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Following the pricing of the SpaceX IPO, Elon Musk has become the world’s first trillionaire, on paper. A significant portion of the response will predictably focus on wealth and inequality. Yet the more interesting story is something else entirely. Following SpaceX’s opening public market valuation of approximately $1.77 trillion on June 11, and an IPO share price of $135 per share, Elon Musk’s estimated net worth stands near $1.1 trillion. That figure is extraordinary, but what it principally reflects is not income, compensation, or consumption. Rather, it is a measure of how financial markets value the future, particularly when financing colossal, extraordinarily uncertain, long-term technological bets.

Most of Musk’s wealth is not cash. It consists primarily of equity: ownership stakes in firms such as Tesla, SpaceX, and xAI. Equity markets are inherently forward-looking. Investors are not paying primarily for what these companies earn today, but for what they believe they may produce years or even decades from now. When valuations become enormous, it is because markets collectively judge the underlying technologies — electric vehicles, reusable launch systems, satellite networks, artificial intelligence, robotics, and energy storage-as possessing the potential to fundamentally reshape industries and economic life.

SpaceX itself illustrates this dynamic vividly. At an IPO valuation of roughly $1.8 trillion, investors are not simply valuing rockets and satellite launches. They are assigning probabilities to a sprawling and highly speculative set of future possibilities: global satellite broadband, orbital computing infrastructure, reusable heavy launch systems, interplanetary transportation, and AI-enabled applications that do not yet fully exist. According to the company’s own filings, SpaceX sees a total addressable market measured in the tens of trillions of dollars, driven heavily by artificial intelligence and orbital data infrastructure. Skeptics, however, argue these expectations may be wildly optimistic. Morningstar, for example, has suggested a base-case enterprise value closer to $1 trillion, assigning only a small probability to a “moonshot” scenario approaching $2 trillion. Goldman Sachs’ underwriting projections reportedly envision revenue growing from roughly $19 billion in 2025 to nearly $475 billion by 2030, while more conservative estimates see growth as substantial but far smaller. The point is not which estimate is correct, but rather that today’s valuation represents markets pricing profoundly uncertain futures rather than certainties.

This is where capital structure becomes crucial. Musk’s companies have relied heavily on equity financing rather than debt, for good reason. Debt requires fixed repayment obligations on a schedule, making it more suitable for stable and predictable enterprises. Equity is more adaptable. If projects fail or underperform, shareholders bear the losses. If they succeed, shareholders participate in the upside. For ventures where outcomes range from complete failure to transformative success, equity is generally the more appropriate financing mechanism.

It could be wiser to view SpaceX’s speculative AI and orbital businesses as akin to a call option: investors pay today for exposure to a potentially enormous future payoff. The analogy is apt: equity financing permits firms to fund experiments with asymmetric outcomes, where failure is common but success can be civilization-altering. Investors voluntarily bear the downside in exchange for the possibility of enormous gains.

That distinction matters for the broader economy. Funding long-term, high-risk innovation with equity rather than leverage reduces systemic fragility. It lowers the likelihood that failed projects trigger cascading defaults or financial instability. At the same time, it permits firms to pursue ambitious and uncertain ideas without the burden of rigid repayment schedules. Historically, many major advances in transportation, communications, computing, and energy have emerged from precisely this type of financing environment. The gains extend beyond founders and investors to consumers and workers through better products, lower costs, and entirely new industries.

Large valuations additionally reveal how markets price uncertainty. Investors are effectively assigning probabilities to vastly disparate future scenarios. Most will not fully materialize, but a small subset may generate enormous value if they do. A core function of financial markets is to incorporate those possibilities into current prices. This helps explain why valuations can sometimes appear disconnected from current earnings or conventional metrics. What looks speculative is often a market attempting to estimate the value of uncertain but potentially revolutionary outcomes.

Macroeconomic conditions matter as well. Interest rates influence how future earnings are valued: lower discount rates generally support higher valuations, especially for firms whose anticipated returns lie far in the future. Investor appetite for risk matters too. When confidence is abundant, capital flows more readily toward uncertain ventures; when it contracts, lofty valuations become harder to sustain. The emergence of a trillionaire reflects not merely an individual’s entrepreneurial success, but the broader financial and monetary environment as well.

It also helps explain why such wealth appears concentrated even though its origins are widely distributed. Asset prices are set by millions of participants, including pension funds, mutual funds, sovereign wealth funds, institutional investors, and retail traders — each of which make judgments about an enterprise’s future prospects. The resulting valuation is collective. Although the headline number belongs to one individual, it reflects a comprehensive market consensus regarding the likely trajectory of technology, production, and innovation.

Seen in this light, the first trillionaire story is far less about egalitarian outcomes than about economic priorities. Markets are directing enormous amounts of capital toward highly uncertain, long-duration innovation while distributing the associated risks across numerous investors of varying levels of sophistication rather than concentrating them through leverage. That is not a flaw of market economies; to the contrary, it is a central mechanism for experimentation, adaptation, and growth.

That Elon Musk is an immigrant to the United States who arrived without wealth, status, or elite connections in America will likely be lost amid the inevitable class-warfare point-scoring. Less remarked upon is that the companies he has founded or helped build — including Tesla, Inc. (134,000), SpaceX (22,000), Neuralink (300), xAI (1200), X (formerly Twitter) (1000), and The Boring Company (400) — now collectively employ on the order of 150,000 people worldwide, directly supporting a workforce larger than many midsized American cities. The temptation will be to generate interpretations of such a milestone in resentment-driven, zero-sum political terms. The more useful and accurate lenses are both financial and structural. An individual with a trillion-dollar net worth ultimately reflects markets allocating vast amounts of equity capital not to an individual, but toward uncertain but potentially transformative ideas; and, in the process, generating benefits extending across billions of lives and potentially generations beyond.

In his State of the Union address earlier this year, President Trump boasted that “one of the primary reasons for our country’s stunning economic turnaround, the biggest in history, where the Dow Jones broke 50,000, four years ahead of schedule, and the S&P hit 7000 where it wasn’t supposed to do it for many years, were tariffs.”

The facts tell a different story. First, because there is no schedule for stock-market gains, it is meaningless to say that the Dow Jones or S&P 500 rose “ahead of schedule.” The reality is that the US economy during the first year of President Trump’s second term simply did not perform a “turnaround,” much less one that could be ranked as “the biggest in history.”

