, Indonesia, India, and Mexico. Other countries across the Anglosphere like Canada and New Zealand are inking new free trade agreements in an effort to diversify beyond the U.S. In other words, as America raises its trade barriers, the rest of the world is lowering theirs, further undermining its standing as the global economic powerhouse.

Meanwhile, the US dollar — America’s enduring monetary advantage — is losing its luster as the world’s reserve currency. Research from Stanford’s Graduate School of Business finds that after Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs took effect, foreign investors sold US debt and dollar-denominated assets en masse, a sharp break from historical norms, when the dollar typically strengthened during global stress. The dollar’s share of central bank reserves has slid to a two-decade low, with foreign nations flocking to gold and other less risky assets.

What does this all mean?

As Johan Norberg lays out in his book, Peak Human, golden eras — from Ancient Rome to the Abbasid Caliphate to Song China — flourished when they embraced the free flow of ideas and people. Today’s post-Pax Americana moment is no exception. We’re not immune to the fate of past golden ages, and the surge of fear-driven economic nationalism will only speed the pace of our decline.

While Pax Americana fades in the rearview mirror, that doesn’t mean the US can’t find its way back to the top of the world’s rules-based economic system. But it will require more than a Supreme Court ruling. It will require Congress to reclaim its constitutional authority over trade policy — and an administration that understands that global free trade is the best recipe for making the country great again.  

The Court may have struck down the IEEPA tariffs. But unless the US reverses its protectionist course, the costs will compound. Starting at home.Other nations are not waiting for America to find its footing. They are building the trading order for this century — and they are building it without us.

In 2017, Candi Mentink and her husband, Todd Collard, of Calvin, Oklahoma, launched Caskets of Honor, an innovative business selling caskets wrapped in vinyl graphics to honor the deceased. Todd, a graphic designer, created designs ranging from religious and patriotic themes to sports and hobbies.

The business grew quickly, but after four years, they discovered something surprising: in Oklahoma—one of only three states alongside Virginia and South Carolina—it is illegal to sell caskets without a funeral director’s license.

Candi and Todd learned this lesson the hard way. When they advertised their caskets at the Tulsa State Fair in October 2021, an Oklahoma Funeral Board investigator posed as an interested customer. After Todd told him he would be happy to sell him a casket, the investigator informed them that they were breaking the law. The investigator proceeded to file a complaint with the Board, which pursued an administrative action against the couple, resulting in a $4,000 fine, among other requirements.

To continue operating their business, Candi and Todd had to do some creative maneuvering. Obtaining a funeral director license was out of the question. That would require two years in a mortuary science program, a one-year apprenticeship, and thousands of dollars in fees. On top of that, to fully comply with the law, they would also have to transform their workshop into an official funeral home, which would be prohibitively expensive—not to mention wasteful, since they don’t plan on becoming funeral directors or running a funeral home.

Their workaround was moving the company’s legal home to Texas and requiring online orders. This allowed them to operate under interstate commerce rules, though Oklahoma law still bars them from selling or advertising to Oklahomans from their shop, cutting into sales.

Lawmakers have repeatedly tried to repeal the restriction, but pushback from the Funeral Board and a private trade association has stalled reform.

As a result, Candi and Todd have decided to sue. Working with the Institute for Justice (IJ), they filed a lawsuit on February 4 challenging the law as unconstitutional under Oklahoma’s protections of economic freedom.

Commenting on the lawsuit, IJ Attorney Matt Liles highlighted the absurdity of the current law. “At the end of the day, a casket is just a box. It serves no health or safety purpose,” he said. “You shouldn’t need to spend years studying unrelated topics just to sell a box.” 

The lawsuit drew particular attention to the protectionist nature of the current legal regime. “Oklahoma’s licensure requirements for casket sales have the intent and effect of establishing and maintaining a cartel for the sale of caskets within Oklahoma,” IJ writes. “…This anti-competitive cartel limits the lawful sale of caskets in Oklahoma to those who provide all other funeral services, while preventing individuals who do not wish to provide funeral services from offering caskets directly to the public. This scheme creates arbitrary and unreasonable barriers to conducting a lawful business and serves no legitimate interest related to public health, safety, or welfare.” 

