Category

Economy

Category

One year ago, Donald Trump took office, swearing an oath to “preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States.” Americans were promised a new golden age, one in which the nation would flourish, in Trump’s words: “We will be the envy of every nation and we will not allow ourselves to be taken advantage of any longer.” One year into this so-called golden age, a familiar pattern has emerged. 

Internationally, the administration has erected tariffs in the name of reviving manufacturing. Domestically, it has implemented sweeping national policies to govern emerging technologies such as artificial intelligence. These are two sides of the same coin: executive power extending into domains traditionally disciplined by Congress and the states. These developments raise a central question: is the pursuit of national renewal reinforcing the constitutional and economic foundations of the republic, or quietly eroding them? 

Tariffs and Manufacturing

On April 2, or “Liberation Day,” tariffs captured much of 2025 as the administration sought to upend decades-long trading practices under the promise of bringing manufacturing back to the United States. In a return to an old-school mercantilist instinct, broad tariffs were imposed on imports to leverage the size of the U.S. economy against trading partners and supposedly spark domestic production, especially in nostalgic sectors such as steel and autos. 

According to FRED, both domestic auto production and employment in manufacturing continue to decrease. At the same time, prices have risen sharply over the past year. From March to September of last year, the Producer Price Index (PPI) for Metals and Metal Products rose roughly by 10 points, from 132 to 143. In autos, Fitch Ratings places the 60-plus-day auto-loan delinquency rate at a record high, with new car prices averaging more than $50,000 for the first time. 

Taken together, tariffs have taxed consumers while failing to deliver the promised production gains — manufacturing, in effect, a kind of policy-made madness. In addition, affordability is now casting a long shadow over the economy, especially when tariffs are applied to goods the United States has little or no capacity to produce at scale, such as bananas and coffee, revealing the bluntness of broad-based tariff policy and a poor understanding of America’s own production capacities.

The idea that tariffs can serve as a magic wand to revive industry rests on a false premise of government action in the economy. Governments do not trade and create prosperity. Firms and individuals do, as they truck, barter, and exchange their way toward a better future.

Artificial Intelligence National Policy

On December 11, 2025, Donald Trump set into motion a National Policy Framework for Artificial Intelligence. This Executive Order is designed to preempt state law: “My Administration must act with the Congress to ensure that there is a minimally burdensome national standard — not 50 discordant state laws. The resulting framework must forbid State laws that conflict with the policy set forth in this order.”

“Defending the Constitution” must mean something different in Washington, because the Tenth Amendment speaks exactly against this sort of power concentration. “The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.” 

Consolidating rules under one roof in this manner reflects poorly on the constitutional design in which each state has room to craft laws for its own people. How else can competing ideas be tried and tested if all states operate under a single federal banner? In other words, these blanket rules reduce the space for experimentation and creative destruction while concentrating power in firms such as: Microsoft, Alphabet, and OpenAI, companies that can retain large legal teams to navigate such federal laws.

Moreover, the “minimally burdensome national standard” comes equipped with an AI Litigation Task Force designed to pressure states into conformity with the new federal framework. “The Attorney General shall establish an AI Litigation Task Force (Task Force) whose sole responsibility shall be to challenge State AI laws inconsistent with the policy set forth in section two of this order, including on grounds that such laws unconstitutionally regulate interstate commerce.” In an effort to combat bureaucracy at the state level, the response is a new federal bureaucracy to police the states under a single policy.

An Executive Unchecked

Like Order 66, Executive Orders 14257 on tariffs and 14179 on AI policy reflect the modern temptation to treat governance as command rather than consent. When the executive frames trade deficits or emerging technologies as emergencies that demand immediate action, policy is issued from the center and enforced through agencies and litigation rather than deliberated through Congress and tested through federalism. The result is not merely bad policy in tariffs or AI; it is a constitutional shift. Each precedent for unilateral action becomes a template for the next, producing regulatory whiplash; one president governs by decree, the next reverses by Autopen, and eroding the stability that firms, households, and states require to plan. Over time, the republic begins to function less like a system of separated powers and more like an administrative chain of command. It is therefore no wonder that trust in government, according to Pew Research, has sunk to historic lows: “Just 17 percent of Americans now say they trust the government in Washington to do what is right ‘just about always’ (2 percent) or ‘most of the time’ (15 percent).”

James Madison, Father of the Constitution, anticipated this entire problem. In Federalist No. 10, he warned that “enlightened statesmen will not always be at the helm,” which is precisely why a free society cannot rely on the character or self-restraint of any single officeholder. The constitutional design assumes that emergencies will be invoked, passions will flare, and interests will press for advantage. The remedy is not to hope for better rulers, but to preserve the institutions that force restraint and distribute power. When emergency governance becomes routine, the public is asked to substitute trust in process with trust in personalities. A republic cannot remain stable on those terms.

A practical way to begin breaking this executive ratchet is to restore Congress as a genuine counterweight, and that requires rebuilding its federalist character. The Senate was originally intended to represent state governments as political units, not simply to mirror national party coalitions. The Seventeenth Amendment’s shift in 1912 to direct election, instead of election by state governments, altered senators’ incentives entirely. Direct election may be democratic, however it weakens the Senate’s original function as an institutional representative of state governments, thereby weakening federalism as a check on executive power. Instead of being accountable primarily to state legislatures and state institutional interests, they increasingly respond to national party lines and Washington’s internal logic. Repealing that amendment, so senators are once again anchored to state interests, would strengthen oversight of the executive, improve the representation of states within Congress, and rebalance authority between the states and the federal government. In one swift motion, both the federal government and the executive branch would be restrained while providing an incentive for people to care about state government affairs. 

If America wants a genuine golden age, it will not be issued by Executive Order, it will be rebuilt by restoring the limits that make self-government possible.

At the Bitcoin conference in Nashville in July of 2024, then-candidate Donald Trump made a campaign promise to end the war against the use and development of cryptocurrencies. This war was coined “Operation Chokepoint 2.0” and led by Senator Elizabeth Warren, former Chair of the Securities and Exchange Commission Gary Gensler, and the Biden Administration. Despite Trump’s obvious relatively relaxed stance on “crypto”, the Biden-era “Chokepoint 2.0” lingers on: the CEO of Bitcoin “mixer” Samourai Wallet sentenced to five years in prison by the Southern District of New York on November 6. (So-called “mixers” allow users of cryptocurrencies to obtain a level of privacy not normally possible on public blockchains). 

While the charge that ultimately stuck against Samourai Wallet CEO Keonne Rodriguez was conspiracy to operate an unlicensed money-transmitting business, repeated accusations of money laundering were used to build the case against him. 

In a similar case in August 2024, a jury found Ethereum developer Roman Storm guilty of operating an unlicensed money transmitting business. In this case also, Storm was also charged with conspiracy to commit money laundering, because the privacy tool that he developed was alleged to have been used by nefarious actors. In the end, the jury’s lack of unanimous agreement meant the money laundering charge did not stick. 