By some measures, the US economy did indeed perform better in 2025 than it did in the previous year — such as, for example, in the growth of real median household income. This income grew by 1.4 percent in 2025, which is ‘bigger’ than its 1.1 percent growth in 2024 — but not (see below) the biggest in US history. Yet by other measures — such as the growth in nonfarm employment — 2025 was a worse year. Nonfarm employment grew only by 0.2 percent between January 2025 and January 2026, after having grown by 0.8 percent between January 2024 and January 2025.

Real Median Household Income United States. US Census via FRED.

But let’s dig deeper to see if we can better determine if Mr. Trump is generally correct that the tariffs he imposed in 2025 were a boon to the American economy. To do so, we need a point of comparison for 2025 that’s more credible than 2024, which was the final year of the economy under Joe Biden’s economically harmful superintendence.

Trump 2.0 Compared to Trump 1.0

Such a point of comparison is plausibly the first full year of President Trump’s first term. Although the first full year of Mr. Trump’s second term isn’t identical to the first full year of his first term, they are similar enough to use the first year of Trump 1.0 as a ‘test’ of Mr. Trump’s boast about the first, tariff-filled year of Trump 2.0. As Phil Gramm and I wrote a few months ago in the Washington Post, “in both 2017 and 2025, Trump dramatically improved the economy’s growth potential by lifting crippling regulatory burdens imposed by his predecessors and by enacting pro-growth tax cuts. The only significant economic policy difference is the imposition of the largest tariffs since the 1930s.” Unlike in 2025, when the marquee economic policy was the tariffs, in 2017 there were no tariff hikes. The first tariff hikes in Mr. Trump’s first term weren’t even announced until late January 2018, more than a year after he was first sworn into office, and these levies didn’t take effect until February 2018.

While policy-wise the chief difference between 2025 and 2017 is the tariffs imposed in 2025, there’s one other significant difference — a non-policy one — that separates these two years. It’s a difference, however, that gave the economy in 2025 a boost that was not present in 2017. That difference is AI, which in 2025 was becoming far more integrated into the economy than it was in 2017. The presence of AI in 2025, and the optimism about its economic potential, added fuel to the 2025 economy that wasn’t available eight years earlier. But I will here do nothing to correct for the effects of that AI boost; I will thus give Mr. Trump’s boast about the effects of his tariffs on the US 2025 economy an unearned edge.

So how does the first year of Trump 2.0 compare to the first year of Trump 1.0? Even with the boost from AI investment, not well.

Financial-Market Indices

Let’s begin by looking at the performance of the three major US financial-market indices: the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA), the S&P 500 index, and the NASDAQ index. These indices are especially telling because they reflect the expectations of people investing their own money. These investors have strong incentives to take account of as much available information as is worthwhile, and not to be misled by political bluster or by reality-distorting hopes and fears.

In the year from January 20, 2017 (the day Mr. Trump was first inaugurated) through January 20, 2018 (two days before the announcement of Mr. Trump’s first tariffs), the DJIA rose by a stunning 31.5 percent. In the corresponding period of Mr. Trump’s second term — January 20, 2025, through January 20, 2026 — the DJIA rose by 11.5 percent. This latter rise in the DJIA is impressive, to be sure, but it’s just over a third of the size of the rise in this index during the first year of Mr. Trump’s first term.

Like the DJIA, both the S&P 500 and the NASDAQ rose by less in the year following Mr. Trump’s second inauguration than they rose in the year following Mr. Trump’s first inauguration. Specifically, during the first year of Trump 1.0, the S&P rose by 24.1 percent and the NASDAQ by 32.1 percent, while during the first year of Trump 2.0, the S&P rose by 13.3 percent and the NASDAQ by 17.0 percent.

S&P 500 Growth by US Presidency: courtesy Darrow Wealth Partners

These indices — which Mr. Trump himself explicitly pointed to as evidence of the success of his second-term tariffs — performed appreciably worse with these tariffs in place than these indices performed eight years earlier before any new tariff hikes were announced.

What about other plausible measures of economic performance over the first 365 days of each of Mr. Trump’s two terms?

Manufacturing and Industrial Output

While manufacturing output rose by more (2.0 percent) during Trump 2.0 than it rose (0.7 percent) during Trump 1.0, the broader measure of industrial output — which is manufacturing plus mining and utilities — performed worse during Trump 2.0 than during Trump 1.0. From January 2025 through January 2026, industrial output rose by 1.4 percent — barely half of its 2.7 percent rise from January 2017 through January 2018.

Manufacturing Employment

Manufacturing employment — an economic statistic of special concern to the White House — fell (by 0.7 percent) in the first year of Mr. Trump’s second term, after having risen (by 1.6 percent) in the first year of Mr. Trump’s first term. Serious economists find no good reason to applaud increased manufacturing employment or to fret about its decrease. But because Mr. Trump and his protectionist supporters think otherwise, it’s fair to note that Mr. Trump’s second-term tariffs failed to increase manufacturing employment.

All Employees, Manufacturing. US Bureau of Labor Statistics via FRED.

Pay and Income

Average inflation-adjusted hourly earnings of production and nonsupervisory manufacturing workers also rose by less (1.1 percent) during the first year of Mr. Trump’s second term than they rose (1.4 percent) during the first year of his first term. More generally, from January 2025 through January 2026, average inflation-adjusted hourly earnings for all private-sector employees rose by only 0.7 percent — less than these wages rose (1.0 percent) from January 2017 through January 2018. (To adjust the nominal dollars available at these links into constant dollars I used this personal-consumption-expenditures deflator.)

The data just above are consistent with two other important measures of economic well-being: real median household income, and real per-capita GDP. While real median household income rose in 2025 by 1.4 percent, in 2017 it rose by more, by 1.9 percent. Real per-capita GDP also rose by more (2.7 percent) in 2017 than it rose (2.3 percent) in 2025.

Investment

Further, the 7.5 percent rise in real private-sector nonresidential fixed investment during the first year of Mr. Trump’s first term was notably higher than was the 5.8 percent rise during the first year of his second term.