Vested Interests and the Power of Public Opinion 

In his 1949 treatise Human Action, the Austrian economist Ludwig von Mises warned about the ever-present threat of special interest groups that wish to stifle competition through legislation. 

“There were and there will always be people whose selfish ambitions demand protection for vested interests and who hope to derive advantage from measures restricting competition,” he wrote. “Entrepreneurs grown old and tired and the decadent heirs of people who succeeded in the past dislike the agile parvenus who challenge their wealth and their eminent social position.”

It’s easy to see why Oklahoma’s funeral industry wants to block up-and-coming competitors like Caskets of Honor. Less competition allows them to charge higher prices and ignore evolving consumer preferences—such as customized casket designs. The Institute for Justice notes that “the average funeral in Oklahoma costs $5,671—18 percent higher than the cost in neighboring states.”

How do vested interests get away with policies so clearly harmful to competitors and consumers? Mises explains: “Whether or not their desire to make economic conditions rigid and to hinder improvements can be realized, depends on the climate of public opinion.” In other words, they succeed because public opinion is on their side—a fact reflected in the repeated failure of three bills to end Oklahoma’s protectionist law.

Such protectionism, Mises observed, would have been largely futile in the nineteenth century, when classical liberalism prevailed. “But today,” he wrote, “it is deemed a legitimate task of government to prevent an efficient man from competing with the less efficient. Public opinion sympathizes with the demands of powerful pressure groups to stop progress.”

Changing that public opinion is challenging, but one promising approach is to tell the stories of entrepreneurs like Candi and Todd. When people see the real-world impact of protectionist policies, the injustice becomes impossible to ignore.

President Trump has nominated Kevin Warsh for the top spot at the Federal Reserve. Though a former member of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors in Washington, DC, Warsh is out of sync with prevailing views at the central bank. That diversity of thought could improve the Fed’s monetary policy decisions.

Warsh’s candidacy for Fed chair has been widely construed as an effort to further politicize the Fed. The implicit assumption is that Fed policy is better if everyone is in sync. While the media has characterized dissent on the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) as controversial or divisive, diversity of opinion often improves the collective decision-making of deliberative bodies like the FOMC. Indeed, my research suggests that groupthink is a real problem at the Fed.   

At each FOMC meeting, staff economists at the Board of Governors brief participants on the state of the economy and present forecasts from the Tealbook, most notably the Fed’s FRB/US model. FOMC members then discuss their own observations and vote to raise, hold, or lower the federal funds rate target range — the interest rate that the Fed targets. Four times per year, FOMC members also provide their own projections for key economic indicators, like real GDP growth and inflation. An anonymized summary of these projections is initially released in the Summary of Economic Projections. Attributed projections are released five years later.

In a 2022 paper, I examined the forecast errors for real GDP growth projections made between 1992 and 2016. I found that while diversity of thought improves the accuracy of the FOMC’s projections, for the most part, FOMC member projections conformed strongly to those of the FRB/US model presented by the Board’s staff economists. Note that FOMC members can use whatever information they like when forming their own projections, including forecasts from regional Reserve Bank staff or private sector analysts. In practice, however, they largely defer to the Board’s model.

There are at least two potential explanations for the observed conformity. It may be that the Board’s staff economists produce the best forecasts and, recognizing this, FOMC members defer to them. An alternative case is that FOMC members suffer from groupthink — that is, that members are inclined to accept the Board’s projections by default rather than challenge them with potentially superior externally produced forecasts.

How good are the forecasts produced by the Board’s staff economists? Not good at all. 

Indeed, the evidence indicates that groupthink has led to suboptimal monetary policy and relatively worse economic outcomes. Two examples serve to illustrate.