In the respective cases against both Rodriguez and Storm, prosecutors decided that money laundering (or conspiracy to launder) was a charge worth stacking against them to make the overall activities they were involved with appear to be of greater severity. And in both cases again, the charge that they were ultimately found guilty of (unlicensed money transmitting) doesn’t pass any reasonable smell test given that both Samourai Wallet and Tornado Cash were “non-custodial.” Neither service ever took custody of the coins to begin with, so they could not have “transmitted” funds, legally or otherwise. This was also the conclusion of lawyers at the US Department of the Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN). 

Why Anti–Money Laundering Now Touches Everything

Money laundering is a topic that often comes up in financial matters of all kinds. Over recent years, especially since the birth and growth of Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies, anti-money laundering (AML) efforts have expanded substantially by governments, central and commercial banks, and by intergovernmental organizations such as the OECD’s Financial Action Task Force (FATF). In fact, under the present climate, law-abiding individuals can hardly interact with a financial institution of any kind anywhere in the world without having to answer questions about source of funds, take repeated selfies from various angles, and upload photos of government-issued documents, and more — even when dealing with small amounts of money. 

As a result of AML, financial institutions across the internet find that they hold treasure troves of sensitive user data that serves as a high value target for hackers to be exploited and sold on Darknet marketplaces. 

In short, regulators have built a giant industry that imposes high costs onto private sector actors and taxpayers without much discussion of costs versus benefits. As such, the subject matter of AML efforts demands a revisit. 

Blind Spots and Perverse Incentives

The term ‘money laundering’ was coined after the Watergate scandal of the 1970s, yet it was not formalized into law with any federal offense until the Money Laundering Control Act of 1986. 

These days, law enforcement and regulatory agencies such as the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) and Financial Action Task Force (FATF) typically use the term alongside other terms that imply an obvious victim needing protection: ‘terrorist financing’, ‘human trafficking’. This is meant to provoke a strong reaction against money laundering as a practice. One problem with the association of money laundering with these other terms that obviously justify a strong response to prevent them is that money laundering does not, in itself, always have a clear victim. As such (at least from a classically liberal point of view), it is not clear that money laundering’s illegality is justified — at least not in every case. 

To understand this, consider that the Money Laundering Control Act of 1986 emphasizes that money laundering involves the transacting with and concealing of criminally derived property. While this may seem reasonable on the face of it, it should be stressed that nearly everyone can think of something that is illegal that (from their own moral code) should not be. 

So, for example, libertarians typically criticize America’s Drug War, arguing that recreational drug use is generally a victimless crime. If someone sells a small amount of marijuana for a $50 banknote, then pretends that it was derived from the sale of ice cream, that could be considered money laundering – even though there is no victim. Both buyer and seller are happy. Whether law enforcement would typically charge someone of money laundering in a minor case like this or whether it would hold up in court is besides the point. Money laundering can – at least in some cases – be a victimless crime and even be said to protect life and property, despite its illegality. 

No sensible person wants to live in a world in which a Leviathan state is omniscient and omnipotent, capable of cracking down on every minor infraction. (It is noteworthy that Switzerland became a global hub for financial privacy because persecuted Calvinists there knew very well the importance of that privacy to their freedom and safety).

Next, it is important to consider some problems with the AML machine, as it is in practice. Four points made by authors Norbert Michel and David Burton at the Heritage Foundation are worth noting. 

First, the vast majority of money laundering investigations, indictments, and convictions on the federal level in the United States are by the IRS, not the FBI. This strongly suggests that its primary use case is to maximize tax revenues, not to protect victims (as repeatedly mentioning money laundering alongside terrorist financing and human trafficking suggests that it does). 

Second, it is impossible to demonstrate any effectiveness of anti-money laundering efforts as a tool to crack down on more serious crimes since law enforcement typically charges alleged offenders with money laundering and non-money-laundering crimes simultaneously. Michel and Burton write that this practice “[makes] it difficult to tell whether law enforcement discovered a drug crime because of money laundering or vice versa.”

Third, no matter how you splice the numbers, the cost to taxpayers to convict a person for money laundering is several million dollars each, and sometimes in the hundreds of millions – and none of this even includes the hundreds of billions of dollars in compliance costs to the private sector every year. 

And fourth, tax evasion is often cited as a justification for AML. But as Burton and Michel argue, crimes in one country are often not considered crimes in other countries and therefore do not justify data sharing between governments (as AML legislation requires) under the principle of dual criminality. Tax evasion is, in some countries, a civil violation (not a criminal one). So to use tax evasion as a justification for AML data sharing is about as misguided as using “speaking out against one’s government, peaceful political or labor organizing, gambling, [or] homosexual behavior.” 

Consider just one example that demonstrates how AML has run amok outside the United States. In New Zealand, like in many parts of the world, someone accused of a crime maintains the legal right to attorney-client privilege. That privilege does not apply, however, in cases of suspected money laundering. So, if you commit a series of violent murders in New Zealand, you have full right to a proper legal defense, but if your attorney suspects you may be involved with money laundering, he is required to submit a Suspicious Activity Report (SAR) about you – and thereby do exactly the opposite of what attorneys exist to do in the first place. This reveals backwards governance priorities of policymakers. 

And lastly, the elephant in the room. While AML efforts globally impose enormous costs onto taxpayers, private businesses, and the economy more broadly, it should be noted that the primary offenders are some of the world’s largest banks. Add to that, many activities conducted by government agencies themselves or by private actors on behalf of these agencies certainly rhyme with money laundering.

To cite just one example, recent discoveries of Jeffrey Epstein’s activities from 1979 onwards reveal that while he worked for Bear Stearns, he was responsible for concealing the true sources of funds for illegal arms deals on behalf of intelligence agencies of various governments. So while the AML regime is promoted as one that hinders crime, it seems ineffective at hindering crimes committed by the politically powerful.

AML is a Regulatory Attempt to Erode Privacy and Property Rights

The first “Crypto Wars” of the 1990s established the legal precedent that computer source code is protected speech under the First Amendment. What remains of the ongoing Biden-era Operation Chokepoint 2.0 lawfare threatens that precedent. Additionally, the privacy protections intended by the Fourth Amendment are under fire nearly everywhere in the world when it comes to financial privacy. In the United States, the chief enemies to it are the Bank Secrecy Act, the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA), PATRIOT Act, the Money Laundering Control Act, and Chokepoint 2.0 — all regulatory attempts at weakening property rights in one way or another. 

There are ways in which anti-money laundering laws can be rationally justified from different perspectives. But given that AML creates a new class of victims for exposure to frequent data breaches, given that it is not clear just how effective AML is at revealing more serious (non-money-laundering) crimes, given the enormous cost to taxpayers and to the private sector, given that money laundering can be a victimless crime, and given that it is a tool of choice for prosecutors to shut down founders and developers who provide much-desired financial privacy to cryptocurrency users, it is time to call AML out for what it is: an enormously wasteful scheme and abuse of power.

I don’t much care for the pledge of allegiance. This got me into a bit of hot water when I was the convocation speaker at Hillsdale College, standing on the stage right next to the flag, silent and polite, while the assembled faculty and studentry recited the pledge.

Don’t get me wrong. I love the “standard to which the wise and honest can repair.” And I confess I’ve gotten misty-eyed when I’ve seen Old Glory flown around a rodeo arena, as the sun is setting over the Rocky Mountains.

