Many debates on economic topics hinge on a set of familiar words: production, prices, costs, value. These terms appear constantly in political speeches, news articles, and policy discussions. Yet they are rarely used with much precision (at least where academic economists are concerned). As a result, people often talk past one another while believing they are in agreement — or disagreement — about the same thing.
Confusing colloquial meanings with technical definitions can lead to deeply flawed conclusions about how markets work and what governments can realistically accomplish. When it is asserted, for example, that governments “produce” value or that sellers “set” prices, these statements seem plausible, but precisely because the words involved are doing too much work. Clarifying what economists actually mean by these terms goes a long way toward dissolving common economic myths.
Two simple examples — one involving production and the other involving prices — illustrate how careless language leads to poor economic reasoning and, ultimately, misguided policy.
Colloquial Language Versus Economic Concepts
Many words carry different meanings depending on context, and often this causes no issue.
Economist Walter Block illustrates this with the word work. If you hold two heavy jugs of milk with your arms extended, we would say you are doing a great deal of work. In physics, however, no work is being done unless an object moves through space. This discrepancy seldom causes confusion because most people understand that different disciplines use words differently. Economics appears to be more susceptible to confusion, with many making claims about how the economy works while actually relying on, at best, loose metaphors.
This is especially true when discussing production.
When Production Isn’t Production
Suppose that after a rainstorm, you make a literal mud pie. You have produced something in the everyday sense of the word: a tangible object that did not previously exist. But have you engaged in production in the economic sense?
Economic production is not solely defined by effort, creativity, or physical output. It requires the creation of value as demonstrated through voluntary exchange. If no one is willing to purchase your mud pie, then no economic production has taken place. What you engaged in instead was a form of consumption — you enjoyed the activity for its own sake. Either that, or it was merely a failed attempt at production. Any value created was internal to your experience, not reflected in the allocation of scarce resources across society.
This distinction becomes far more important when we move beyond childish examples. Governments are routinely described as producers of goods and services, including roads, schools, healthcare, and national defense. In a colloquial sense, this is understandable. Physical infrastructure is built, employees are hired, and services are rendered.
Economically speaking, however, production cannot be separated from profit and loss accounting. Market production requires prices for inputs and outputs that emerge from voluntary exchange. These prices enable producers to assess whether they are utilizing resources in ways that consumers value more highly than alternative uses.
Government activity is funded through taxation, not voluntary exchange. This means that tax revenue does not accurately reflect the demand for specific services by consumers. Instead, it merely reflects the government’s power to compel payment. Since the state, then, sets its own revenue amount through taxation, it lacks genuine market prices for many of its inputs and outputs. Accordingly, it cannot calculate profit and loss in any economically meaningful sense.
Without profit-and-loss feedback, there is no way to know whether a project creates value or destroys it. From an economic perspective, government provision is therefore better understood as consumption by state agents rather than production — regardless of the intentions behind it or the visible outputs it generates.
When Prices Aren’t Prices
The same linguistic confusion arises with prices. Let us return to the mud pie. Suppose you list it online for $1 million. No one buys it. What is its price?
The answer is not one million dollars. In fact, the mud pie has no price at all.
A price, in the economic sense, exists only when an exchange takes place. Until then, what we observe are merely offers. The sticker price on a shelf is not yet a price; it is a proposal that buyers are free to accept or reject. If no transaction occurs, no price has emerged.
This distinction matters because it undermines the common belief that sellers determine prices. Sellers can propose prices, sure, but they cannot unilaterally create them. If consumers refuse to purchase a good at a given price, sellers must either lower the price, alter the product, or leave the market altogether.
This also helps clarify the relationship between prices and costs. While production costs may influence the prices sellers hope to receive, they do not determine market prices. Prices are governed by consumers’ subjective valuations — by how much value buyers believe they can derive from a good relative to other options.
This is why cost-of-production theories of price fail to explain real-world markets. They ignore the central role of consumer judgment and treat prices as if they were deliberately determined, rather than emerging from exchange.
Why Precision Matters
Confusing offers with prices leads to the mistaken belief that firms exploit consumers by arbitrarily raising prices. Confusing government spending with production leads to the belief that public projects can be evaluated independently of market feedback. In both cases, the underlying error is conceptual rather than empirical.
Economic reasoning depends on disciplined language. When we use economic terms loosely, we smuggle in assumptions that the theory itself does not support. The result is not merely academic confusion but policy proposals built on faulty foundations.
If we want better economic debates — and better economic policies — we must begin by taking economic concepts seriously. Without such precision, sound analysis is impossible.
Commercial nuclear fission dates from the 1950s, a time when electricity was generated by fossil fuels (80 percent) and hydro (20 percent). Today, nuclear supplies 19 percent of US generation and 10 percent globally. Nuclear fusion remains in the laboratory with little prospect of foreseeable commercialization.
Nuclear power is a government-enabled industry. It emerged from wartime R&D and continued under the postwar “Atoms for Peace” subsidy programs. The Price–Anderson Act of 1957, which capped liability payouts from nuclear accidents, was instrumental.
Rate-base treatment under state-level public utility regulation was a de facto insurance policy for utilities to commit to experimental technology. A “bandwagon effect” occurred after Westinghouse and General Electric offered performance (“turnkey”) guarantees for new reactors, but losses ended the program and transferred risk to owners and ratepayers.
Government subsidies incited multiple technical designs and plant-size escalation in the 1960s, all contributing to cost and construction failures in the next decade.
Activist regulation by the Atomic Energy Commission/Nuclear Regulatory Commission contributed to cost overruns and completion delays. Extensions of the Price-Anderson Act (1966, 1975, 1988, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2024) have kept federal regulators in charge.
Orders for new reactors ended in 1979, the year of the Three Mile Island accident. In response, nuclear utilities engaged in collaborative best practices that have proven effective for safety and reliability.
New subsidies in the Energy Policy Act of 2005 resulted in four new reactors. Two were abandoned during construction, and two entered service after multiple delays and major cost overruns (2023, 2024).
New subsidies in the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 were designed to keep existing units in operation and encourage new-generation Small Modular Reactors (SMRs). The Trump administration is expanding this Biden administration program with grants, guarantees, and executive orders.
The quest for competitive commercial nuclear power has been long on promises and short on performance. Technological complexity and government policies have resulted in the worst of all worlds, with today’s situation not unlike that of the 1950s.
A free-market approach to nuclear policy would entail the following: Ending governmental research and development in the field. Abolishing public grants and tax preferences for the industry. Halting foreign-loan guarantees. Repealing the Price-Anderson Act in order to privatize safety and insurance regulation. Lifting all antitrust constraints on industry collaboration. Making waste storage the responsibility of waste owners. Removing the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and the US Department of Energy from civilian nuclear policy.
Introduction
“With nuclear power, hardly anything is as it seems.” – Marco Visscher, The Power of Nuclear (2024), p. 248
Commercial nuclear power has been praised as limitless, dependable, ultra-safe, emission-free, scalable, long-lived, and the fuel of the future. Once built, nuclear fission plants have relatively low operating costs compared to fossil-fuel generation. In today’s complicated energy mix, nuclear “is a reliable, high-capacity, high load mode of electricity generation, which makes it an ideal complement to various renewable conversion modes that still have mostly low-capacity, moderate-load, and unpredictably intermittent operations.”[1]
The operational physics of nuclear power represent, to many, “one of mankind’s greatest intellectual achievements … awesome, beautiful, elemental, and elegant; it gets down to the very roots of the universe.”[2]
Politically, federal support for nuclear under the Biden Administration has been significantly enlarged by the Trump Administration to date. Loan guarantees, direct investment, and executive orders are the order of the day.