Unemployment, Jobs, and Inflation

Two of the most familiar economic gauges are the unemployment rate and the inflation rate. Each of these measures, alas, performed worse during the first year of Trump 2.0 than during the first year of Trump 1.0. Between January 2017 and January 2018, the unemployment rate dropped from 4.7 percent to 4.0 percent, yet between January 2025 and January 2026, this rate rose from 4.0 percent to 4.3 percent. Total nonfarm employment, from January 2017 through January 2018, rose by 1.4 percent, but from January 2025 through January 2026, it rose only by an anemic 0.2 percent.

And although the fall in the rate of inflation was a bit steeper during the first year of Trump 2.0 than during the first year of Trump 1.0 — declining from an annual rate of 3.0 percent in January 2025 to 2.4 percent in January 2026 — in January 2026 inflation was still running at an annual rate higher than the annual rate of 2.1 percent that prevailed in January 2018.

A Reality Check on Trump’s Tariff Boast

Data notoriously are able to be sliced, diced, and presented in ways that convey false impressions even without the data being falsified. And to ‘test’ any given economic claim, reasonable people can disagree over which events and phenomena are the most appropriate ones to measure and report on. The reader is advised to apply the same healthy dose of skepticism to my presentation of data that he or she should bring to anyone else’s.

But I submit that the data that I present above are sufficiently broad and relevant to cast great doubt on President Trump’s boast that his 2025 tariffs have been a boon to the American economy.

Conscious consumption has moved from niche to mainstream. According to PwC’s 2024 Voice of the Consumer Survey, shoppers reported a willingness to pay more for sustainably produced or sourced goods, signaling growing interest in aligning purchases with social and environmental values. Market behavior appears to reflect this trend: a separate report estimated that consumers paid an average 26.6 percent premium for eco-friendly products in 2024 relative to comparable conventional alternatives. 

Similarly, a 2024 survey highlighted by the New York Post found that roughly two-thirds of Americans now expect sustainability to be a baseline feature of business, while 44 percent believe “unsustainable” options should not be sold at all. Millennial and Gen Z consumers appear especially values-driven, with younger shoppers reporting stronger preferences for sustainability in brand and purchasing decisions. Consumers increasingly want their purchases to reflect ethical commitments, and the market has responded accordingly with an ever-expanding ecosystem of ethical labels and sustainability certifications.

Firms now routinely signal commitments to environmental stewardship, labor protections, cruelty-free production, or responsible sourcing in an effort to satisfy both consumer and political pressures. Yet while the rise of conscious consumption may reflect admirable intentions, the systems built around it often introduce meaningful costs and complications.

Take your simple morning coffee choice. A consumer hoping to purchase “ethical” coffee is confronted with a growing array of labels: Fair Trade, Rainforest Alliance, Organic, Bird Friendly, Direct Trade, and UTZ-certified products, among others. Each certification emphasizes different priorities like farmer welfare, biodiversity, pesticide use, supply-chain transparency, or environmental sustainability. Yet these standards frequently overlap and sometimes conflict, with no universally accepted hierarchy among them. Rather than simplifying purchasing decisions, the proliferation of labels often leaves consumers to navigate competing definitions of what “ethical” actually means.

Or let’s say you’re feeling like having fish for dinner. Ethically sourced seafood presents a similar dilemma. Consumers increasingly encounter a maze of sustainability signals: the Marine Stewardship Council label for wild-caught fisheries, “dolphin safe” designations for tuna, Aquaculture Stewardship Council certification for farmed seafood, retailer-specific sustainability commitments, and NGO-generated seafood ratings. These systems emphasize different concerns, from bycatch reduction and species preservation to labor practices, fishing methods, ecosystem impacts, and carbon footprints.

And this trend isn’t confined to just food products. Take the skincare and beauty market. Products are promoted as “clean,” cruelty-free, vegan, sustainably sourced, reef-safe, dermatologist-approved, ethically harvested, or free from controversial ingredients such as parabens and sulfates. Yet, as with seafood and coffee, understanding what these claims truly stand for isn’t easy, nor is determining which standards are the best indicators that a firm is socially responsible.

Ethical labeling systems complicate decision-making, create opportunities for rent-seeking behavior that advantages certifiers more than consumers or producers, and raise the costs for both consumption and production. As certification regimes proliferate, organizations responsible for defining and auditing standards gain influence and revenue regardless of whether measurable consumer welfare improves.

Producers and retailers face difficult strategic choices regarding which labels to pursue, which standards are commercially valuable, and whether compliance aligns with operational realities. Certifications often require audits, reporting systems, chain-of-custody verification, operational adjustments, and licensing fees. Firms must also decide whether to implement standards internally or rely on an independent certifier — and at what cost. Internal assessments can be viewed as less credible given the inherent bias, but external certifications can be risky. Some certifiers have received a bad rap as pay-to-play programs while others have simply lost their appeal.

Even among widely recognized labels such as Fair Trade coffee, consumer understanding appears limited. While many shoppers recognize the label, fewer understand the underlying standards, pricing mechanisms, cooperative structures, or barriers embedded within certification systems. At the same time, Fair Trade’s growth has attracted critics who question whether some certification models constrain economic flexibility or create barriers for farmers operating outside approved networks.

Overall, certifications function as costly market signals. Fisheries and suppliers pursuing sustainability credentials absorb expenses related to audits, compliance systems, and operational changes, which then spill over into higher retail prices. Higher prices can make participation in conscious consumption more difficult for lower-income or price-sensitive households, effectively transforming morality into a premium good. In some cases, certification systems may also narrow market participation by creating compliance burdens that discourage smaller producers or entrepreneurs from entering certain industries.

As I have argued previously, this dynamic risks emboldening certification systems and rent-seeking institutions that increasingly define, monitor, and monetize what qualifies as “ethical” market participation. Firms, meanwhile, face growing pressure to compete less on quality, affordability, or innovation, and more on moral positioning and cause-related branding. While signaling virtue may resonate with values-driven consumers, it can also distract from the core function of markets: creating value.

None of this is an argument against ethical consumption. Consumers understandably want to support firms that reflect their values, and some certifications likely improve transparency or encourage better business practices. But good intentions do not eliminate tradeoffs. Markets have historically delivered broad welfare gains through affordability, accessibility, and convenience without layering moral obligations onto everyday purchases, complicating that equation.