Alas, the pledge of allegiance had an ugly midwife: the Christian Socialist Francis Bellamy, who was kicked out of his Boston pulpit for preaching against the evils of capitalism. Not for me, the pledge to a symbol or the Hegelian nation. And not for me a pledge that was accompanied by the Bellamy salute, until it was quietly dropped during World War II because it looked a little too much like Nazi theatrics.

The pledge was a clever work of Progressivism. It inculcated allegiance to the state and the abstract patria, while ignoring the bedrock of American liberty, the US Constitution — because its pesky constraints might otherwise thwart wise leaders who can fix all of our problems with the stroke of a regulatory or legislative pen. 

I am, however, ready to pledge allegiance to the Constitution.

In fact, back in 1996, I did “solemnly swear that I will support and defend the US Constitution against all enemies, foreign and domestic.” I was an eager 23-year-old Foreign Service Officer, taking my oath of office. I left the Foreign Service because the State Department opened my eyes to the ills of bureaucracy, and because too many of my colleagues were not defending the Constitution. Ironically, the US Government made a libertarian of me.

What’s so special, so laudable, so lovable about the US Constitution? 

The Constitutional Contract

The economist James M. Buchanan (Nobel Laureate, 1986) founded the discipline of constitutional political economy. In the simplest of terms, he explained how a constitution might emerge out of a state of nature. My neighbor and I live in a constant state of fear, as we routinely raid each other. Instead of dedicating resources to innovation and capital accumulation, we dedicate resources to defense (and offense). One day, we realize this doesn’t make sense. Instead of eking out a living in constant fear of plunder, we could agree to live in peace, divide labor according to comparative advantage, innovate, accumulate capital — and, generally, both become rich.

There remain two problems. First, each party will cheat on the contract if it thinks it can get away with it. So we need an outside enforcement mechanism. But this leads to a second problem: how do we control that entity? Neither party will sign off on the constitution if there aren’t explicit conditions for contractual enforcement — especially if the other party could someday be in power. In the powerful language of Federalist 51: “In framing a government which is to be administered by men over men, the great difficulty lies in this: you must first enable the government to control the governed; and in the next place oblige it to control itself.”

The [Expanded] United States Constitution

I like to read the Constitution as a three-part document: the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution of 1787, and Martin Luther King’s “I Have a Dream” speech. This establishes the Constitution as the institutional fulfillment of a philosophical statement, and one that is still growing into its promise. Fellow nerds will complain that there are more than three documents… touché! A fuller understanding requires a reading of earlier philosophy (Locke, Montesquieu, Milton, and others); the Federalist Papers; the Articles of Confederation; and the Constitution of the Confederate States (though it was born of grievous sin, it did address a century of constitutional learning, and addressed both federal overreach and a scandalously latitudinarian reading of the Commerce Clause). But let’s start with the starring three.

The Declaration of Independence submits a list of colonial grievances against the British Crown. A contemporary reading that substitutes “president” or “federal government” for the British Crown will show the perennial nature of governmental overreach. But the core is contained in the beginning: “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.” From a pithy statement of metaphysics, epistemology, and ethics, flows a simple political theory: “That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed…” 

The Constitution is the institutional implementation of the Declaration’s philosophy. Back to Federalist 51, the Constitution enables the federal government to “establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity.” It does so through such things as unified foreign policy and defense powers, the regulation of commerce between the states, the ability to call forth the militia to quell insurrections, and the Supremacy Clause (Article VI) over the states. The Constitution also “oblige[s] [the federal government] to control itself.” This, it does through separation of powers (“ambition [is] made to counteract ambition”); through a balance of power between the states and the federal government; and through the granting of limited and enumerated powers to the federal government (notably under Article I, Section 8, and the Tenth Amendment). To these measures, we can add the Bill of Rights and the Reconstruction Amendments.

Martin Luther King’s “I Have a Dream” speech completes the trifecta. Indeed, a major line of dissent against the Constitution (embodied in identity politics and the debunked 1619 Project) seeks to recast the American founding as a simplistic story of racism. Of course, the Constitution did not immediately actualize the vision of the Declaration of Independence. But consider the history: before the Enlightenment, nobody (except for a handful of nobles and bishops) had rights, and everybody was poor. Then something — something radical — changed: some people in some countries saw their rights recognized. Not everybody, not everywhere, not immediately. But increasing numbers of people in increasing numbers of countries came to be included in the Enlightenment fold, and prospered accordingly. That project is still unfolding. Rather than throwing out the proverbial constitutional baby with the bathwater, and dumping the Enlightenment project because it wasn’t immediate or perfect, we are called to expand it. 

Consider the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King’s speech:

When the architects of our republic wrote the magnificent words of the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence, they were signing a promissory note to which every American was to fall heir. This note was a promise that all men, yes, black men as well as white men, would be guaranteed the ‘unalienable Rights’ of ‘Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.’ It is obvious today that America has defaulted on this promissory note, insofar as her citizens of color are concerned. Instead of honoring this sacred obligation, America has given the Negro people a bad check, a check which has come back marked ‘insufficient funds.’

But we refuse to believe that the bank of justice is bankrupt. We refuse to believe that there are insufficient funds in the great vaults of opportunity of this nation. And so, we’ve come to cash this check, a check that will give us, upon demand, the riches of freedom and the security of justice.

Is The Constitution Still Relevant?

Critics have argued that the Constitution of 1787 went too far in empowering (versus constraining) the federal government. In hindsight, perhaps the Anti-Federalists were right, as the federal government has grown from its small scope of enumerated powers, into a behemoth that controls a third of the economy. The Constitution has been ignored and bypassed, as federal growth has been enabled by the Supreme Court. But a weaker confederation would surely have been abused also. And for all its shortcomings, the US Constitution remains a speedbump on the road to serfdom. The US is consistently within the top ten (and usually within the top five) most economically free countries. It is among the lowest public spenders within the OECD. 

The United States remains a solid democracy. It may be a dirty shirt, but it’s the world’s cleanest dirty shirt. In the words of Algernon Sidney’s epigraph to Hayek’s The Constitution of Liberty

Our inquiry is not after that which is perfect, well knowing that no such thing is found among men; but we seek that human Constitution which is attended with the least, or the most pardonable inconveniences.

Other naysayers have claimed that the Constitution represents an unfair claim of the past on the present. The “organicists,” for example, claim that the Constitution is a living document and subject to pragmatic reinterpretation, without the need for amendment. But if a constitution can be interpreted at the drop of a judicial hat or legislative act, it means nothing — and it fails at its fundamental purpose of constraint. 

What is more, the Constitution can be amended, whether for clarification, or to reflect the changing times (for example, ending slavery, recognizing women’s right to vote, or changing the voting age to eighteen).

So, the Constitution is not sacred because it is inalterable, or because it is old. It is sacred because it represents voluntary self-constraint. It treats power as dangerous, and assumes that even the well-intentioned will eventually abuse it. We are still tempted by shortcuts, still eager to trade liberty for promises of security. The American experiment survives only when citizens insist that government stay within its bounds — especially when doing so is inconvenient.

So yes: I will pledge allegiance to the Constitution — and I hope you will, too. An enduring constitution requires a public that understands it, a judiciary that respects it, and leaders who fear violating it more than they fear losing elections. It survives only when citizens refuse to let it be hollowed out by “emergencies,” reinterpreted into meaninglessness, or bypassed by administrative decree.