But is nuclear competitive in a world of scarce resources versus competing ends? Splitting atoms to steam water to spin the turbines is a major undertaking, fraught with danger. Containing and controlling fission safely and reliably necessitates “the perfect machine,”[3] composed of complex, redundant infrastructure with long construction schedules. Financial economics is complicated by post-completion sales of price-undetermined electricity. Consequently, from the industry’s inception, special government favor and protection has been necessary for new reactors to compete against other forms of thermal generation.
Federal safety standards have resulted in costly overdesign. Regulators have been conservative and cautious, perhaps for ideological reasons. But given the liability limits of a nuclear accident imposed by the Price-Anderson Act of 1957, extended seven times to date, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), an independent agency, got to set the standards. This predicament invites consideration of free-market alternatives in place of federal rulebooks.
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In a free market, government would be neutral toward commercial nuclear power, as with other energies. Research and development would be private, grants and tax preferences absent. Insurance and safety would be determined under market conditions, not government incentives. Nuclear waste would also be privately managed without taxpayer support.
The institution of political capitalism (as opposed to free-market capitalism) has allowed government to become the dominant actor in this energy sector. Government-in-play allows special interests to gain control over the (less represented) majority of consumers and taxpayers. Concentrated benefits and diffused costs encourage government to favor those who lobby. Nuclear interests were there first.
What would a free-market nuclear industry look like in the US? For the 94 existing reactors (versus a peak of 112 in 1990), with capital costs sunk, operations would continue so long as marginal revenue exceeded marginal costs. With the average reactor being 40 years old and running well, most plants could continue running for decades.
The challenge is for new capacity given high up-front costs and long construction times. Simple economics favors new capacity powered by natural gas, oil, or coal in free-market settings. The future of the nuclear industry depends on government subsidies in the US (and elsewhere), and on the wherewithal of nationally planned economies, where most new reactors are being constructed abroad.
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There is significant support for new-generation atomic energy. Technological optimism abounds, with a call for less regulation for more competitiveness. Two recent books make this case.
In Nuclear Revolution: Powering the Next Generation (2024), Jack Spencer of the conservative Heritage Foundation calls for a “policy revolution” to unleash the potential of an energy source hitherto hampered by regulators and activists.[4] “The debate over the integrity of nuclear energy is over,” he declares. “Experience demonstrates that it produces good jobs, clean energy, and dependable power.”[5]
Robert Zubrin’s The Case for Nukes (2023), subtitled “How We Can Beat Global Warming and Create a Free, Open, and Magnificent Future,” is endorsed by notables such as Michael Shellenberger (Environmental Progress), Marian Tupy (Human Progress), and Alex Epstein (Center for Industrial Progress). “Nuclear power can provide the energy for an unlimited and magnificent human future,” Zubrin states. “But the technological revolution it offers has thus far been strangled by political constraints, mismanagement, poor decisions, and outright sabotage.”[6]
James Hansen, father of the climate alarm, endorses nuclear power as the only viable large-scale alternative to fossil fuels.[7] Microsoft-founder and Terrapower founder Bill Gates provides a “one-sentence case” for nuclear fission: “It’s the only carbon-free energy source that can reliably deliver power day and night, through every season, almost anywhere on earth, that has been proven to work on a large scale.”[8]
Political support springs eternal. “The case for nuclear power is a compelling one, not only for its environmental benefits, but also for economic, nonproliferation, and energy security perspectives that support our national and international goals,” Pietro “Pete” Domenici (US Senator, R-NM) wrote two decades ago.[9]
Most recently, a $900 million DOE loan program came with a call from Secretary of Energy Chris Wright of the Trump Administration:
America’s nuclear energy renaissance starts now. Abundant and affordable energy is key to our nation’s economic prosperity and security. This solicitation is a call to action for early movers seeking to put more energy on the grid through the deployment of advanced light-water small modular reactors.
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Left environmentalists have traditionally opposed nuclear reliance, beginning with safety concerns and continuing with economics. “What technology has the potential for wiping out cities and contaminating states after an accident, a natural calamity, or a successful sabotage?” asked Ralph Nader and John Abbotts in the 1970s.[10] “Nuclear power is in many ways this country’s ‘technological Vietnam’,” they added.[11] The forgone opportunity was “simple thrift” (conservation) or “the deployment of renewable energy supplies.”[12]
“Happy talk” about a “nuclear renaissance” defies experience, concluded M. V. Ramana, a professor of disarmament at the University of British Columbia. And it detracts from the mother problem, the limits to nature. “Pushing the nuclear agenda allows maintaining the false idea that the current pattern of development can continue indefinitely with no limits,” he concludes, “while climate change is solved by using one more technology from the same toolbox responsible for the problem in the first place.”[13]
Al Gore’s Marshall Plan to save the earth from global warming was dismissive of the largest emission-free resource. Perceiving “a great danger in seeing technology alone as the answer to the environmental crisis,” Gore demoted current nuclear designs as “a technological dead end.” Nuclear, consequently, was not “the key to solving global warming.”[14]
Wind and solar, with battery backup, can forestall new nuclear capacity more quickly and at less cost, many advocates contend. Energy engineer and Stanford professor Mark Z. Jacobson dismisses nuclear as pollutive in its (long) planning-to-operation phase, with resources better spent on “100 percent WWS [wind, water, and solar] across all energy sectors” to meet aggressive climate goals.[15]
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Countless books have described the business and political economy of commercial nuclear energy, many sharply for or against. There is general recognition that its problematic past was due to government over-inciting the technology, followed by a regulatory ratchet that created an over-engineered, overpriced nuclear fleet. This worst-of-all-worlds prompts the question of what would have resulted from a let the market decide approach during the last seventy years.
I. Historical Review
Industry Launch: Subsidies, Over-entry
During wartime, nuclear power was strictly a military operation of the U.S. government. Come peacetime, the Atomic Energy Act of 1946 created the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) to control the technology, as well as the Congressional Joint Committee on Atomic Energy (Joint Committee) to oversee and fund it. Private development was not allowed, but between 1947 and 1954, $8 billion flowed toward prototypes with civilian electricity in mind.[16]
In its 1948 report to Congress, the AEC stated that though nuclear operational costs might be lower, “the cost of [constructing] a nuclear-fuel power plant will be substantially greater than that of a coal-burning plant of similar capacity.”[17] In the estimation of Arjun Makhijani and Scott Saleska:
There was no scientific or engineering foundation for the claims made in the 1940s and 1950s that nuclear power would be so cheap that it would lead the way to a world of unprecedented material abundance. On the contrary, official studies of the time were pessimistic about the economic viability of nuclear power, in stark contrast to many official public statements.[18]
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President Eisenhower’s Atoms for Peace speech in 1953 signaled the high expectations and federal priority for commercial nuclear power, which were formalized in the Atomic Energy Act of 1954. In addition to “making the maximum contribution to the common defense and security,” this law demanded “the development, use, and control of atomic energy … to promote world peace, improve the general welfare, increase the standard of living, and strengthen free competition in private enterprises.”[19]
Privatization was one thing, commercialization another. But forces were gathering that would ensure government intervention would create the latter.
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Why push nuclear power beyond its military niche so quickly? Foremost, there was a heady confidence that a new era of energy abundance from US-led technology would result in a host of societal benefits. Scientists and engineers said so, and small experiments on the military side for ships and submarines proved the concept, cost aside.[20] The march of science would overcome obstacles, it was reasoned.