The challenge moving forward is preserving the benefits of markets while allowing room for ethical aspirations. Capitalism functions best when firms remain focused on creating value while responding to consumer concerns, not when moral signaling overshadows economic performance. Conscious consumption may be well intentioned, but it remains an imperfect experiment that often requires more time, more money, and more uncertainty than advocates have acknowledged.

Inflation remained elevated in May, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported yesterday. The Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose 0.5 percent last month, down slightly from 0.6 percent in April. But on a year-over-year basis, headline inflation climbed again, rising to 4.2 percent from 3.8 percent — the fourth straight monthly increase in the annual rate and the highest reading in more than a year.

Core inflation told a more reassuring story. Excluding volatile food and energy prices, CPI rose just 0.2 percent in May, half the 0.4 percent pace recorded in April. On a year-over-year basis, core inflation ticked up only slightly, to 2.9 percent from 2.8 percent.

As in March and April, the gap between headline and core inflation came down to energy. The energy index rose 3.9 percent in May — after climbing 3.8 percent in April and 10.9 percent in March — and, according to the BLS, “accounted for over sixty percent of the monthly all items increase.” Gasoline prices rose 7.0 percent over the month and are now up 40.5 percent over the past year, while the broader energy index is up 23.5 percent, reflecting the cumulative effect of the oil shock tied to the conflict involving Iran and the disruption to shipping through the Strait of Hormuz. Outside of energy, the monthly gains were comparatively muted. Shelter, which accounts for about one-third of the index, rose 0.3 percent in May and is up 3.4 percent over the past year, while food prices rose 0.2 percent over the month and 3.1 percent over the year.

Ten years of Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (blue) and CPI less food and energy (red). Bureau of Labor Statistics via FRED.

Within the core, the big moves largely canceled out. Airline fares jumped 2.7 percent in May and are up 26.7 percent over the past year, while motor vehicle insurance fell 1.7 percent and is down 2.0 percent from a year ago. With little movement elsewhere, core inflation slowed to 0.2 percent even as the headline figure stayed elevated.

In short, the categories excluded from core — energy above all — pulled the overall index up, while underlying price pressures eased.

The three-month trend underscores how much of the recent acceleration is an energy story. From March through May, headline CPI averaged about 0.67 percent per month, equivalent to roughly an 8 percent annual rate — well above the 4.2 percent year-over-year figure. But that pace is almost entirely a product of the energy spike. Strip out food and energy, and the picture changes sharply: core CPI rose 0.2 percent in March, 0.4 percent in April, and 0.2 percent in May, an average of roughly 0.27 percent per month, or about a 3.3 percent annual rate. That is only modestly above the 2.9 percent year-over-year core pace, and well below what the headline trend implies.

Although the Federal Reserve officially targets the personal consumption expenditures price index (PCEPI), CPI data remain a timely and relevant gauge for policymakers, since the two measures generally track one another closely. According to the CME Group’s FedWatch tool, markets are assigning a 98.4 percent probability that the Fed will hold rates steady at its meeting next week.

The labor market data give policymakers no reason to ease in the face of that elevated inflation. Employers added 172,000 jobs in May, and the unemployment rate held at 4.3 percent, the BLS reported last Friday. The Bureau also revised March and April payrolls up by a combined 93,000, lifting April’s gain to 179,000 from the 115,000 first reported. With labor-force growth held down by an aging population and reduced immigration, the participation rate steady at 61.8 percent, and the employment-population ratio little changed at 59.2 percent, the economy appears to be near full employment — a setting in which even modest monthly job gains no longer signal a weakening economy. 

Taken together, the May data point to something more than a passing energy shock. Above-target inflation that keeps drifting higher, alongside a labor market near full employment, is hard to square with the view that oil alone is to blame. Supply shocks change relative prices; they do not, by themselves, push the overall price level up year after year. That requires excess nominal spending, which grew 5.9 percent over the year through the first quarter — well above the roughly 4 percent pace that prevailed before the pandemic. By that standard, the recent run of inflation looks less like a temporary disruption and more like a monetary phenomenon.

Governor Christopher Waller, a leading voice on the FOMC, made a similar case in a recent speech. With the labor market stable and inflation elevated, he said he would drop the “easing bias” from the Fed’s policy statement and hold the rate steady, warning that price pressures were broadening beyond energy — about half of consumer prices have risen 3 percent or more this year, a historically large share. He also noted that, with workforce growth near zero, “little or no job creation is now consistent with a stable labor market,” and he declined to rule out a rate increase if inflation failed to recede. 

The May CPI report, even with its softer core reading, fits that diagnosis. The single-month deceleration in core prices is welcome, but it does not change the broader picture: inflation remains above the Fed’s two-percent target, and it is being driven by demand that is still running too hot. For now, the case for cutting rates is weak — and if nominal spending fails to slow, the harder question facing the Fed may not be when to cut, but whether it will have to move in the other direction.

Twenty-five years ago this fall, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone premiered on 8,500 screens in the United States. The first movie adaptation of the Harry Potter book series, it earned more than $31 million on its opening day, enough to break the record previously held by Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace.  

“Harry Potter is bewitching American audiences,” said a story in the New York Post. 

To be more precise, this bewitching may have been a Confundus Charm, producing befuddlement in its target. According to a 2022 academic paper by economists Daniel Levy and Avichai Snir, the Harry Potter franchise may be responsible for spreading economic illiteracy among its fans. And the problem may be even bigger than the paper contends. 

Citing evidence from psychology and neuroscience, Levy and Snir begin by making the case that fictional stories have a significant influence on their audience’s opinions and worldview. 

Success logically magnifies that influence. The Harry Potter novels have sold more than 600 million copies globally. They have been translated into 85 languages, including two that are dead (Latin and Ancient Greek). By comparison, the most popular economics textbook currently used in classroom settings, Principles of Economics by N. Gregory Mankiw, which was published the same year (1997) as the first Harry Potter novel, has yet to reach the five-million threshold.  

Author J.K. Rowling endowed Potter’s fictional realm with a surprisingly detailed economy, which Levy and Snir dissect like a two-headed Adam Smith.  