That kind of humility is all too rare in modern politics, and it is well worth defending.

In early 2021, a declining video game retailer unexpectedly became the epicenter of one of the most extraordinary episodes in modern financial history. GameStop saw its stock price surge from under twenty dollars to well over four hundred in a matter of days, propelled by an unusual combination of extreme short interest, coordinated retail buying, and feedback loops embedded in contemporary market structure. Hedge funds suffered dramatic losses, trading platforms restricted activity under operational strain, and Congress called hearings in rapid succession. What might otherwise have been a transient market dislocation quickly became a cultural and political event. The episode was soon framed as a populist revolt — small investors versus Wall Street, social media versus institutional finance, narrative triumphing over fundamentals. 

Yet beneath the spectacle lay quieter and more enduring economic issues. The first is the massive impact of record levels of fiscal and monetary expansion during the pandemic. The other remains unresolved even today, years later. The GameStop episode was not merely a story about price volatility or market plumbing. It was a case study in what happens when capital markets intervene so forcefully that they separate a firm’s financial survival from its economic validation, disrupting the market’s normal process of error correction.

From an Austrian perspective, markets are not allocators of abstract “efficiency,” but discovery processes. Prices, profits, and losses transmit information about what consumers value and how scarce resources can best be employed. Losses are not pathologies; they are signals — evidence that entrepreneurial plans have failed to align production with consumer demand. When those signals are muted or overridden, discovery slows, and misallocation persists.

GameStop did not merely experience a temporary price spike. The short squeeze fundamentally altered the company’s financial condition. By issuing large quantities of equity at elevated prices, the firm raised billions of dollars, eliminated near-term bankruptcy risk, and transformed its balance sheet almost overnight. A business that appeared to be on a downward glide path suddenly possessed a war chest large enough to attempt reinvention. The market had not merely repriced GameStop; it had suspended the binding constraint that normally forces rapid learning.

That outcome raises a question that extends well beyond a single retailer: did the short squeeze save an ailing firm with unrealized entrepreneurial potential, or did it prevent the liquidation of a badly run business that had already failed its market test? The distinction is central to Austrian economics. Saving a viable firm can allow entrepreneurial recombination and reorganization. Preserving a failed one risks freezing capital and labor in lines of production that consumers have already rejected.

Economists often distinguish between financial survival and economic validation, though popular discussions frequently collapse the two. A firm survives when it has access to capital. It is validated when customers willingly pay prices that cover costs and generate sustainable cash flow. These conditions frequently coincide, but they need not. When they diverge, capital can keep a firm alive even as its business model remains unproven — or has already been disproven.

Before 2021, GameStop had largely lost that validation. Physical game sales were shrinking, margins were under pressure, and the steady shift toward digital distribution — through platforms owned by console manufacturers and publishers — was eroding the retailer’s role in the value chain. Losses were persistent rather than cyclical. By 2021, revenue had been in decline for over a decade, and in 2018 saw sales of its primary product, pre-owned and value goods, drop by 13 percent. The store footprint was oversized relative to demand. Cash flow was deteriorating. These were not temporary setbacks caused by a weak quarter or a singular shock; they reflected structural decline in the firm’s core business.

Net sales of GameStop worldwide from fiscal 2010 to fiscal 2023(in million US dollars)

© Statista 2026 Published by Bruna Rocco, Nov 26, 2025

Under ordinary market conditions, such a firm faces a reckoning. It restructures sharply, shrinks to its profitable core, or exits. From an Austrian standpoint, this is not “market cruelty” but knowledge transmission. Capital and labor are released from failed uses and redirected toward higher-valued ones. Liquidation is not the destruction of value; it is the recognition that value has already been destroyed and that further losses should be arrested.

The WallStreetBets-driven short squeeze disrupted that process. By allowing GameStop to raise equity at prices far above any reasonable estimate of near-term earning power, market discipline was suspended. The firm’s survival was no longer contingent on consumer choice. Capital substituted for cash flow, and the hard budget constraint that normally enforces entrepreneurial discipline softened dramatically. Losses became tolerable. Time was purchased.

From an Austrian perspective, this matters because constraints are not arbitrary. They are the mechanism through which markets force alignment between plans and reality. When those constraints are relaxed — whether by central banks, governments, or speculative capital surges — error correction gives way to error tolerance. The system continues to function, but it functions more slowly and less accurately.

To be clear, buying time is not inherently irrational. Capital markets sometimes fund loss-making firms when uncertainty is high and future payoffs are difficult to forecast. Optionality has value. But Austrian economics emphasizes that time without discovery is not neutral. The question is not whether GameStop gained time, but whether that time was used to generate genuine entrepreneurial learning.

Following the squeeze, the firm pursued a series of initiatives framed as transformations rather than incremental improvements. The most visible was the launch of an NFT marketplace in 2022, intended to position the company at the intersection of gaming, digital ownership, and online communities. The idea was not obviously incoherent. But economics is not about plausibility; it is about revealed preference. Consumers vote with their spending, not with their enthusiasm.

Transaction volumes on the marketplace collapsed as interest in NFTs faded. Revenues were negligible. The initiative was eventually wound down. Official explanations cited regulatory uncertainty, but regulation does not extinguish demand. When consumers value a product, they find ways to access it. In this case, the market delivered a negative verdict.

A later decision was even more revealing. In late 2023, GameStop authorized its CEO to invest corporate cash in publicly traded securities. This was not an operating strategy aimed at improving production, logistics, or customer experience. It was a financial strategy. At that point, the firm was no longer primarily engaged in entrepreneurial discovery through production and exchange. It was implicitly conceding that returns might be more reliably earned through asset markets than through serving customers. More recently, the decision was made to enter the collectibles business, with early signs of success as the primary business of selling games continues to deteriorate.

Stock price behavior reinforces this distinction between trading success and business success. GameStop’s post-squeeze history, even recently, has been characterized by extreme volatility. Investors who entered early and exited at precisely the right moment realized extraordinary gains. But those outcomes depended on timing, coordination, and tolerance for violent drawdowns — not on patient ownership of a firm generating rising cash flows. Over longer horizons, returns have been weak relative to risk. Holding the stock proved far less rewarding than trading it.

By contrast, firms operating in adjacent or overlapping spaces – such as Best Buy, Dick’s Sporting Goods, Chewy, or Take-Two Interactive – generated value through far more ordinary means: selling products people wanted, managing costs, and producing operating cash flow. Their returns lacked drama, but they displayed durability. A successful trade validates a market position under unusual conditions. It does not validate a business model.

What, then, was delayed by the short squeeze? Most importantly, the liquidation counterfactual. Absent extraordinary access to capital, GameStop would have faced binding constraints by late 2020 or early 2021. Management would have been forced to close stores more aggressively, sell assets, renegotiate leases, and concentrate narrowly on whatever segments could plausibly generate positive cash flow. Some capital would have been written off. Employees and physical locations would have been redeployed elsewhere in the economy. This would not have been painless, but it would have represented a rapid resolution of error.