Unlocking the atom in peacetime was internationally prestigious for the country that started it all in wartime, and many Americans thought the peaceful use of atomic power might somewhat atone for its horrific wartime origin.[21]Plus, if not the US, who? Both allies, such as the United Kingdom, and adversaries, such as the Soviet Union, were racing ahead on the civilian front as well.
There was concern that fossil fuels, responsible for four-fifths of power generation at the time, were finite—with an end to come, even as soon as the 1970s.[22] On the demand side, electricity providers saw demand potentially doubling every decade. Utilities wanted this space and feared a federal or municipal takeover (“a TVA for nuclear energy”).[23]
Uranium was abundant and energy dense, which made it ideal for tackling the problems of the future, such as air pollution, a growing public concern that atomic energy could neutralize. (Passage of the Clean Air Act of 1970 to federalize the issue was just ahead.)
“Transmutation of the elements, — unlimited power, ability to investigate the working of living cells by tracer atoms, the secret of photosynthesis about to be uncovered … in 15 short years,” the chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission, Lewis Strauss, exulted in 1954. “It is not too much to expect that our children will enjoy in their homes electrical energy too cheap to meter.”
In a 1962 report to President Kennedy, the AEC stated:
While the Commission has been proceeding on a considered course in general accord with its 10-year civilian power program adopted in 1958, that program is now on the threshold of attaining its primary objective of competitive nuclear power in high-fuel-cost areas by 1968.[24]
A continued, enlarged government push promised competitive nuclear power
as a means of exploiting a large, new energy resource; as an economic advantage, especially to areas where fossil fuel costs are high; as an important contributor to new industrial technology and to our technological world leadership; as a significant positive element in our foreign trade, and, potentially, as a contributor to the nation’s defenses. Its potential benefits will actually be realized, however, only if it can be made economically attractive.[25]
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Bullish talk from government and the nascent industry was not enough for utilities, municipalities, and the three federal power marketing agencies: the Tennessee Valley Authority (established 1933), the Bonneville Power Administration (established 1937), and the Southeastern Power Administration (established 1950). The cost and scale of a reactor was unknown, and safety and liability issues were paramount. Nuclear fission came with the fear of accidental radioactive contamination, a flash point with the public.
“By 1955, five utilities had announced plans to build nuclear electric plants, but none had acted,” noted conservative journalist William Tucker.[26] Democrats wanted government construction; Republicans looked to subsidies.
Both approaches — government construction and subsidies — were underway. In 1954, the AEC financed what became the 60-MW Shippingport project by Westinghouse Electric Corporation for Duquesne Light Company, which went critical in late 1957. Far from helping the cause, the cost overrun (50 percent) and high cost ($72.5 million, about $850 million in 2025 dollars) “left the utilities as uninterested in nuclear power during the late 1950s as they were a decade before.”[27]
Private financing for Shippingport fell short. By 1959, AEC expenditures of $586 million compared to $82 million from industry.[28]
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Liability protection for explosions or accidental discharges was under debate. Still, the “capital and operating costs of nuclear power were sure to be much higher than those of fossil-fuel plants, at least in the early stages of development, and the prospects of realizing short-term profits from atomic stations were dim.”[29] The Joint Committee told AEC to stoke private development or face federalization.
With the “industry [having] indicated little immediate interest in reactor development under the terms of the 1954 act,” the AEC created the Power Demonstration Reactor Program in early 1956 for special inducements. Government R&D was offered gratis or at fixed cost, and a seven-year waiver was available for enriched uranium, which the government solely owned.”[30]
Between 1955 and the end of the program in 1963, four major projects were developed. Industry consortiums (Power Reactor Development Company, Atomic Power Development Associates) chose a best way forward, although the AEC encouraged multiple designs, such as a highly problematic attempt by Detroit Edison for a fast-breeder reactor.[31]
Liability Limits: Price-Anderson Act of 1957
In 1956, Congress’s Joint Committee on Atomic Energy asked the AEC to assess the potential damage from a major nuclear accident. The following year, the Brookhaven Report, titled “Theoretical Possibilities and Consequences of Major Accidents in Large Nuclear Power Plants,” estimated that a 200 megawatt (MW) plant located thirty miles from a city could result in several thousand deaths, ten times more injuries, $7 billion in property damage, and 150,000 square miles of contamination. Companies and insurers were taken aback by this conclusion.
The nuclear radiation panic reached the public. Edward B. Lewis’s article in Science, “Leukemia and Ionizing Radiation” (1957), cautioned against background radiation, leaving the prospect of reactor releases disconcerting. Television appearances and other publicity for Lewis (a future Nobel Prize-winner in physiology) were a black eye for the “sponsor, participant, regulator, guardian and mediator,” the AEC.[32] This was despite reasonable scientific evidence that radiation fears were overblown, which later proved to be the case.[33]
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The elephant in the room for reactor development was the possibility of an accident. Nuclear technology was experimental. There was no data for insurance companies to set terms and conditions. Safety mishaps had occurred. “Everyone involved in the atomic-power program in the mid-1950s accepted the fact that atomic technology posed significant potential danger.”[34] A liability limit was necessary for reactor supply and demand to emerge.
Other generation options were cheaper. Coal was abundant, and natural gas was on the ascent with proven turbine technology and a maturing interstate gas transmission system. “Between 1963 and 1975,” reported one scientifically trained journalist:
gas turbine power plant capacity in the US increased by a factor of 70. Many of these turbines were essentially jet engines (aka “aeroderivative” turbines) redesigned to generate electric power.
The dash-to-gas, which nuclear orders also held back, was interrupted by federal wellhead price controls that put coal back into the driver’s seat by the late 1960s.
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Two years of intense negotiations began between government bodies and industry parties, including the US Chamber of Commerce, Association of Insurance Counsel, American Bar Association, and Federal Bar Association. Testimony before Congress established the fact that private insurance indemnification was far short of the destruction an accident could hypothetically produce.[35]
The head of Consolidated Edison Company of New York asked, “why not have the risk shared by all the people through the Federal Government,” since atomic energy was “in the interest of all of the people.”[36] Precedent existed with federal insurance for crops, floods, and banks, supportive parties argued.[37]
Rather than pause the process to let things sort out, with multiple designs shrinking to a few or even one (AEC’s “decentralization” approach invited many[38]), and let risk assessment improve with better information—a free market approach—the federal government would fill the gap. The infant industry was providing, in effect, a public good, said the political majority.
A charter member of Congress’s Joint Committee, and ultimately its chairman, Congressman Chet Holifield (D-CA), was critical of the commercialization rush. He noted the irony in 1955 hearings that:
…all these industrial groups which beat tom-toms and put articles in national magazines and built up a great propaganda drive that now is the time for private industry to come in and do a job, are suddenly becoming a little coy. They don’t want to plunge in, they are putting their big toe in the water and say it is a little cold, will the Government give us a little incentive?[39]
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The Nuclear Industries Indemnity Act of 1957 (Price-Anderson Act), “to protect the public and to encourage the development of the atomic energy industry,” authorized federal funding “for a portion of the damages suffered by the public from nuclear incidents, and may limit the liability of those persons liable for such losses.”[40] Licensees were required to obtain “available” private insurance, past which the federal government would be liable for as much as $500 million per accident. Firms were assigned an “indemnification fee” of $30 per megawatt per year for the government insurance.