Here are the basics: Outside of the broomstick industry, the Potterian economy appears to be stagnant. The government (a British-styled Ministry of Magic) is large, inefficient, and corrupt. Private enterprise exists, but businesspeople in the wizarding world are often deceptive. The only bank, Gringotts, is a monopoly owned and staffed entirely by goblins, a race known for greed. And, strikingly, Gringotts does not seem to perform the economically critical banking function of channeling funds from savers to investors. 

On a more technical level, Levy and Snir deduce that the gap between the commodity value and exchange value of gold galleons — a denomination of money in the Potterian economy — is implausibly large. But on the positive side, the infrequency of cash withdrawals (Harry withdraws cash only once a year) does seem to accurately reflect the Baumol-Tobin model of money holding in the face of transaction costs. 

Overall, the Potterian economy often violates basic economic logic while perpetuating numerous biases and stereotypes. It is also not consistent with any one economic model or school of thought. Levy and Snir call it an example of “the formation and dissemination of folk economics — the intuitive notions of naïve individuals who see market transactions as a zero-sum game, who care about distribution but fail to understand incentives and efficiency and who think of prices as allocating wealth but not resources or their efficient use.” 

In other words, the Harry Potter stories present audiences with a view of economic life that conflicts with the reality in which the individuals who make up those audiences (hopefully) earn a living. 

And there may be an even deeper level of conflict, which Levy and Snir do not address, between the Potterian economy and how the capitalist system works.  

For those unfamiliar with the franchise’s premise, Harry is an orphan who learns that he is not a regular person (a muggle), but someone special (a wizard). At age 11, he is plucked from ordinary life into an enchanted realm to develop his craft. 

It’s easy to see how such a mythology would appeal to a child’s imaginative vanity. But carried into adulthood, it’s problematic. It teaches that your identity — muggle or wizard — is innate rather than built. You are born with it. It’s a medieval worldview in which one’s station in life is hard-wired. Virtually everyone — with the notable exception of entrepreneurial pranksters Fred and George Weasley — ends up working for the government.

In the real world, capitalism overturned that system and democratized opportunities for advancement. In Harry’s realm, your role is revealed up front, and then the work begins. In a market-based economy, it’s the opposite. Work comes first. Feedback, failure, and adjustments follow. Eventually you do things worth celebrating. This is how true economic magic happens, and how the Western world created the highest standard of living in history. 

The bad news is that finding your role in a market economy requires struggle. The good news is that it’s a realm where even muggles can become wizards. That’s a lesson young people need to hear.

John Maynard Keynes was not happy with US President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. In 1934, the famed economist criticized FDR for being “engaged on a double task, Recovery and Reform” when Keynes believed reform should wait until recovery was achieved. In fact, Keynes argued that Roosevelt needed to embark on much more deficit spending, and he lamented that the president was too wedded to his belief in balanced budgets. In contrast to many libertarian accounts of Roosevelt, he was not a Keynesian, and the New Deal did not come remotely close to fulfilling Keynes’s vision for the government’s role in combating an economic downturn. 

Overturning the FDR as Keynesian narrative is just one of George Selgin’s contributions in False Dawn: The New Deal and the Promise of Recovery, 1933-1947. Selgin’s main argument is that Roosevelt’s New Deal did not result in economic recovery. He is critical of the New Deal as a recovery program, but is careful to note that he is not evaluating its effectiveness when it came to relief and reform, which along with recovery were the stated goals of the Roosevelt administration. Throughout, Selgin analyzes “particular New Deal policies to see how each influenced the course of production and employment” (xii), and he concludes that most of them were not successful. 

The Agricultural Adjustment Administration (AAA) and the National Recovery Administration (NRA) were “the twin pillars of Roosevelt’s recovery program” and Selgin finds both wanting. The AAA set out to raise farm commodity prices by incentivizing farmers to restrict supply. The goal was to increase farmers’ purchasing power. Unfortunately, the program had unintended consequences and was especially bad for sharecroppers (who were disproportionately black). The increased spending by farmers “tended to be more than offset by reduced spending by displaced former farm laborers, sharecroppers, and tenants.” One post-New Deal assessment concluded it was “extremely doubtful whether the AAA restriction policy did anything to increase total purchasing power” and another found no evidence that the program was “a stimulus to recovery in the economy as a whole.” After evaluating the latest empirical evidence, Selgin concludes that “it’s hard to imagine a plausible social welfare function that would yield a positive balance, let alone a substantial one” toward encouraging economic recovery. 

In Selgin’s account, the NRA performed even worse than the AAA as a vehicle for economic recovery. The goal of the NRA was to lift wages to increase purchasing power across the economy to address underconsumption, which many New Dealers blamed for the Great Depression. To this end, the NRA established “codes of fair competition” that established working conditions, set maximum working hours, and uniform wage rates. The point was to replace competition with cooperation. The result was the cartelization of the American economy. 

Selgin gives voice to the NRA’s many critics, among them Keynes, who “was especially critical of the National Recovery Administration…describing it, accurately, as pretending to promote recovery while actually impeding it.” In 1935, the Brookings Institution released a report on the NRA, which condemned the program keeping “business in a churn, preventing re-employment, and consequently retard[ing] American development.” In short, the twin pillars of the First New Deal did not promote economic recovery and likely impeded it. 

The economy did improve from 1933 to 1937, but the reason for that recovery had little to do with Roosevelt’s policies. Unemployment fell from 25 percent to 11 percent, and industrial capacity more than doubled. Selgin explains that during this time “the money stock (M2) rose by more than 50 percent, boosting the overall demand for goods and services and, with it, both equilibrium prices and real output.” Sometimes the Roosevelt administration is given credit for the improvement, but Selgin demonstrates that their policy efforts did little to contribute to the increase in the money supply. Most of the monetary expansion resulted from European gold flows due to the uncertainty created by Adolf Hitler’s aggression and by Joseph Stalin’s efforts to increase Russian gold output. 

Shockingly, officials in the Roosevelt administration viewed the inflow of gold as a threat to the economy. Fearing inflation, the Treasury and the Federal Reserve embraced policies to decrease monetary expansion. Keynes quipped that they “professed to fear that for which they dared not hope.” The Federal Reserve voted to raise member bank reserve requirements. Furthermore, the Treasury sterilized the gold flows by not depositing those certificates. Combined, Selgin argues, these policies changed inflation expectations and led to the downturn. Their actions led to the Roosevelt Recession during 1937 and 1938, in which GNP decreased by over 18 percent, industrial production declined by one-third, and unemployment increased to around 20 percent.