Instead, that liquidation – which might have sent its assets into other, more competent hands – was postponed. Capital remained locked inside a firm whose entrepreneurial direction remained unclear. From an Austrian perspective, this is not a moral failure but a systemic one: the knowledge embedded in losses was not allowed to do its work. Discovery slowed. Misallocation persisted.

So did the short squeeze save GameStop, or did it merely preserve it? The honest answer is that it did both. It saved the firm financially while leaving its economic status unresolved. Survival was secured. Validation remains pending. Austrian economics cautions against mistaking one for the other.

Markets are powerful coordinating mechanisms, but they are not redemptive. They can rescue firms without validating them. They can delay liquidation without ensuring renewal. Ultimately, only consumers determine whether a business deserves to persist.

Until GameStop converts the time it purchased into durable, self-funding cash flows, its story remains an open question — not a triumph of markets, nor a failure of them, but a reminder of the difference between staying alive and being worth keeping.

Full empirical and methodological analysis can be found here: GameStop Five Years Later: Capital Market Intervention and Corporate Survival. SSRN: 6022957 (jump to PDF).

For much of the last half-century, California benefited from a powerful first-mover advantage. Dense networks of talent, capital, and research institutions allowed the state to absorb policy mistakes that would have crippled competitors. High spending and taxes, restrictive housing rules, and regulatory complexity were treated as nuisances rather than binding constraints, because growth could outstrip their costs.

That margin of error has narrowed dramatically.

What California is now experiencing is not a cyclical tech downturn or a post-pandemic anomaly. It is a measurable, policy-driven decline in relative competitiveness. The most important evidence is not that tech employment has fallen in absolute terms, but that California’s share of national tech employment has been shrinking, while other states gain ground.

Markets are responding to incentives exactly as economic theory predicts.

Employment Share, Not Headlines, Tells the Story

According to Bureau of Labor Statistics Current Employment Statistics data, California’s technology employment growth has underperformed national trends for several years, including during periods when tech hiring stabilized or rebounded elsewhere, and recently has been declining. California’s share of US tech jobs is falling from roughly 19 percent pre-2020 to closer to 16 percent in recent years, a nontrivial shift for an industry this large.

This is a classic example of relative decline. California still employs more tech workers than any other state, but it is no longer where the marginal job is being created.

Commercial real estate data corroborate the employment figures. Office vacancy rates across Silicon Valley remain elevated well beyond what remote work alone would explain. Bay Area office markets have not recovered in the way peer regions have. Persistent vacancies signal not just a shift to hybrid work, but geographic reallocation of firms and labor.

Migration as a Labor Market Signal

Labor mobility reinforces the same conclusion. US Census state-to-state migration data show continued net domestic outmigration from California, particularly among working-age adults. While international immigration partially offsets population losses, domestic migration is more relevant for employer location decisions, especially in high-skill sectors.

Economic theory predicts that firms follow labor when relocation costs are low and regulatory frictions are high. California now faces both: high regulatory frictions at home and increasingly credible substitutes elsewhere.

Founding Versus Scaling: A Crucial Distinction

California still dominates early-stage venture capital totals, as shown in venture investment data. This is often cited as evidence that concerns about the state’s competitiveness are overstated. That interpretation conflates firm formation with firm expansion.

Founding activity reflects legacy advantages such as universities, networks, and capital concentration. Scaling decisions reflect marginal costs. Increasingly, firms are choosing to incorporate or raise seed funding in California while expanding headcount in lower-cost, lower-regulation states.

From an economic standpoint, this is predictable. Scaling in California exposes firms to the nation’s highest marginal income tax rates, comparatively punitive capital gains taxation, rigid labor mandates, slow permitting processes, and volatile regulatory expectations. These costs rise nonlinearly as firms grow.

AI Regulation as a Binding Constraint

Artificial intelligence policy may become the clearest illustration of California’s regulatory overreach.

A recent CalMatters analysis documents how California lawmakers have pursued some of the most expansive state-level AI regulations in the country. These proposals extend liability, mandate preemptive risk assessments, and impose compliance obligations before alleged harms are empirically demonstrated or even defined.

From an economic perspective, this approach treats innovation as a presumptive externality rather than a productivity-enhancing input.

AI is widely understood as a general-purpose technology. Research shows that such technologies generate broad, economy-wide productivity gains, not sector-specific benefits. Overregulating AI therefore depresses expected returns not only in software, but across healthcare, logistics, manufacturing, finance, and education.

California’s AI regulatory framework has drawn federal scrutiny, which is instructive. As noted in CalMatters, state-level AI mandates were referenced in Trump’s recent presidential executive order, citing concerns over fragmented and inconsistent state regulation. Regardless of political framing, the economic concern is straightforward: regulatory fragmentation raises fixed costs and discourages upscaling.

Regulation, Market Structure, and Incumbency

California’s regulatory posture also has implications for market structure. Extensive empirical literature shows that high fixed compliance costs reduce entry and increase concentration. The OECD’s work on regulation and competition consistently finds that heavier regulatory burdens favor large incumbents at the expense of startups and challengers.

This dynamic undermines the very competition that drives innovation. Europe’s experience with digital (over)regulation offers a cautionary parallel, acknowledged even in European Commission competitiveness reports. California risks reproducing that outcome domestically, exporting innovation to other states rather than other continents.

Costs Complete the Incentive Structure

AI regulation is best understood as the marginal constraint layered atop an already expensive environment. California has the highest top marginal income tax rate in the United States, and taxes capital gains as income. Housing scarcity, documented extensively by UC Berkeley’s Terner Center, raises labor costs without increasing real purchasing power. Energy prices remain among the nation’s highest, as shown by EIA electricity price data.

In combination, these policies alter the expected return on investment at the margin. States like Texas and Florida offer credible alternatives: no personal income tax, faster permitting, lower housing costs, and a lighter regulatory touch. 

Firms do not need ideological motivation to relocate. The incentive structure does the work.

Opportunity Costs and Distributional Effects

The economic cost of tech job relocation extends beyond headline employment figures. When tech employment relocates, these spillovers disappear as well. The distributional consequences are regressive. High-skill workers are mobile. Lower-income workers tied to local economies are much less so. Policies that suppress growth (even under the banner of equity) often hurt the poor most.

A Predictable Outcome

Unless California changes course, the trajectory is clear. AI firms will incorporate elsewhere. Venture capital will follow labor. Scaling will increasingly occur in states that treat innovation as an asset rather than a liability.

California will remain an important source of ideas. It will be a diminishing source of jobs. Markets are not ideological. They respond to incentives. On that front, the verdict is already in.

Recently on Facebook, I shared my Café Hayek post titled “Lower-Priced Goods are a Blessing, Not a Curse.” I prefaced this share with this remark: “Protectionism is the theory that 10+2=6, and 10-2=16. And protectionists proudly and tirelessly defend this theory, happy to dismiss as ‘elitists,’ ‘experts,’ or ‘globalists’ those of us who point out that 10+2=12, and that 10-2=8.”

Of course, my description of protectionism isn’t literally true. And yet it does truly capture protectionism’s essence, which is the bizarre belief that a greater abundance of goods and services made available from sources outside of a nation’s boundaries reduces the supplies of goods and services available to the people of that nation, while policies that diminish the abundance of goods and services made available from sources outside of a nation’s boundaries increase the supplies of goods and services available to the people of that nation.