With an antitrust exemption, insurance syndicates (three were formed) agreed to pay up to $60 million per accident, past which the Treasury would pay. The deal, vetted among the industry parties, was enough to remove a major barrier to nuclear commercialization.
With a liability cap estimated at one-fourteenth of the potential total cost of an accident, the taxpayer was put into play, and tort risk was otherwise placed on potential victims. “Nuclear exclusion” clauses in homeowner insurance policies from radiation damage were indicative of this.[41]
Critics wondered if the new law would lessen incentive for safety and cautionary siting.[42] Both industry and government were optimistic, however, that experience and the march of science would solve any problems.
Price-Anderson was scheduled to expire in ten years. No payouts occurred, but the private sector was not ready to stand on its own. The involved parties lobbied for $100 million per accident, which became $74 million in a 10-year extension in 1966 (about $750 million today), a small increase in real terms.[43]
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Behind the scenes, an updated AEC major-accident report, not released to the public, estimated worst-case deaths and damage at a multiple of that of a decade before.[44] This made the AEC part of the problem as promoter-regulator. Yet it was time to release “largely invisible, intangible, and undramatic” safety guidelines, and time was short.[45]
Construction Boom: 1963–1972
“The Price-Anderson Act opened the nuclear floodgates.”[46] With the insurance barrier removed, nuclear investment, while not the low-cost option, became attractive to utilities for another governmental reason.
Under state-level public-utility regulation, allowable profit was determined by a rate of return multiplied by capital investment based on original depreciated cost. The rate base would shrink (depreciate) over time. Utilities, while reimbursed dollar-for-dollar for “reasonable” costs, needed more rate base for steady or higher profit. Capital costs for a reactor were 50 percent higher than for a coal plant of the same capacity, if not more.[47]
State commissions could disallow “imprudent” costs of approved projects in rate hearings. Cost overruns were common in AEC projects. Hesitation by utilities remained despite the bullish presentations from General Electric, Westinghouse, and newer entrants that costs would diminish from learning-by-doing and scale economies to become competitive with oil, gas, or coal-fired generation.
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In 1961, the AEC reported that ten nuclear plants (mostly small) were complete and twice as many projects had permits to build.[48] But foreign developments seemed more robust, leaving nuclear as “a standby resource for the American economy, but one that could be perfected through experience gained abroad.”[49] A breakthrough was needed. General Electric, with only three orders through 1962, would provide that.[50]
In late 1963, Jersey Central Power and Light Company signed a fixed-priced turnkey contract with General Electric for a 515 MW reactor for “an astonishingly low price” of $66 million.[51] Construction began a year later, and the plant entered service in 1969 under a 40-year license from the AEC.
Jersey Central claimed parity with a fossil-fueled plant, which President Lyndon Johnson hailed as an “economic breakthrough.”[52] The head of the Oak Ridge National Laboratory announced a “Nuclear Energy Revolution” based on “the permanent and ubiquitous availability of cheap nuclear power.”[53]
Westinghouse matched GE’s terms for its own version of the light-water reactor.[54] Both companies, in fact, were taking the risk—and together would suffer losses as high as $1 billion, nearly half of the total plant cost, in their drive to capture the market and learn-by-doing.[55]
In 1966, cost-plus contracts replaced the unprofitable “de facto demonstration plants.” Still, the promotion “laid the psychological groundwork for … the ‘great bandwagon market’ of 1966–67.”[56] Seven reactor orders in 1965 were eclipsed by 21 in 1966 and 27 the next year.[57] Optimism ruled. The new industry was driven by subsidies and rate-base economics. Foreign orders came too, with federal financing through the Export-Import Bank.
Proven, improving new-generation technology, after all, would meet power demand growth of 7 percent per annum—and without smoke. The Northeast power blackout in 1965, affecting 30 million, the worst ever to date, created a safety issue of its own. Supportive state and federal authorities, as well as Big Science, blessed the utilities’ rush to lock in the future.
“Nuclear enthusiasts perceive[d] the technology as the obvious next step in an energy heritage that has already progressed through wood, coal, and oil/natural gas.”[58] AEC predicted a thousand reactors operating in the United States by year 2000. General Electric as late as 1974 expected a commercialized breeder reactor by 1982, the end of fossil fuels in power generation by 1990, and a virtual takeover by breeder reactors by the turn of the century.[59] But a report in 1969 by the highly respected Philip Sporn (retired president of a large utility, American Electric Power) estimated nuclear costs at double that of coal, which came in a year when new reactor orders began to drop off.[60] Existing utility heads would not speculate against what was seen as more upside, not downside.
Business Abroad: EXIM Financing
The government-enabled boom had another dimension. US nuclear developers were busy abroad, helped by the US Export-Import Bank (EXIM), a New Deal–financing agency. With its first commitment in 1959 (to Italy), EXIM’s nuclear portfolio would become its largest segment.
Domestic job creation was the traditional rationale for this agency, as well as the Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC, founded in 1971). Other nations were similarly promoting their technologies, including nuclear power in the 1970s, such as Canada, France, and Germany. A third proffered reason came after the Arab Embargo in 1973: lowering global oil demand to reduce prices.[61] Countries inundated EXIM with requests to help finance nuclear plants to displace oil in power generation.
“None of the nuclear power plants sold [abroad] since 1967 would have been ordered without Exim loans,” the Government Accounting Office opined in 1973.[62] By first quarter 1976, EXIM’s cumulative commitments (loans and guarantees) neared 100 for $5.2 billion with an outstanding exposure of $4.2 billion. Recently inked deals in the Philippines, Yugoslavia, Taiwan, Spain, and Korea were expected to be joined by several billion dollars of commitments in the coming years.[63]
The lending boom ended quickly, mirroring the domestic market. “All told, there does not appear to be an example of EXIM providing financing in support of a US reactor to a new country since the 1970s.”[64]
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Domestic reactors were typically financed for 20 to 25 years with institutional investors, backed by the credit of the utility, itself protected by the regulatory compact of state commissions. Foreign projects were different. Bank loans of five years were not suited for commercial reactors, which could take up to seven years to build, with payouts often stretching another 10 to 15 years.
EXIM loans of 15 to 20 years could be double the term of the agency’s more usual 8-to-12-year loans.[65] A major subsidy of this program was postponing repayment until the reactor was operational, a grace period that could be as much as ten years.[66]
Retreat and Adjustment: 1973–Present
The nuclear boom was rudely reversed in the 1970s, with cancellations and completions revealing “almost certainly the costliest technical miscalculation of the twentieth century.”[67] Utility financing began to tighten in the late 1960s due to higher inflation (nearly 6 percent) and regulatory lag (the time between expenditure and reimbursement).[68] With the first cancellation in 1972, one hundred orders would be terminated in the next decade, representing nearly 100 gigawatts (GW) of planned capacity.[69] With the last order executed in 1978, nuclear capacity was destined to plateau.
Some reactors under construction were repurposed or cancelled. Consumers Power Company in Michigan (now CMS Energy) converted its 85 percent complete nuclear project to a gas-fired combined cycle plant after 17 years and $4.3 billion in outlays.[70] The William H. Zimmer Power Station in Ohio, facing costs of $3.1 billion, ten times its original estimate, was converted to coal in 1984. Originally announced in 1969 with completion expected in the mid-1970s, two 840 MW reactors had been reduced to one. Fines and lawsuits marred the project as well.[71]
Public Service Company of Indiana ran out of money with its half-completed $2.5 billion Marble Hill plant.[72] Commonwealth Edison lost its NRC license for its nearly completed $3.3 billion Illinois reactor.