Selgin is also emphatic that the decline in spending during 1937 did not trigger the downturn. He concludes that the “expansionary fiscal policy wasn’t an important driver of the pre-1937 recovery” and as such the reduction of spending in 1937 “couldn’t have caused or even contributed [to the Roosevelt Recession].” 

The traditional historical narrative asserts that World War II got the United States out of the Great Depression due to the massive amount of government spending. Selgin evaluates the various explanations for economic recovery and concludes that Roosevelt’s decision to end his hostility toward businesspeople and bring them into the administration, while most of the New Dealers left government, resulted in regime change in the early 1940s. 

Following World War II, the United States embarked on a period of significant economic growth. Selgin explains that this resulted from the “revival of private spending” that “far exceeded what many economists, especially Keynesians, predicted.” Pent-up demand from wartime austerity, combined with forced savings and a restoration of private investment, led to economic revival. The Great Depression was over in spite of the efforts of the New Dealers.

In what is the most comprehensive, thorough, and balanced book on the subject, Selgin does more than just overturn the narrative that FDR was a Keynesian. He delves into each of the historiographical debates from 1933 to 1947 in a level of detail that intimidated my undergraduate students when I assigned this book to my American Economic History class last semester. But as my students worked through the book, at a pace much slower than they wanted, they learned to appreciate Selgin’s fair description of scholars who disagreed with him. 

The result is the closest authoritative single volume on the New Deal and recovery. I plan to continue using it in class, and I recommend that anyone interested in a detailed account of the New Deal and recovery purchase a copy of False Dawn. You will not be disappointed.

The AIER Everyday Price Index (EPI) rose to 316.0 in May 2026, up 1.22 from the previous month. The index has risen 6.3 percent since the start of 2026, 5.4 percent since the start of the Iran War and 7.3 percent year-over-year. Thirteen price categories rose, ten declined, and one was unchanged, with the largest increases seen in motor fuel, postage and delivery services, and recreational reading material. Gardening and lawncare services, intracity transportation, and purchase, subscription, and rental of video saw the greatest price pullbacks in May. 

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

(Source: Bloomberg Finance, LP)

Also on June 10, 2026, the US Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) released the May 2026 Consumer Price Index (CPI) data. Headline CPI rose 0.5 percent, which met expectations, while core inflation rose 0.2 percent, less than the 0.3 percent forecast.

May 2025 US CPI headline and core month-over-month (2016 – present)

(Source: Bloomberg Finance, LP)

Consumer prices in May were driven primarily by another sharp increase in energy costs, with the energy index rising 3.9 percent and gasoline climbing 7.0 percent on the month (8.6 percent before seasonal adjustment), while food inflation eased. Overall food prices rose 0.2 percent, down from 0.5 percent in April, as grocery inflation remained subdued at just 0.1 percent. Restaurant prices continued to advance, with food away from home up 0.3 percent, while within groceries the largest increases came from beverages (+0.6 percent, including coffee and tea materials +1.1 percent) and bakery products (+0.4 percent). Offsetting pressures included declines in dairy (-0.6 percent), led by cheese (-2.9 percent), and a modest drop in meats, poultry, fish, and eggs (-0.2 percent).

Core inflation cooled materially in May, with prices excluding food and energy rising 0.2 percent after a 0.4 percent gain in April, though shelter costs remained firm. Rent increased 0.4 percent and owners’ equivalent rent rose 0.3 percent, continuing to provide a steady upward contribution, while airline fares (+2.7 percent), communications (+1.3 percent), medical care (+0.3 percent), and personal care (+1.0 percent) also posted notable gains. Offsetting weakness came from motor vehicle insurance (-1.7 percent), household furnishings (-0.6 percent), prescription drugs (-0.9 percent), and new vehicles (-0.3 percent), pointing to further easing in goods inflation even as services inflation remains comparatively sticky.

In year-over-year data, headline CPI came in at 4.2 percent with core (ex food and energy) rising 2.9 percent, both of which met surveyed expectations. 

May 2025 US CPI headline and core year-over-year (2016 – present)

(Source: Bloomberg Finance, LP)

From May 2025 to May 2026, food inflation remained relatively contained even as energy costs surged. Grocery prices rose 2.7 percent in the past 12 months, led by fruits and vegetables (+6.1 percent) and nonalcoholic beverages (+5.8 percent), while meats, poultry, fish, and eggs (+1.8 percent) and cereals and bakery products (+1.9 percent) posted more modest gains. Dairy prices declined 1.0 percent over the year, helping offset broader food pressures. Dining out continued to outpace groceries, with food away from home rising 3.5 percent, including increases of 3.8 percent for full-service meals and 3.3 percent for limited-service restaurants.

Energy remained the dominant inflation story over the last year, unsurprisingly, with the energy index climbing 23.5 percent and gasoline soaring 40.5 percent, while electricity rose 5.9 percent and natural gas increased 3.0 percent. By contrast, core inflation stayed comparatively moderate, with prices excluding food and energy up 2.9 percent over the year. Shelter remained a key contributor, rising 3.4 percent, while apparel (+4.8 percent), household furnishings and operations (+3.0 percent), medical care (+2.6 percent), and recreation (+2.6 percent) posted notable, though less pronounced, gains.

US inflation accelerated in May as the Iran War drove a renewed energy shock, with prices rising at the fastest rate since early 2023. Yet beneath the surface, inflation pressures remained notably softer than feared: core CPI, excluding food and energy, rose at a pace broadly consistent with the Federal Reserve’s two-percent target on an annualized basis. More than half of May’s headline increase stemmed from energy, and categories tied to discretionary demand or durable goods showed ongoing weakness, with prices for new vehicles falling for a second consecutive month and core goods overall declining 0.1 percent. This also suggests that tariff pass-through may largely be complete.

The data suggests a US economy where supply shocks are colliding with increasingly cautious consumers. Shelter inflation cooled significantly, helping offset firmness in areas such as airfares and lodging away from home. Importantly, inflation breadth narrowed: nearly 60 percent of core CPI categories posted annualized price increases below the Fed’s two-percent target in May, while the share of categories experiencing outright price declines rose sharply. That pattern suggests that American consumers are resisting price increases in nonessential categories, restraining firms’ pricing power even as higher fuel and transportation costs begin filtering through portions of the economy.