Putting aside the national-security exception to the case for free trade, such an arithmetical impossibility is indeed what 90 percent of protectionism is revealed to be, when stripped of the vague and misleading language typically deployed to mask its essence. Tariffs and other protectionist interventions are sold as means of creating more and higher-paying jobs (which would, in turn, reverse the allegedly rising “cost of thriving”), of paving paths for the development of “the industries of the future,” of raising impressive amounts of tax revenue from foreigners, of making the economy more ‘competitive,’ and generally of strengthening the domestic economy, improving the living standards of ordinary citizens.

Because voters overwhelmingly like policies that promise them greater access to goods and services, protectionists understandably trumpet the alleged ability of protectionism to deliver on this economic front.

But what about the remaining 10 percent of the attempted justifications of protectionism (again, putting aside considerations of national security)? These justifications pretend to be non-materialistic and, therefore, presumably are ‘higher’ and more weighty than are ‘merely economic’ concerns. Such is the stance, for example, of Mr. Kang Chen, who offered this comment in response to my Facebook post: “No. Protectionism is the theory that there are things that matter besides the prices of goods and services.”

An easy response to a comment such as Mr. Chen’s – a response that’s accurate and appropriate despite its easiness – is to point out that the great majority of the pleas for protectionism promise improved material well-being. More jobs. Higher wages. Rising standards of living. A larger share of our tax revenues paid by foreigners. Protectionists such as Mr. Chen would be taken more seriously if the likes of Donald Trump and Elizabeth Warren campaigned for higher tariffs by explicitly announcing that “tariffs will significantly raise, now and into the future, the prices of the goods and services that you and all American households regularly purchase. Most of you, therefore, will see your real wages fall and your material standard of living worsen. But don’t worry! Your lower standard of living will be more than offset by non-material benefits.”

Protectionist politicians never say such a thing. On rare occasions, protectionists triumphantly declare that higher tariffs might reduce people’s access to cartoonishly frivolous luxuries such as “plastic baubles and trinkets,” or, as President Trump said last year, “maybe the children will have two dolls instead of thirty.” (Such declarations are meant to convince voters that the economic costs of protectionism are trivial compared to its economic benefits.) But never do protectionist politicians campaign on a platform of arranging for people to be economically poorer as a price to be paid for non-economic benefits.

No more need be said to dismiss Mr. Chen’s suggestion that protectionism, in practice, is about the sacrifice of economic well-being for higher non-economic ends. But more can – and should – be said.

What people such as Mr. Chen and others believe themselves to be doing when they insist that protectionism is about more than “the prices of goods and services” is distinguishing themselves from free traders, who are assumed to be concerned only with narrow material ends. Mr. Chen and Co. fancy themselves as standing in gallant opposition to the horde of mindlessly materialistic free-traders in order to promote ends such as job security, the family, and the character of towns and regions.

But Mr. Chen and Co. deeply misunderstand the case for free trade. It is not a case for the elevation of shallow materialism over profoundly important non-economic ends.

First, very many (most?) free traders — including myself — support free trade ultimately because it’s consistent with individual liberty, while protectionism is an offense against individual liberty. Even if free trade somehow resulted in a reduced material standard of living, I and many other free traders would still champion it because of its non-economic virtue of being consistent with freedom. It’s fair for Mr. Chen and other protectionists not to esteem individual liberty as highly as do we free traders. It’s unfair, however, and mistaken for protectionists to accuse us free traders of valuing nothing higher than material enrichment.

Second, all motives for economic action ultimately are non-monetary (that is, they’re not about accumulating money for the sake of accumulating money). Some of these motives are material in a narrow sense and, hence, might be called “materialistic”: everyone must eat and be housed and clothed. And some of these materialistic motives are indeed crass and shallow and even contemptible: Joe uses some of his monetary earnings to get drunk on Friday nights while Janet regularly feeds some of her monetary earnings into slot machines. But other of these motives are not materialistic in any narrow sense: Jane spends much of her monetary earnings on piano lessons for her grandchildren while Jerry donates a portion of his monetary earnings to a community children’s theater and uses another portion to improve his and his wife’s learning by subscribing to The Rest Is History podcast. Because free trade increases the opportunities to do all of these things, it’s erroneous to suggest that the case for free trade is a case only for narrow material or sensual gratification.

Third, nearly all of the alleged non-materialistic benefits of protectionism are, in fact, materialistic benefits.

Consider, for example, job security. Job security is valued largely because a secure job is a secure stream of income. If job security really were a non-economic goal that trumps ‘mere’ material well-being, workers who have this goal could greatly increase the security of their jobs by offering to take a significant cut in their monetary wages. Yet, tellingly, such wage-cut offers seldom occur. The case for using protectionism to increase the job security of workers in protected industries is the case for having fellow citizens other than the protected workers pay the economic cost of making the protected jobs more secure.

It’s admirable to have non-economic goals. But it’s detestable to force other people to subsidize the achievement of these goals, and hypocritical to accuse those of us who object to such subsidization of being excessively materialistic. If any group in this situation is excessively materialistic, it’s the protected workers and the protectionists who apologize for them. These protectionists never pause to ponder what non-economic goals a policy of protectionism prevents the bulk of their fellow citizens from pursuing. As a result of having to pay prices driven higher by tariffs, how much leisure does a working mom lose? How much does a family’s education budget shrink? How much health care must another family forego? By how many years does dad postpone retirement?

If protectionists are in search of people who are mindlessly and narrowly materialistic – of people who are blind to the non-economic goals that most individuals have – protectionists should look in the mirror.

Private markets work well when they are allowed to function free from big government directives. The latest example is in the world of financial data sharing, where Washington tried to dictate prices, warring industry interests warned of disaster, and the free market quietly delivered a solution on its own.

Since the passage of major financial industry reform legislation in 2010, policymakers have debated how to create a regulatory framework within which personal data portability and sharing can occur safely and securely. Unsurprisingly, the Biden Administration sought to finalize rulemaking that was supposed to put an end to some 15 years of speculation on what this framework, under Section 1033 of Dodd-Frank, would look like.

For years, banks were required to provide financial technology companies with customer data for free, with few limits on how that data could be monetized. The Biden Administration embraced that policy, finalizing a rule that required banks to share data with aggregators at no cost. It was a government-mandated price control of zero dollars, delivering a “solution” to a problem that didn’t exist.

President Trump saw the absurdity of the so-called Rule 1033 and acted swiftly to stop it. By forbidding banks from charging for access, the rule would have forced them to absorb the infrastructure, cybersecurity, and compliance costs of data sharing while allowing fintech firms — favored by the Biden Administration — to profit from the very data they received at no charge. The result would have been a system where the costs were socialized, and the profits were privatized.

After a federal court issued an injunction halting enforcement of the Biden-era rule, some claimed that government needed to put its thumb on the scale to negotiate fair compensation for access. Those arguments have already collapsed.

In recent weeks, JPMorgan Chase — the country’s largest bank — reached market-based pricing agreements with 95 percent of the data middlemen in the market. One such actor supporting greater government involvement went so far as to confirm that its updated agreement with the bank “wouldn’t affect current customer deals or pricing.” 