The largest nuclear power project in history, formulated in 1968 for the Pacific Northwest by Washington Public Power Supply System, soured in the 1970s and 1980s when three units were abandoned during construction and another cancelled. Billions of dollars of fruitless expenditure led to the greatest municipal default in US history.[73]
Portland General Electric’s Trojan Nuclear Plant in Oregon, ordered in 1968 for $228 million, was completed two decades later at double the cost. Operational issues thereafter led to a lawsuit by PGE against builder Bechtel. But this was not a turnkey project with performance guarantees; it was a cost-plus contract. Bechtel prevailed; technical risk laid with the utility.[74]
High expectations for the breeder reactor to close the gap with fossil fuel generation, beginning with Detroit Edison’s Fermi 1, portended the future. “America’s fast breeder programme never got off the ground, and the continuing French and Russian efforts do not signal a mass breeder economy around the corner.”[75]
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Federal interest in nuclear power faded during the 1970s energy crisis. President Nixon appointed a new head of the AEC, James Schlesinger, who lectured the industry to solve its own problems and think about less demand, not more supply.[76]
President Ford was ambivalent, as costly completions came in. President Carter could only say, “as a last resort, we must continue to use increasing amounts of nuclear energy.”[77] And this was before the Three Mile Island accident in March 1979 that resulted in a de facto moratorium on new projects for decades.[78]
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The last nuclear plant entered service in 1990. Completions swelled the rate base that ratepayers had to cover. Consumer and environmental interests were now part of utility rate-case hearings, which resulted in cost disallowances, lawsuits, and reputational damage for utilities.
Fossil fuel plants, meanwhile, were benefiting from low energy costs and improving technology. With cheaper alternatives compared to the utility’s (nuclear-inflated) average cost, ratepayers wanted to buy their own power outside of the utility—if they could get it delivered. With the utility’s monopoly on transmission, legislative and regulatory reform became paramount.
End-users, beginning with industrials, lobbied federal and state lawmakers for mandatory open access, whereby transmission services would be offered at cost-based regulated rates for outside parties (independent generators and end users).
Open-access victories beginning in the mid-1990s would redefine the so-called regulatory compact.[79] Nuclear power’s cost inflation, in short, did much to upend the quiet, stable world of traditional public utility regulation in electricity.
II. Anatomy of Problems
“Non-turnkey plants ultimately cost about 175% of predicted costs.”[80] Nuclear plants that cost less than $1 million per MW in 1967 (2010 dollars) jumped to $3–$6 million by the mid-1970s.[81] Once completed, many plants underperformed.
“The failure of the US nuclear power program ranks as the largest managerial disaster in business history,” a Forbes editorial stated in 1985. Blame was placed on all parties: federal and state regulators, vendors, utilities, and contractors/subcontractors.[82]
In fact, nuclear power was never the great technology on the white horse. It was experimental and, with improvement, a backstop technology for electrical generation.
Safety was achieved. The cost and delay of nuclear plants, their overdesign, made the US industry arguably the safest of all energy technologies.[83] The mishap at Unit #2 at Three Mile Island in 1979—“history’s only major disaster with a toll of zero dead, zero injured, and zero diseased”[84]—compares favorably to the Deepwater Horizon offshore oil blowout (2010) that killed or injured two dozen.
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“It is hard to believe that a $200 billion industry with the potential to help solve the nation’s energy problems could be on the rocks—politically, technologically, and commercially,” a 1980s industry review noted. “Certainly the controversy surrounding nuclear power is unique; nowhere can we find a historical precedent for a technology that held so much promise but that is now virtually stalemated.”[85]
Such malinvestment had never happened before in the century-old US power business. Electricity was highly regulated, and nuclear the most government-subsidized sector within it. This was not coincidental, nor was it a market failure.
The “why” of nuclear’s underperformance was a combination of entrepreneurial error, technological complexity, and overregulation. The why behind the why was governmental. With insurance socialized, as well as cost and delivery taken on faith under public-utility regulation, the brakes were off.
Part of the problem with the nuclear dream was that hyperbole overtook reality as federal and state intervention encouraged reckless risk-taking with a new and complex technology. Interest rates rose significantly near the end of the boom, inflating the costs of capital-intensive, long-construction nuclear projects. Electricity demand growth fell by half in the troubled 1970s. Another part was regulatory overreach, magnifying the other issues.[86]
Complexity
Nuclear fission for electrical generation is inherently complicated “low risk, high-dread technology.”[87] “Safety must be built into every aspect of the design,” Terence Price explains.
A first safeguard is redundancy: a deliberate excess of protection systems. A second is diversity: a variety of different systems, operating in different ways, so that one systemic fault cannot put all of them out of service simultaneously. A third is rigorous use of the ‘fail-safe’ principle—so that if a failure occurs the system automatically places itself in a condition that is more secure, not less. A fourth precaution is the physical separation of vital functions—so that, for instance, a local fire cannot destroy the whole safety system.[88]
Utility fiefdoms (antitrust law prevented consortium strategies[89]) exacerbated the challenge of complexity. “As the US utilities opted for many individualized designs, rather than for a standard reactor, and as they began to build concurrently dozens of new plants,” Vaclav Smil concluded, “construction costs escalated, and they were pushed up further by changing requirements of new safety regulations.”[90] The expected learning curve and scale economies proved elusive.[91]
Learning-by-doing encountered numerous design and engineering problems, including “neglect of material embrittlement problems involving neutron bombardment, insufficient attention to cooling water chemistry and potential corrosion problems, a lack of appreciation of maintenance complexities and quality control problems, and a trivialization of waste disposal and decommissioning tasks.”[92]
A typical reactor had 40,000 valves, ten times that of a coal plant.[93] Repairs around a radioactive core differed from repair at other thermal (oil, gas, or coal) plants. A pipe failure at Consolidated Edison’s Indian Point Plant that took seven months to repair would have taken two weeks with far fewer, less specialized workers in a conventional facility.[94]
Utility management thought nuclear was “just another way to boil water and make steam.”[95] Not so. “A nuclear reactor requires 10 times the management intensity as a comparable coal-fired power plant,” one expert stated.[96] “[A] nuclear plant is a system—a system that requires an interdisciplinary perspective,” noted three MIT experts.
A failure in any one of the more mundane disciplines can be as disastrous as the failure of the most glamorous one. … Problems in the field are usually in areas that the engineers and scientists tend to take for granted.[97]
Rush
“No other mode of primary electricity generation was commercialized as rapidly as the first generation of fission reactors,” noted Vaclav Smil, with 25 years “between the first sustained chain reaction … and the flood of new plant orders after 1965.”[98] The cause behind that effect? “[N]o other mode of energy production has received such generous public subsidies,” with nuclear receiving 96 percent of all federal energy monies between 1948 and 1998.[99]
“We scaled-up nuclear reactors too fast,” admitted one federal regulator, “handed them out to the utilities too fast, and the technology wasn’t quite ready, and the utilities weren’t quite ready.”[100] Two economists wrote:
… the US nuclear power industry, the government included, in the late 1950s and early 1960s made a heroic decision to bypass the normal gradualism in the development and commercialization of a new technology—especially an exotic and extraordinarily sensitive technology like nuclear power—and to proceed rapidly to a $100 billion commitment, and ultimately far more. Numerous issues were too little understood, too little researched, and too little acknowledged.[101]
Environmentalism
“Being ‘anti-nuclear’ in the early 1960s meant opposition to nuclear weapons.”[102] Not-in-my-back-yard (NIMBY) activism was less ideological.[103] Some major environmental groups supported commercial nuclear, in fact.