In 2021, Fed officials repeatedly (but wrongly) claimed that the pandemic-era inflation was “transitory.” This caused the FOMC to delay raising its federal funds rate target range in late 2021 and early 2022, and proceed too slowly once it began raising the target range. The Fed’s sluggish response allowed inflation to reach a 40-year high, eroding the real incomes of average Americans. Fed Chair Jerome Powell attributed the Fed’s mistakes, in part, to groupthink, saying “everyone had the same model — which was the Phillips curve model.”

Groupthink was also a problem during the Great Recession of 2007-2009. The FOMC adopted expansionary monetary policy at the start of the recession, but it ceased cutting interest rates in early 2008 as the economy continued to decline. Even as the financial system fell into crisis in September of 2008, the FOMC refused to loosen financial conditions by lowering its federal funds rate target. 

As then Fed Chair Ben Bernanke later recounted in his autobiography, “In retrospect, that decision was certainly a mistake.” In fact, it was a mistake that put nearly 15 million people out of work.

Warsh is a strong pick for Fed Chair. His out-of-sync views will bring much-needed diversity to the Fed and help break the Fed’s pervasive groupthink. Making space for different perspectives at the FOMC table will encourage discussion, which will help lead to better policy. 

That’s how diversity of thought works — and it is an essential component of effective deliberative bodies. The FOMC is no exception.

Inflation ticked up slightly in February, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported in its March release. The Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose 0.3 percent last month, up from 0.2 percent in January. On a year-over-year basis, headline inflation was unchanged at 2.4 percent.

Core inflation, which excludes volatile food and energy prices, rose 0.2 percent in February, down from 0.3 percent in January. On a year-over-year basis, core inflation was unchanged at 2.5 percent.

The uptick in headline CPI reflected rising food and energy prices. Shelter, which accounts for about one-third of the index, rose 0.2 percent and was, according to the BLS, “the largest factor in the all items monthly increase.” Food prices rose 0.4 percent, with food at home increasing 0.4 percent and food away from home rising 0.3 percent. The index for energy also increased in February, rising 0.6 percent, driven by a 0.8 percent increase in gasoline prices. These figures reflect price data collected before the recent spike in oil from the conflict involving Iran and the disruption to shipping through the Strait of Hormuz.

The easing in core CPI reflected a mixed picture across categories. Medical care posted the largest increase among core components, rising 0.5 percent, followed by apparel, which surged 1.3 percent. Airline fares rose 1.4 percent, and household furnishings and operations increased 0.3 percent. Prices also rose for education. 

Offsetting these gains were declining prices for communication, which fell 0.5 percent, used cars and trucks, which declined 0.4 percent, and motor vehicle insurance, which fell 0.3 percent. Personal care also declined. In short, the categories that saw lower prices more than offset those where prices rose, pulling core inflation below its January pace.

While the year-over-year figures continue to show gradual disinflation, the recent three-month trend tells a somewhat different story. Inflation averaged 0.27 percent per month across December (0.3 percent), January (0.2 percent), and February (0.3 percent), which is equivalent to a roughly 3.2 percent annual rate. That is well above the year-over-year figure of 2.4 percent, suggesting that the recent pace of price increases is running hotter than the trailing 12-month average. Part of that gap likely reflects missing housing data resulting from last year’s government shutdown that held down the year-over-year inflation rate.

Recent core CPI data tell a similar story. Core prices rose 0.2 percent in December, 0.3 percent in January, and 0.2 percent in February — an average monthly rise of roughly 0.23 percent, which is equivalent to a roughly 2.8 percent annual rate. That’s higher than the year-over-year core figure of 2.5 percent, meaning core inflation has also been running somewhat hotter in recent months compared to its year-over-year pace.

Although the Federal Reserve officially targets the personal consumption expenditures price index (PCEPI), the steady February CPI report offers little reason to expect an imminent pivot toward easier policy. According to the CME Group’s FedWatch tool, markets are assigning a 99 percent probability that the Fed will hold rates steady at its meeting next week. Markets’ expectations that the policy stance remains at least through July were modestly boosted as well. 