The success of these agreements makes one thing clear: market participants can solve complex problems through negotiation and partnership far better than regulators can through compulsion. Voluntary, market-based arrangements have succeeded where central planning failed.

As the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau prepares to issue an updated rule, it should reject the false premise that consumer privacy and innovation can only thrive under government control. Embracing a market-based framework will strengthen consumer protection and foster responsible innovation far more effectively than price mandates ever could.

The best course of action would be to eliminate the agency entirely, and transfer its powers to other areas in the federal bureaucracy. If that is not possible, there is a menu of options to reform the structure to better serve taxpayers. Over the past decade, the agency’s priorities have swung dramatically with each administration, creating instability for consumers and industry alike. Concentrating so much authority in a single director has proven unworkable. A bipartisan commission structure, like the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) or Federal Trade Commission (FTC), could restore accountability and consistency.

Congress should also bring the CFPB’s funding under the normal appropriations process, rather than letting it draw money directly from the Federal Reserve. Transparent funding would improve oversight and focus CFPB’s work on real consumer benefit instead of political goals.

Most importantly, CFPB should pursue modern oversight that protects consumers while supporting innovation. Its failure to evaluate the data security risks of mandatory data sharing under the Biden-era Rule 1033 shows the danger of heavy-handed policymaking.

President Trump’s CFPB should build a lasting legacy of practical, forward-looking regulation that respects both consumer protection and market competition. The fall of the Biden-era Rule 1033 is a reminder that the free market, when allowed to work, delivers the best results for everyone.

When the internet went mainstream at the turn of the twenty-first century, it was widely celebrated as a revolutionary force for freedom and democracy. Its decentralized architecture promised to empower individuals, expand free expression, and weaken the grip of authoritarian states. Many believed that open information flows would make censorship obsolete and repression impossible to maintain.

That optimism has not merely faded — it has been decisively overturned. The same technologies once hailed as instruments of liberation are now being repurposed as tools of surveillance, censorship, and control. What is unfolding is not a sudden collapse of digital freedom, but a slow, structural transformation of the internet itself — one that is quietly reshaping how power operates in the digital age.

Crucially, this shift is not confined to authoritarian regimes. It is increasingly spreading into liberal democracies that once saw themselves as custodians of an open and global internet.

A Global Recession of Digital Freedom

Internet freedom is deteriorating globally at an unprecedented rate. The Freedom on the Net 2025 report marks the fifteenth consecutive year of decline, representing the longest recorded recession in digital freedom. Nearly 80 percent of internet users live in countries where a social-media post could result in arrest, and two-thirds are in nations where people have been assaulted or killed for their online expression. Governments in 65 percent of assessed countries block political, social, or religious content, while more than half restrict access to major platforms altogether.

This erosion is no longer confined to the usual suspects. Even established democracies are backsliding. U.S. internet freedom fell to a record low in May 2025, dropping three points in a single year — reflecting a growing willingness among democratic governments to deploy tools once associated with authoritarian rule. 

That shift is already visible in practice. During the unrest in New Caledonia, France restricted access to TikTok; meanwhile, authorities in the United States, India, and Brazil have pressured platforms to remove political content. At the same time, Meta and X have rolled back transparency tools that once enabled researchers to track disinformation and government influence.

Two decades ago, such a trajectory would have seemed implausible. In 2000, President Bill Clinton famously mocked China’s early censorship efforts, likening them to “trying to nail Jell-O to the wall.” Yet China went on to build the Great Firewall — the most comprehensive censorship system in modern history — reshaping global assumptions about what information control could achieve. 

What once appeared to be a uniquely authoritarian experiment has since evolved into a widely adopted model of digital governance, replacing the open, participatory internet imagined in the 1990s with a controlled, increasingly surveilled digital environment shaped not by a single censor but by the combined pressures of regulation, corporate incentives, and algorithmic control.

How the West Is Quietly Adopting Authoritarian Tools

In Western democracies, digital control rarely takes the form of overt repression. It advances quietly — through regulatory creep, technical adjustments, and procedural changes that seldom provoke public alarm. Surveillance expands, encrypted spaces shrink, and the line between state authority and corporate power blurs. Control is not imposed as repression but framed as protection, administered through law, normalized by bureaucracy, and legitimized by democratic institutions.

Encrypted communication — once indispensable for journalists, activists, and dissidents — is increasingly under threat. Europe’s proposed Chat Control legislation would require scanning private messages, weakening end-to-end encryption by mandating content inspection before or after transmission. In parallel, the UK’s Online Safety Act and Australia’s identity-verification rules introduce new points of access to private communication — often justified in the language of safety or child protection.

If eroding encryption compromises private communication, mandatory digital identity systems go further by undermining anonymity itself. Proposals such as the UK’s BritCard, the EU’s Digital Identity Wallet, and similar frameworks in Australia and parts of the United States would link online activity to state-verified identities. When integrated with corporate datasets — biometric, location, financial, and browsing data — these systems enable continuous monitoring without requiring explicit surveillance orders.

Much of this infrastructure is now supplied by private firms rather than built by the state. Companies such as Palantir have become central actors, providing data-fusion platforms to intelligence agencies, police forces, militaries, and immigration authorities across multiple (otherwise) democratic states. What began as narrowly framed security tools has evolved into systems that aggregate vast troves of personal data and deploy predictive analytics at scale — raising profound concerns about bias, accountability, and oversight, even in societies long committed to strong privacy protections.

Together, these tools are beginning to form an integrated surveillance system. Digital identity systems, predictive algorithms, and surveillance technologies increasingly reinforce one another, creating a state–corporate surveillance architecture that — though softer and more bureaucratic — mirrors key features of digital authoritarianism. Platforms police users to meet regulatory demands, while governments rely on private firms to enforce political priorities. Control expands not through overt repression but through routine administrative processes that quietly shrink the space for individual freedom.

Pavel Durov’s warning is therefore not an exaggeration. Digital liberty is not taken away all at once. It erodes through the accumulation of quiet legislation, routine deployments, and the gradual weakening of institutional safeguards, which slowly remake the internet into something it was never meant to be. If freedom is to endure, it must remain the starting point of governance — not its exception.

Otherwise, Durov’s warning may be remembered not as a call to action, but as a record of freedoms already gone.

The US seizure of Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro is being framed publicly as a counternarcotics and democracy-restoration operation. But it is oil — not cocaine or fentanyl — that sits at the center of events. Venezuela’s vast reserves, its role in gray and black energy markets, and its position within a broader geopolitical contest over oil supply explain far more about the timing and scope of the intervention than narcotics enforcement ever could.

Venezuela is no longer the oil superpower it once was. Production has collapsed from more than three million barrels per day in the late 1990s to under one million today, placing the country outside the top tier of global producers. Still, oil remains the backbone of the Venezuelan economy, accounting for roughly 95 percent of export revenue. In a world where energy markets are increasingly shaped by sanctions, supply fragmentation, and political risk, even marginal barrels matter — especially when they are sold at a discount and routed outside formal channels.

In recent years, Venezuelan oil has flowed largely into opaque markets, particularly to China, often via intermediaries and “ghost ships” that mask origins to evade sanctions. These barrels are not priced at global benchmarks; they are sold cheaply, quietly, and strategically. The result is not simply lost revenue for Caracas, but distorted price signals across the global oil market. Interventions disrupt price discovery. Sanctions do not eliminate supply — they reroute it into less-transparent channels, where prices convey less information and capital allocation becomes more politicized.