This changed in the next decade, and definitively with Three Mile Island in 1979. Leading the opposition were the Union of Concerned Scientists, Friends of the Earth, and the Sierra Club (position reversal in 1975).[104]
“Opposition to nuclear power started rising in the mid-1960s,” summarized Michael Shellenberger.
From 1962 to 1966, only 12 percent of applications by electric utilities to build nuclear plants were challenged. By the beginning of the 1970s, 73 percent of applications to build nuclear plants would be challenged.[105]
The politicized environment expanded the forum for legal action and further regulation. “Between 1975 and 1983, 430 lawsuits were brought against the NRC, leading to 2,349 proposed rules and regulations—each of which required an industry response,” summarized Jack Spencer. “The additional and unexpected controls created industrywide uncertainty and raised questions about the long-term economics of nuclear power.”[106] Additionally, “state and local governments expanded their over-sight functions.”[107]
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Air quality standards emanating from the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1970 suggested a nuclear-for-coal substitution. But the upstart environmental movement became “closely bound” with “small is beautiful.” Soft energy (renewables, conservation) was in; hard energy (fossil-fuel and nuclear plants) was out.[108] Vaclav Smil described the triumph of emotion over reality.
A heady mixture of generation revolt, liberal activism, Schumacherian preaching, environmental concerns, nostalgic ruralism, back-of-the envelope calculations, and American faith in salvation through new gadgets produced a simplistic faith in passive solar heaters on every roof, clean electricity from photovoltaic cells … [and] in equally clean and captivating melodious power from the swooshing of assorted windblades, in benignly sweet-smelling fuel alcohols oozing from cozy farm stills fed with spoiled grain and fueled with dried straw or stover.[109]
The dilute, intermittent, and fragile nature of wind and solar made them ill-suited for the demands of the hard grid. Free-lunch conservation—or “a lunch you are paid to eat”—was magical thinking as well.[110] But this was the 1970s when Peak Oil and Peak Gas thinking predominated. Thus, in America, the “indigenous hassle-free alternative of cheap coal”[111] became the energy of policy choice under Jimmy Carter.
Today, environmental opposition to nuclear power is marked by concern for wind and solar displacement. Nuclear is too slow and costly in comparison, opponents contend, not unlike free market critics who favor fossil fuels for new capacity.
Informational Absence
Informational issues always plagued nuclear power. “The policy of secrecy not only inhibited commercial development of nuclear power in the United States,” wrote three MIT scholars, “but proved ineffective in preventing other countries from developing nuclear energy themselves….”[112]
The information problem went from government to industry. “[T]he nuclear industry’s absorption of the promotional attitudes of the AEC and reactor vendors was to plague its economic analysis for the next two decades.”[113] There was “selective publication of information.”[114] “Costs were underestimated and performance over promised in almost all categories, from plant construction duration to plant capacity performance.”[115]
“Technical reports underestimated future engineering problems, and available warnings about cost trends were ignored.”[116] Industry “self-deception” came from a lack of outside review.[117] “The fact that such crucial cost components have not been satisfactorily quantified,” Richard and Caroline Hellman wrote in their 1983 book on the subject, “reflects the primary difficulties in the nuclear power industry—inadequate available data and the technological and economic gap between design and performance.”[118]
Nuclear’s problems compromised the whole sector. Utilities “experienced a shock to their financial viability and a loss of public trust.”
The investor’s maxim that electric utilities “never lost money and never went broke” had run into a disturbing new reality. And the US nuclear industry, which had started the game with all the best cards, had lost its standing in the competitive global market.[119]
Overregulation
Government subsidies for commercial reactors set up the problem. Micro-regulation from Washington, DC, worsened it.
Early concerns were raised about potential overregulation of commercial nuclear.[120] How would industry leaders and regulators achieve best practice? Unfortunately, antitrust law precluded a united front, leaving some 15 interested utilities to collaborate with vendors to choose a favored technology.
AEC’s first safety hearing was in 1953. With the coming market, it was time to codify “standards, codes, criteria, and guides.”[121] AEC’s first radiation standards, going from protection of on-site workers to the general population, came in early 1957.[122] This would guide the Atomic Safety Board and Licensing Board, created within AEC in 1962.
The bandwagon effect featuring the Big 4 (Westinghouse, GE, Babcock & Wilcox, and Construction Engineer) overwhelmed the AEC.[123] “The constantly evolving designs produced unanticipated safety questions.”[124] What resulted “was excessively conservative and unpredictable,” noted Thomas Wellock. “The AEC believed there was no consistency in designs, the vendors believed there was no consistency in regulation.”[125]
Price-Anderson put regulators in charge, not companies and insurance providers. The outcome was ever-more-stringent edicts, a regulatory ratchet, which
was driven not by new scientific or technological information, but by public concern and the political pressure it generated. Changing regulations as new information becomes available is a normal process, but it would normally work both ways. The ratcheting effect, only making changes in one direction, was an abnormal aspect of regulatory practice unjustified from a scientific point of view. It was a strictly political phenomenon.[126]
Regulatory ratchet was “the way of the institutions of government.”
They begin dedicated to a greater purpose, and they end up serving themselves…. That was the way it was with the United States Atomic Energy Commission and its watchdog in Congress, the Joint Committee on Atomic Energy.[127]
In the swamp of Washington was
a fanatically defensive protectionist clique of tenured bureaucrats who have been drawing job security and prestige from the miraculous achievements of the Manhattan Project over twenty-five years ago, and whose best efforts since then have been divided between wildly inappropriate technological adventures and the justification of their past mistakes. [128]
Regulatory conservatism—err on the side of stringency—resulted in highly prescriptive, rule-oriented, legalistic control from Washington, DC. “The effects of this orientation,” summarized James M. Jasper, “include complex rules; opportunities for public participation; adversarial rather than cooperative relations between regulators and industries; a large role for lawyers rather than technical experts; inspectors expected to follow rules rather than use their discretion; and a large role for courts since regulatory agencies can be sued for improper administrative procedures.”[129]
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Nuclear safety was revisited in a 1988 book, Searching for Safety. Author Aaron Wildavsky took issue with the strict aversion rule that neglects the reality of irresolvable uncertainty, opportunity cost, and tradeoffs. Tolerable risk was the right response to the no-risk anti-technologists.[130]
When the opportunity cost of one risk is another risk, or just lost human betterment, then “risk taking can improve safety, and … ‘safety risks’ can be damaging.”[131] Nuclear power was a prime example. Too many safety devices, reviews, and procedures (“detailed prescriptive regulation”) can preclude electricity that otherwise would be generated by more risky or expensive methods.[132]
Recognizing safety as an entrepreneurial process of discovery, Wildavsky concluded:
Should we look upon safety as something we already know how to achieve, aiming directly at it by central command? Or should we view safety as something largely unknown, aiming at its achievement indirectly through a decentralized process of discovery?[133]
The economic viability of nuclear was not the subject of the above critique. But for existing nuclear operations, the issue was paramount.
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“Reforming the reactor licensing process has been an aspiration of five presidents,” Terence Price wrote in 1990. Having one license instead of two (because two had allowed “a measure of ‘design-as-you-go’” in the early years), as well as ending mandatory retrofits, could reduce construction time to “a reasonable six years.”[134] What had been five years before was now at least double that.