Even with the real shock to the economy from higher oil prices, policymakers are likely to look past them as a temporary energy spike — especially if longer-run inflation expectations remain well anchored. More relevant for monetary policy is whether overall nominal spending — that is, the total amount of money households and businesses are spending across the economy — is growing at a pace consistent with stable prices. By that standard, the recent inflation data offer an ambiguous signal. While the year-over-year inflation numbers look reassuring, the three-month annualized pace above three percent suggests underlying demand is running somewhat stronger than the trailing 12-month figures imply.

Factoring in the latest labor market data, the picture is more mixed. February’s employment report showed a 92,000 decline in payrolls, a figure some observers have taken as evidence that the labor market is weakening. The unemployment rate held steady at 4.4 percent, and both the labor force participation rate and the employment-to-population ratio were essentially unchanged. Wages are still rising at roughly a 3.8 percent annual pace, pointing to continued growth in nominal spending. 

Even with a dip in payrolls, those dynamics remain broadly consistent with nominal spending expanding faster than would be needed to keep inflation at the Fed’s two-percent target over time. In that environment, easing policy too quickly could risk reigniting price pressures. For now, patience remains the safer course.

The AIER Everyday Price Index (EPI) saw its largest jump in 13 months in February 2026, rising 0.61 percent to 299.8. This was the index’s fourth largest monthly increase going back two years. Fourteen of the 24 constituents rose in price, with two unchanged and eight falling. The largest monthly price increases were seen in motor fuel, audio discs and tapes, and internet services, with the largest declines among video purchase and rental subscriptions, cable satellites and streaming services, and postage/delivery services. 

AIER Everyday Price Index vs. US Consumer Price Index (NSA, 1987 = 100)

(Source: Bloomberg Finance, LP)

The US Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) released the February 2026 Consumer Price Index (CPI) data on March 11, 2026. From January to February 2026, headline CPI increased by 0.3 percent and core rose 0.2 percent; both were in line with forecasts.

February 2026 US CPI headline and core month-over-month (2016 – present)

(Source: Bloomberg Finance, LP)

Consumer prices in February were driven primarily by shelter and a modest firming in energy and food costs, with the index excluding food and energy increasing 0.2 percent for the month. Shelter was the largest contributor to the overall increase, while gains were also recorded across several service and discretionary categories including medical care, apparel, household furnishings and operations, airline fares, and education. Within medical care, hospital services and physicians’ services moved higher even as prescription drug prices declined slightly. Offsetting some of these increases were declines in communication services, used cars and trucks, motor vehicle insurance, and personal care, suggesting continued easing in selected consumer goods and insurance-related categories.

Food prices rose 0.4 percent in February, matching the increase in the food-at-home index and following smaller gains in January. Grocery price movements were mixed: fruits and vegetables and nonalcoholic beverages both moved higher, while the “other food at home” category posted a notable increase driven in part by a sharp rise in candy and chewing gum prices. In contrast, dairy products declined, led by lower cheese prices, while cereals and bakery products edged down and the meats, poultry, fish, and eggs category was unchanged overall. Prices for meals away from home increased 0.3 percent as both limited-service and full-service meals became modestly more expensive. Energy prices also turned higher in February, rising 0.6 percent after January’s decline, reflecting increases in gasoline and natural gas prices that were partly offset by a drop in electricity costs. Overall, February’s inflation profile reflected moderate increases across housing, food, and selected services alongside pockets of softness in vehicles, insurance, and communications.

On the year-to-year side, headline CPI rose 2.4 percent, which was in line with forecasts. Core year-over-year inflation also met surveyed expectations of 2.5 percent.