The US blockade and seizure of sanctioned tankers and the disruption of naphtha imports, critical for transporting Venezuela’s heavy crude, had already begun constraining production even before the military operation. Storage tanks filled, wells were shut, and exports stalled. Yet global oil prices barely moved. That muted response reflects a market already awash with supply and conditioned to treat Venezuelan output as unreliable. Oil markets have learned to discount politically fragile production, which means that sudden interventions often have less immediate price impact than policymakers expect.

The longer-term implications, however, are more significant. A successful political transition followed by large-scale foreign investment could eventually bring Venezuelan production back toward its pre-collapse levels — perhaps to 2.5 million barrels per day over several years. That would represent a meaningful supply shock, potentially lowering global oil prices by several percentage points over time. Such an outcome would benefit refiners, particularly in the US, that are configured for heavy crude, while putting downward pressure on higher-cost producers elsewhere.

But that optimistic scenario rests on fragile assumptions. Oil production is not simply a matter of drilling holes; it requires institutional stability, secure property rights, skilled labor, functioning infrastructure, and credible contracts. Venezuela’s oil collapse was not caused by geology, but by decades of state control, politicized management, expropriation, and capital flight. Reversing that damage will take time and discipline.

There is also a broader pattern worth noting. Within a single week, the United States has been exerting escalating pressure on three oil-producing nations across three continents: Venezuela, Iran, and Nigeria. Whatever the specific justifications in each case, the pattern suggests a strategic shift. A decade ago, Donald J. Trump rose to prominence as an anti-interventionist critic of foreign entanglements. Today, the US is asserting itself as an active enforcer of energy order, using sanctions, seizures, and force to reshape supply flows.

Among other reasons, it matters because energy markets thrive on decentralized discovery and suffer under centralized control. When oil becomes an explicit instrument of geopolitical maneuvers, prices reflect power as much as scarcity. Capital flows follow political signals rather than entrepreneurial ones. The result is not necessarily higher prices, but noisier ones: prices that convey less reliable information about underlying supply and demand.

Discounted oil sold into black markets sustains regimes, finances patronage networks, and reshapes global trade patterns. Controlling that flow is economically consequential in a way that narcotics interdiction rarely is. Whether the US intervention ultimately stabilizes Venezuela or entrenches a prolonged foreign presence, its lasting impact will be felt less in Caracas politics than in the structure — and credibility — of global oil markets.

W.E.B. Du Bois was born in Great Barrington, Massachusetts (where AIER is now headquartered), in 1868. Today, this towering figure of the early civil rights movement is remembered as a groundbreaking sociologist, Pan-African socialist, and near-mythical hero to the intellectual left.

“He’s a reformist,” philosopher Cornel West told a classroom of Dartmouth students in a 2017 lecture on Du Bois’ long path to becoming a revolutionary. “But he’s a radical reformist, no doubt.”

But there was once a W.E.B. Du Bois who was radical mainly in the scientific sense. Before drifting into the study of history and sociology, he was an economics student at Harvard. The marginal revolution had just remade the dismal science into a more mathematical and literally “edgy” subject. And Du Bois made original contributions that leveraged insights from the free-market Austrian school and anticipated later developments in neoclassical economic thought, as Daniel Kuehn explains in a recent paper published in the Journal of Economic Perspectives.

Similarly, the young Du Bois’ recommendations for black racial uplift bore surprising similarities to the modern-day conservative economist Thomas Sowell. What caused his later radicalization? It was arguably a tragedy of racism.

Du Bois’ maternal great-great-grandfather was born in Africa and enslaved in America. But in the late 1700s he gained his freedom, possibly by fighting in the American Revolution. By the time Du Bois was born in Great Barrington, the town had a small but largely integrated black population. Du Bois’ mother (his father had abandoned the family when Du Bois was a toddler) owned land, and he learned and played at the public school alongside white kids. In 1888, having already studied at historically black Fisk University, he became only the sixth African American student to matriculate at Harvard.

Studying under Frank Taussig, Du Bois wrote a 158-page essay titled A Constructive Critique of Wage Theory. It included a thorough review of Carl Menger, one of the drivers of the marginal revolution, and his insight that the market value of goods and services does not depend on the value of inputs, but rather the value that consumers place on the most recent, or marginal, unit of output.

In his essay, Du Bois built on such work and rigorously demonstrated what Kuehn terms “a statement of wages as equal to the marginal revenue product… Du Bois identifies this need to think in terms of what would ultimately be called the marginal revenue product of labor.”

Kuehn goes on to note that Du Bois provides “one of the earliest acknowledgements that a labor-leisure trade-off determines individual labor supply in the marginalist framework.”

A year later, Du Bois left Harvard for two years of study at what is today the Humboldt University of Berlin. There he was exposed to a more historical approach to economics under scholars such as Adolph Wagner. Du Bois’ interests evolved, and when he returned to Harvard to finish a PhD (the first PhD Harvard would award to an African American), it was in history.

In his autobiography published in 1968, Du Bois would look back and characterize the economics he studied under Taussig as “reactionary” and “dying.” But as a newly minted PhD, Du Bois still had a long way to go to reach that point. His early works such as The Study of the Negro Problems (1898), The Philadelphia Negro (1899), and The Negro in Business (1899, which he edited), mention family cohesion, productive skills acquisition, and entrepreneurship as keys to black uplift. The required precursor, he believed, was ending racial discrimination.

But having taken a position at Atlanta University in Georgia, Du Bois was immersed in the South’s era of Jim Crow segregation. It was a time when a black man accused of a heinous crime against whites could find himself facing, rather than a court of law, mob action determined to surpass in barbarity the alleged underlying crime. Sam Hose was such a man, alleged to have murdered his white employer in 1899. A mob kidnapped him from a jail in Newnan, Georgia, dismembered him and burned him alive. Another black man was shot to death for “talking too much” about the attack on Hose.

Du Bois later reported in his autobiography that on his way to meet an Atlanta newspaper editor to discuss the lynching, he learned the burnt knuckles of Hose’s hand were on display in a nearby store window. He said the experience “broke in upon my work and eventually disrupted it…one could not be a calm, cool, and detached scientist while Negroes were lynched.”

Was this the final disappearance of the W.E.B. Du Bois who had once made those economic breakthroughs at Harvard? Subsequent years saw him drift to the left. In 1910, Du Bois joined the Socialist Party of America. In 1926, he visited the new Soviet Union, which he saw as a beacon of hope for racial equality. In 1961, he joined the Communist Party USA. By this time, he seemed to believe that, rather than having potential for black uplift, capitalism was an obstacle to it.

The suffering of The Great Depression likely played a role in his views, as it did for some others. But one wonders how much Du Bois’ embrace of socialism had to do with the simple fact that, for all their proven faults, such regimes tend not to be concerned with skin color. They oppress all races the same. 

We live in a time when many young people have a similarly friendly view of socialism. They see the historic wealth produced by free markets not as a path to their dreams but an obstacle to them. And like the evolution of Du Bois’ economic thought, it’s a tragedy.