Stringent standards worked against safety. NRC rules became the maximum, not the minimum.[135] “Industry’s fixation on NRC regulations,” explained Joseph V. Rees, encouraged autonomous behavior in place of an industry-wide “standard of excellence.”[136] On-the-spot knowledge and judgment were regulated away.
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In 1985, nuclear project engineer John Crowley testified before Congress about an industry “once healthy and full of promise, now currently in disarray,” evidenced by “spiraling construction costs, prolonged schedules, a generally negative public perception, and an increasingly difficult regulatory environment.”[137]
Rather than grandfather design requirements at the start of construction, federal regulators issued new rules that required “reanalysis and redesign of numerous other systems and their supports,” what he called the “ripple effect.”[138]
Overall construction time doubled or tripled compared to what it had been before—what it was currently in France, thanks to “a nonadversarial regulatory climate” and “stabilization and standardization of their designs.”
“Federal regulations used to take up two volumes on our shelves,” Crowley related. “We now have 20 volumes to explain how to use the first two volumes.”[139]
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What about nuclear development abroad, often facilitated by US Export-Import Bank financing? France’s response to the Arab oil embargo provides a case study of nuclear done better. The country’s shift from fossil fuels to nuclear, resulting in 50 reactors by 1987, was not necessarily economical, however.
“No other country has matched her single-minded pursuit of an agreed national energy objective,” noted Terence Price.[140] It was not a free market but government central planning by Électricité de France SA (EDF). Standardization, while beneficial, was alleged by “detractors” to be “technocratic megalomania” at “enormous” cost.[141] “The debt incurred during France’s change-over to nuclear—232 billion francs at the end of 1989—is criticized by nuclear opponents for having ‘crowded out’ more profitable investment.”[142]
But overall, it was a technological success, economically endured, and without the opportunity cost of the US approach of design heterogeneity and micro-regulation.
III. Quest for Competitiveness
Retrofits kept the nuclear vendors going in the absence of new orders in the 1990s. What could resurrect industry growth in the US? The fast breeder reactor was not it, and nuclear fusion was stuck in the laboratory.[143] Simplification to reduce costs and construction time was much discussed but missing in action. Streamlined regulation was a perennial hope, but inertia prevailed. The only outlet for industry activity lay in improving operations.
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In 1991, President George H. W. Bush’s National Energy Strategy lamented “the hiatus in the reconstruction of new nuclear capacity.” The NES blamed an “impossibly cumbersome licensing process” and unresolved issues such as waste disposal for a “loss of public confidence.”[144]
The manifesto recommended general reforms (“remove undue regulatory and institutional barriers”). The report also cited the NRC’s work on “next-generation” light-water reactors, intended to result in substantial new entry by 2010.[145] This R&D would await Bush II’s Energy Policy Act of 2005 to result in new entry.
Fossil-fuel Competition
A rationale for civilian nuclear reactors was to supplement, and eventually replace, fossil-fueled power generation. Peak Oil and Peak Gas seemingly arrived in the 1970s—and again several decades later. But deregulation in the 1980s ended the oil and gas shortages, and technology improved with directional drilling and then hydraulic fracturing. (Coal abundance was never really in doubt.) The ultimate resource of human ingenuity under economic freedom overcame the limits of nature.
Nuclear commercialization undermined fossil-fuel generation from the beginning. “The coal industry’s ability to finance new mines or mining equipment is adversely affected by unfounded claims for nuclear power,” complained the National Coal Association in 1963, “and the financing of new conventional utility plants is also affected by the mistaken notion that nuclear power may obsolete them in a short time.”[146]
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A second loser was upstart natural gas. Simple turbines emerged from wartime jet propulsion technology. In 1949, the 3.5 MW Belle Isle gas plant, built by GE for Oklahoma Gas & Electric, ran successfully for decades. Total capacity of 240 MW a decade later was dwarfed by oil-fired turbines, not to mention the mainstays of coal-fired steam and hydro turbines.[147]
In 1965, a power blackout in the Northeast, impacting thirty million customers, revealed the need for natural gas peaking units that could quickly start in emergencies. Natural-gas-fired capacity of 1,300 MW would soar to 43,500 MW a decade later.[148] But disrupted gas supply from federal price controls in interstate markets would send demand to coal for the rest of the decade, delaying the implementation of new clean-burning, efficient cogeneration and combined cycle technologies.[149]
With 1980s price deregulation, the “dash for gas” was on. Gas turbines serving the peak were upgraded to provide mid-range and, like nuclear plants, baseload generation.[150] Oil, too, could substitute for gas in dual-fuel plants.
With nuclear reactor entry stagnant, natural gas technologies flourished until government-advantaged wind and solar power displaced thermal generation on the grid. The cogeneration/combined cycle boom, in retrospect, could have occurred decades earlier except for nuclear displacement.[151] Now, the best technology had another political foe.
“Nuclear Renaissance” I (Bush’s EPAct 2005)
In 2001, President George W. Bush’s energy report to Congress declared “the expansion of nuclear energy in the United States as a major component of our national energy policy.”[152] Expedited relicensing and other measures were proposed for existing capacity, but new subsidies to incite new construction went unmentioned.
This changed in Bush’s second term. Title VI of The Energy Policy Act of 2005 included federal subsidies for the construction of up to six new “advanced” reactors, as well as new funding for “Generation IV” research and development.[153] The Production Tax Credit (PTC), at 1.8 cents per kWh, in use with renewables, was offered for new entrants with “advanced” technology for the first eight years of operation.
With high costs and uncertain performance, Gen IV needed international support. The US Department of Energy formed the Generation IV International Forum, followed by a similar assemblage by the International Atomic Energy Agency the next year.[154]
In response to loan guarantees, cost-sharing, and PTC, 18 proposals were submitted for 29 new reactors, with the NRC issuing eight licenses for 14 projects.[155] A new 1,000 MW plant was estimated to cost between $1.5 and $2.0 billion, with construction expected to take five or six years, according to nuclear proponents at the time of EPAct 2005.[156] Four entrants, even with higher budgeted costs, would find out how over-optimistic this was.
Twin 1,100 MW reactors, Summer 2 and 3 in South Carolina, were abandoned during construction. Four years and $9 billion (almost the original cost of the project) was not enough to continue given $14 billion in estimated completion costs. Work stopped in 2017 when developer Westinghouse declared bankruptcy.
Two completed projects, Vogtle #3 and #4 in Georgia, were almost abandoned. The 2,200 MW project was budgeted at $14 billion over seven-to-eight years beginning in 2009. The project was completed in 2023/24 for $35 billion. But not before Westinghouse went bankrupt with its vaunted AP1000 Generation III+ pressurized water reactor technology in tow, leaving ratepayers on the hook despite relatively small cost disallowances against Georgia Power.[157]
“EPACT 2005 was supposed to keep the good times rolling for the nuclear industry by encouraging ongoing investment,” stated Jack Spencer. “Instead, it did the opposite.”[158] A lethal combination of subsidies and overregulation had claimed its latest victims.
Source: US Energy Information Administration
Entry was achieved after decades of stagnation (see above) but at great cost. Whether new reactors will enter service in the next decade(s) is a political question, not only a market one.