Nevertheless, the inflation outlook remains complicated. Real average hourly earnings fell 0.7 percent from a year earlier, the sharpest decline in more than three years, which intensifies already considerable pressure on strained US household budgets. The Middle East war, which recently surpassed 100 days, could still broaden inflationary pressures through fertilizer, transportation, and production channels, lifting food and goods prices more broadly. Still, it remains possible that headline inflation peaked in May on a year-over-year basis, and better-than-expected core readings should alleviate fears of imminent Federal Reserve tightening despite the blowout May payrolls report. Markets continue to expect the Fed to hold rates steady at its June meeting under new Chair Kevin Warsh, though futures still imply a meaningful chance of at least one rate increase later in 2026 if energy-driven price increases prove persistent or reignite substantially.

A clay tablet from Kanesh, in what is now central Turkey, contains the founding charter of a twelve-partner trading company. Twelve merchants pooled thirty-three pounds of gold. The document specifies the partners by name, the starting capital, the profit split, and the penalty for any partner who wishes to withdraw early. Pull your share before the term ends and the firm will return silver at a steep discount to the gold you invested. Capital was locked up under prescribed terms.

The tablet is nearly four thousand years old. 

No one had yet written a sentence about markets. The word “capitalism” would not be coined for another 3,800 years. Adam Smith was 3,700 years from picking up his pen. And yet here, baked into clay by a fire that destroyed the building where it was stored (and in doing so preserved it) is a document that any modern private equity attorney would recognize on sight: defined partners, contributed capital, profit-sharing ratios, and a liquidity penalty designed to align the interests of investors with the long-term needs of the enterprise. 

The merchants of Assur, in modern-day Iraq, loaded donkeys with tin and textiles and walked them a thousand kilometers across mountain passes to Kanesh, roughly the distance from New York to Atlanta, on foot, through terrain that had no roads. Each animal carried about 180 pounds. The journey took two to three months, and yielded silver and gold in return for the trade. 

Archaeologists have recovered more than twenty thousand clay records from Kanesh. Most are business documents: receipts, loan contracts, shipping orders, correspondence, lawsuits. The economy they reveal is not primitive or embryonic, but teems with complete stories familiar to the modern mind. Partners sued each other in commercial courts. Husbands wrote home about prices. Wives wrote back, noting that the husband had been gone too long. A woman named Ahatum lent silver to four different men over nine years, keeping her own records, extending credit on her own terms, building a portfolio of receivables with no bank behind her and no theory to guide her — only prices, trust, and the accumulated discipline of knowing which borrowers repaid. 

People bought other merchants’ loan documents and used them as collateral for new loans. This was not a rough precursor to modern financial instruments — it was a modern financial instrument. Wall Street calls it securitization. The merchants of Assur called it Tuesday. One of the traders got caught smuggling tin in his undergarments to evade a ten percent import tax. 

There was, in other words, a tax. And a smuggler. And an enforcement regime capable of catching him. The full apparatus of commercial civilization, operating without a theorist in sight. 

In 2019, four economists from Harvard, Sciences Po, the University of Chicago, and the University of Virginia did something unusual. They took the Kanesh tablet records and ran them through a gravity model — the mathematical framework that modern economists use to predict trade flows between countries based on economic size and geographic distance. The model is a workhorse of contemporary international economics. Its coefficients have been estimated thousands of times using modern data. 

The Bronze Age numbers matched. 

Trade fell off with distance at nearly the same rate observed between modern nation-states. The relationship between market size and trade volume held. The paper appeared in The Quarterly Journal of Economics, which is not a venue given to romantic claims about ancient wisdom. It demands identification strategies and careful econometrics. The proposition the paper advanced was this: the fundamental structure of human commercial behavior has not changed in four thousand years. 

This is not a sentimental finding. It is a measurement. The gravity model does not care about ideology or historical narrative. It fits a curve to data, and this curve fit. 

Friedrich Hayek (1899–1992) spent much of his career trying to explain why centrally designed economic systems fail while spontaneously ordered ones succeed. His answer was the knowledge problem: the information required to coordinate a complex economy is dispersed among millions of actors, embedded in local circumstances, expressed in prices, and impossible to aggregate in any planning bureau. No designer can know what the market knows because the market’s knowledge exists only in the act of exchange itself. 

Hayek was right and received the Nobel Prize in economics. He was also, in a precise sense, describing something that had been running for at least four thousand years before he named it. 

The merchants of Assur did not read Hayek. They had prices, which told them where tin was scarce. They had interest rates, which told them what credit was worth. They had courts, which told them what contracts meant. They had penalties for early withdrawal, which told them that patient capital and impatient capital are different things with different values. They had Ahatum, who told four borrowers what her terms were and kept her own records of who had honored them. 

The system worked not because anyone designed it, but as the residue of thousands of individual decisions by people trying to do better for themselves and their families. It was, in the vocabulary Hayek would eventually give it, spontaneous order. Pushu-ken, one of the Assyrian merchants whose correspondence survives, would have called it simply trade. 

Deirdre McCloskey has argued that the bourgeois virtues — prudence, enterprise, honest dealing, the willingness to truck and barter on agreed terms — produced the modern world. Her argument is not that these virtues were invented in Amsterdam or London, but that there, they were celebrated for the first time. The rhetorical and cultural legitimization of commercial life was the novel event of that period, not the commercial behavior itself. On that point, Kanesh cannot argue. The tablets show the behavior. They do not show a civilization that held its merchants up as an expression of human virtue. 

But they do complicate the explanation. The graph of human welfare is essentially flat from Kanesh to roughly 1750. Four thousand years of merchants practicing every virtue McCloskey names: prudence, honest dealing, contract enforcement, patient capital, and the world did not get meaningfully richer. Something else broke the graph open. McCloskey calls it rhetoric and dignity. Others point to energy density, Atlantic scale, or the dismantling of usury prohibitions. The tablets from Kanesh cannot settle that argument. What they can do is clarify the prior question: whatever the answer, it is not the birth of commerce. Commerce was already ancient when the argument began.

This matters for a reason beyond historical curiosity. 