February 2026 US CPI headline and core year-over-year (2016 – present)

(Source: Bloomberg Finance, LP)

From February 2025 to February 2026, overall consumer prices increased 2.4 percent, unchanged from the pace recorded in January, while core inflation — excluding food and energy — rose 2.5 percent over the year. Food prices continued to show steady upward pressure, rising 3.1 percent over the past year, with grocery prices up 2.4 percent. Within grocery categories, nonalcoholic beverages recorded one of the largest increases, climbing 5.6 percent, while fruits and vegetables and cereals and bakery products each advanced 2.7 percent. The “other food at home” category rose 3.3 percent, while meats, poultry, fish, and eggs edged up 0.4 percent despite a sharp decline in egg prices. Dairy products posted only a slight 0.1 percent increase. Dining out remained a notable contributor to food inflation, with the food away from home index rising 3.9 percent over the year, driven by a 4.6 percent increase in full-service meals and a 3.2 percent rise in limited-service meals.

Energy prices increased modestly over the year, rising 0.5 percent overall as declines in gasoline prices offset gains in other components. Gasoline prices fell 5.6 percent over the 12-month period, while electricity costs rose 4.8 percent and natural gas prices increased a notable 10.9 percent. Excluding food and energy, core consumer prices increased 2.5 percent over the year, with shelter costs advancing 3.0 percent and continuing to anchor underlying inflation. Additional upward pressure came from medical care, household furnishings and operations, recreation, and personal care ( the latter posting a 4.5 percent increase) highlighting continued firmness across several service and household-related categories, with energy prices remaining relatively subdued.

February’s inflation report pointed to a continued easing in underlying price pressures, with core consumer prices rising 0.2 percent on the month and holding at 2.5 percent year-over-year —  the slowest pace in nearly five years. The moderation reflected softer housing costs and ongoing declines in categories such as used vehicles and motor vehicle insurance, while goods prices excluding food and energy barely moved overall. Still, the details revealed a complex mix of offsetting forces. Apparel prices rose sharply, some electronics and recreation-related goods saw increases linked to rising metals and semiconductor costs, and certain discretionary services — including air travel, hotels, and car rentals — continued to post gains. At the same time, rents and owner-equivalent rents advanced only modestly, suggesting that one of the largest contributors to inflation over the past several years may be gradually cooling. Food inflation ticked higher in February, driven in part by rising fruit and vegetable prices, even as egg prices continued to retreat from last year’s historic spike.

Beneath the headline moderation, however, the data also hinted at emerging pressures that could complicate the outlook. Energy prices turned higher during the month, with gasoline and natural gas contributing modestly to the overall increase. Meanwhile, supply shocks in metals and electronic components have begun to filter into some consumer goods prices, particularly in recreation items and technology products. Price increases were also less pervasive across the core CPI basket than in January, reflecting the typical seasonal pattern in which businesses implement many of their annual price adjustments early in the year.

Still, the overall picture suggests inflation pressures are shifting rather than disappearing. If geopolitical tensions remain contained, moderating rent growth and cooling goods prices could leave room for the Federal Reserve to consider rate cuts later this year. But the war against Iran, now entering its second week — and the resulting surge in oil, natural gas, gasoline, and fertilizer prices — could quickly complicate that calculus by pushing headline inflation higher.

Even as overall inflation cools, the cost of everyday staples continues to weigh on household budgets, underscoring how affordability pressures persist despite improving macroeconomic indicators. Coffee prices provide a vivid example, and in their ubiquity a counterpart to gasoline prices at the pump. US retail coffee prices reached a record $9.46 per pound in February, up 31 percent from a year earlier, reflecting earlier supply disruptions in Brazil and Vietnam as well as tariff-related costs that continue to filter through the supply chain. Because coffee beans purchased months ago at elevated prices are still working their way through inventories, consumers may not see meaningful relief until well into 2027. Similar dynamics are evident in other grocery items and prepared beverages, where retail prices remain elevated even as underlying commodity markets soften.

Looking ahead, the developing war introduces a significant new risk of higher prices. Oil has already surged since the outbreak of hostilities, and the resulting increases in gasoline, energy, and transportation-related costs are likely to show up prominently in the March CPI report scheduled for release on Friday, April 10. As a result, February’s comparatively mild inflation reading may prove to be a brief lull before a new round of price pressures, these largely relating to energy, emerge in the months ahead.

EPI_FEB26_FINALDownload

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.