The recurring argument for managed economies, regulated markets, and designed commercial systems rests on a premise that is rarely stated explicitly but always present: that markets are artifacts, constructed things, instruments of policy that require expert supervision to function and expert correction when they fail. In this view, the market is downstream of theory. Someone had to think it up. Someone has to maintain it. Remove the hand of the designer, and the thing collapses. 

Kanesh is a four-thousand-year refutation of that premise. The courts that enforced Ahatum’s loan contracts were not the creation of a policy commission. The interest rates that told Pushu-ken whether a shipment was worth the risk were not set by a central authority. The early-exit penalty in the founding charter of that twelve-partner company was not mandated by a regulator. These were the spontaneous products of people with things to trade, routes to travel, and enough accumulated experience to know that trust required terms and terms required enforcement. 

When the Harvard and Chicago economists ran the gravity model on the Kanesh data and got modern coefficients, they were not discovering that ancient people were clever. They were discovering that the underlying structure of commercial behavior is not a cultural achievement that can be redesigned. It is closer to a constant. 

Adam Smith described a market that had been running since before his civilization existed. Every argument for designing markets from theory has it exactly backwards. The theory arrived to explain something already there, already working, already generating the surplus that funded the theorists. 

Pushu-ken wrote a clay tablet to his business partner about a shipment of cloth. A woman named Ahatum recorded who owed her how much silver. Neither of them had a theory. They had prices and trust and the patience to walk a thousand kilometers for a net margin. 

That was enough. It always has been.

America is good at solving problems, but less good at recognizing when the “solutions” become the problem. Nowhere is this more evident than on your water bill, which has risen more than 27 percent over the past five years and is increasing at roughly twice the rate of inflation. Politicians and journalists point to aging infrastructure, climate change, and per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) contamination. They are not entirely wrong. What they often omit is how decades of well-intentioned government intervention have systematically weakened the market mechanisms that might otherwise help keep costs in check.

Consider gasoline. Drivers may not like what they pay at the pump, but the price is determined in global markets where no single regulator sets it. The market aggregates information from millions of producers and consumers and generates a price that, whatever its imperfections, reflects underlying conditions of scarcity and demand. Water operates very differently. Its price is shaped by a maze of legal doctrines, regulatory mandates, utility commissions, and interstate compacts accumulated over more than a century. Each layer places additional distance between the resource and the consumer, making prices less transparent and less reflective of underlying realities. 

This is what makes the situation so puzzling. Markets are remarkably effective at directing resources to where they are most needed. Hong Kong, Singapore, and Japan are three of the world’s most prosperous economies, yet they share one notable characteristic: a scarcity of natural resources. They possess little oil, coal, or rare earth minerals, and yet they thrive because markets reveal prices, coordinate investment, and allocate resources to their highest-valued uses. Scarcity, it turns out, is not an obstacle markets cannot overcome. It is often the very incentive that drives innovation and efficiency.

Water, by comparison, is an unusually ordinary resource. It is more abundant than oil, easier to treat than rare earth minerals, and across much of the United States, it literally falls from the sky. So why is America facing a slow-motion water crisis while Singapore can recycle wastewater to semiconductor-grade purity? The answer is not geology or climate. It is governance.

Some will argue that water is fundamentally different—a natural monopoly with relatively inelastic demand and pervasive externalities, where actions upstream affect everyone downstream. Those characteristics are real. Yet similar challenges exist in markets for oil, coal, and rare earth minerals, and markets have still found ways to move those resources across oceans to countries that possess little or none of them. To understand America’s water challenges, we must go back to a series of legal and political decisions that began before the Civil War and have compounded ever since. Let’s dive in (pun intended).

The first distortion predates federal regulation entirely. American water law split into two doctrines before the country was even fully defined. In Eastern and Midwestern states, riparian rights gave water access to whoever owned adjacent land; geography, not prices, determined access. In most Western states, prior appropriation, “first in time, first in right,” meant whoever diverted water first held the senior claim, regardless of the proximity of future landowners. Neither doctrine consistently allowed water to flow to its most productive use, as both locked allocation in place by accident of history. This was not a free market distorted by regulation, but one that was never permitted to form. 

On top of that foundation, Congress layered environmental mandates over many years. The Clean Water Act (1972) and the Safe Drinking Water Act (1974) set uniform standards every utility must meet, regardless of local conditions or costs. Each new regulated contaminant means a new compliance cost passed directly to ratepayers with no competitive check. PFAS regulations (2024) alone now add an estimated $1.5 billion annually in system-wide costs.

Meanwhile, most Americans cannot choose their water provider. One pipe, one utility, no exit. 

Investor-owned utilities have learned to leverage that captivity through mechanisms that pass capital costs to ratepayers, combining the pricing power of a monopoly with limited cost discipline.

This dynamic, where customers have nowhere else to turn, creates a system ripe for upward price pressure with little accountability. And the Colorado River Compact (1922) illustrates just how deep this dysfunction runs: negotiated by political compromise, it divided water among states by seniority of claim, locking in agriculture’s consumption of 80 percent of the river’s flow simply because those rights are oldest. Meanwhile, cities that would generate far greater economic value per gallon are legally prevented from buying that water at any price. The result is a river stretched to its limits, serving yesterday’s economy by law, while growing urban centers go thirsty by design.

Decades of regulations that distorted water prices also resulted in them being too low in some 

municipalities. These layered laws subsidized the construction of entire cities in places that markets never would have chosen: dry desert cities like Las Vegas, Phoenix, and Tucson. The logic was circular: keep prices low enough that growth looks cheap, and the growth generates political constituencies that demand prices stay low. It is precisely the logic of subsidizing flood insurance for beachfront homes, except the moral hazard here is measured in millions of people and entire metropolitan economies that now require ongoing federal intervention just to stay hydrated. 

The solution is to move water more fully into the market, allowing prices to reflect scarcity and capital to flow toward conservation and innovation. In practice, that means a managed transition in which rates gradually move toward market levels, whether higher or lower. Most importantly, it means eliminating the policies that created the problem: below-cost agricultural water contracts, federal development subsidies that ignore water costs, and interstate compacts that lock 1922 decisions in place indefinitely. It also means stopping policies that make it artificially cheap to build the next Phoenix in the desert.

Your water bill isn’t rising because water has become more expensive. It’s rising because we’ve built a system specifically designed to ensure that price has little to do with it.