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The “renaissance” was capacity-negative: nuclear reactors, which peaked at 112 units in 1990, would decline to 94, reflecting industry stagnation and early retirements. The Vermont Yankee reactor was closed in 2014 due, in part, to protests from environmental pressure groups. Thirteen reactors entered decommissioning in the decade ending in 2022, most prematurely from subsidized competition from wind and solar power, a legacy of the Energy Policy Act of 1992 (Bush I). Around 10,000 MW of “reliable and clean power” was lost, most during the second term of the Obama years (2009–17) because of the rush to renewables.[159]
Retired nuclear capacity transferred some, if not much, generation back to fossil-fuel plants, an irony of Obama and DOE secretary Chu’s energy policy, which was “somewhat less about energy and more about a belief system.”[160]
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In June 2017, President Trump announced “six brand-new initiatives to … begin to revive and expand our nuclear energy sector … which produces lean, renewable and emissions-free energy.”[161] But with Summer-Vogtle problems manifest, little could be done. What was true back in the 1980s (“… nuclear power is an increasingly mature industry: there are few new technical surprises to report, simply steady consolidation and incremental development”[162]) had not changed.
“What is presented as simple, inexpensive, and close to market-ready always seems in reality to be complicated and expensive and never quite market-ready.”[163] A heralded “nuclear renaissance” from 2022 legislation is proving to be a familiar mirage.
“Nuclear Renaissance” II (Biden’s IRA 2022)
The Inflation Reduction Act of 2022, the high mark of the federal government’s “energy transition” push, was a life-saver for wind, solar, and other favored energies and technologies. Nuclear again demonstrated its bipartisan political support, with generous subsidies in search of another growth period.
The Act implemented an eight-year PTC of $0.015 per kWh from 2024 through 2032. For new “advanced” capacity, a $0.025 per kWh credit was granted for the first 10 years of operation, beginning in 2025. DOE’s Loan Programs Office was granted up to $40 billion in additional section 1703 loan authority, available through September 2026. Additionally, the IRA extends the Investment Tax Credit of 30 percent (and up to 40 percent) for facilities beginning construction before 2025 (not realized) and a “technology-neutral” credit for advanced nuclear for post-2025 entry.
The new hope was Small Modular Reactors (SMRs), another government play from start to finish. “[A] lot of the initial research and development is done on the taxpayer’s dime,” noted one critic.
The NuScale reactor design, for example, was the outcome of the Multi-Application Small Light Water Reactor project funded by the US Department of Energy and largely carried out in two public institutions: Idaho National Laboratory and Oregon State University. Likewise the virtual reality tools used by companies like Westinghouse … were funded by the DOE and carried out at another public university, The Pennsylvania State University.[164]
TerraPower, Transatomic, NuScale—SMRs are a taxpayer-funded, not market-driven, play, and are not commercially feasible. “By the late 1980s,” Vaclav Smil noted, “it had also become clear that the second option for the second nuclear era, the deployment of much better designed, smaller and less expensive but more reliable and inherently safe fission reactors, will not happen anytime soon.”[165] To date, none of the proposed projects has entered into construction, much less service.
“Nuclear Renaissance” III (Trump II)
The federal government continues to chase the nuclear dream. . Four executive orders by President Trump, in the words of the Energy Department, “lay out a plan to modernize nuclear regulation, streamline nuclear reactor testing, deploy nuclear reactors for national security, and reinvigorate the nuclear industrial base.”[166] International projects of domestic U.S. companies will receive financial and technical support from Trump agencies, one goal being “at least 20 new international Agreements for Peaceful Nuclear Cooperation by the close of the 120th Congress to enable the United States nuclear industry to access new markets in partner countries.”
The “bold new strategy for unleashing American energy and continuing our nation’s dominance as the world’s nuclear energy leader” is a refrain uniformed by history. “Currently, American policymakers are tripling down on this approach… to use taxpayer money to drive the advanced reactor industry forward,” warned Jack Spencer. “Hundreds of billions in taxpayer-backed loans are now available to fund nuclear projects, $2.5 billion is available to fund demonstration plants, and a plethora of tax subsidies have been authorized.”[167]
Nuclear subsidies are at play with recommissions, too. In Michigan, the 777 MW Palisades nuclear facility, closed in 2022, plans to restart in the next few years, enabled by a $1.52 billion DOE loan, as well as $300 million from the state of Michigan. The US Department of Agriculture has additionally allocated $1.3 billion to two rural electric cooperatives to buy Palisades power.[168] Most recently, a billion-dollar loan was approved as part of the Big Beautiful Bill’s Energy Dominance Financing program to restart a Three Mile Island reactor, part of an effort for fission to power new data centers. And a reorganization has created an Office of Fission within the Energy Department.
Favorable politics must meet and overcome the status quo of overregulation. “As of June 2024,” Spencer notes, “the NRC listed over eighty sources of regulation, including over two thousand pages of laws, treaties, statutes, authorizations, executive orders, and other documents[169][170]
IV. TMI: Failure and Reform
In the 1970s, average US reactor utilization was under 60 percent compared to the expected 70 percent, the result of “poor attention to quality,” including “inadequate testing of valves, lack of attention to the possibility of stress corrosion cracking, and flow-induced vibration, and underestimating the importance of water chemistry.”[171] Then came an event in 1979 that shook regulators and utilities to the core.
The accident at Three Mile Island inspired the formation of the Institute of Nuclear Power Operations (INPO), a “private regulatory bureaucracy created by the nuclear industry itself.”[172] Fifty-four utilities finally did what should have been done decades ago—collaborate. The worst reactor, after all, could put the other hundred in disrepute and turn the public and regulators against utilities. And the 900 MW Unit 2 in Middletown, Pennsylvania, with a 12-year cleanup ahead at a cost of nearly $1 billion, did just that.
Checking the regulatory boxes had brought out the worst in management. Nuclear was too complex and experimental for staid utilities and Washington, DC, regulators. INPO sought supra-regulatory standards of excellence[173] via shared knowledge from loaned employees under neutral management. It would work, with nuclear critics even suggesting that INPO replace the NRC.[174]
For its part, the NRC realized that its focus on hardware missed the institution using the technology.[175] Management processes and culture were key, which meant demoting regulation to liberate on-the-spot knowledge for spontaneous improvement. A wave of technical edicts prepared by the NRC after the Three Mile Island disaster was avoided.
INPO’s “communitarian” regulation was geared toward continuous operation.[176] Unplanned outages fell by half in the 1980s.[177] Average utilization, which had peaked in 1977–78, resumed in the late 1980s and improved thereafter. Capacity factors exceeded 70 percent in the early 1990s and 80 percent by decade-end. Capacity first reached 90 percent in 2002 and has remained above that level since.
The fruits of INPO were at work, but so was enhanced incentive. With more reactors becoming price-unregulated “merchant” plants, profit-maximizing owners did the right things. This worked until premature reactor retirements occurred from lower margins from government-subsidized wind and solar facilities.
The World Nuclear Association reported “remarkable gains in [US] power plant utilisation through improved refuelling, maintenance and safety systems at existing plants.”
Average nuclear generation costs have come down from $51.22/MWh in 2012 to $30.92/MWh in 2022. This 40% reduction in nuclear generating costs since 2012 has been driven by: a 41% decrease in fuel costs; a 51% decrease in capital expenditures; and a 33% decrease in operating costs.
Better efficiency allowed nuclear to retain its 20 percent market share of growing US generation. “It is as though the nuclear fleet were doubled without actually building any new plants.”[178]
Expert Error
“In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex,” President Eisenhower warned six years after his Atoms for Peace speech. “The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist.”
Little did Ike realize that his civilian nuclear ambitions would spawn its own complex of power, with government enabling a new industry when the free market’s invisible voice was saying not yet, go slow, wait-and-see.[179]
Enter expert failure, defined as “any deviation from a normative expectation associated with the expert’s advice,” within the entangled deep state.[180]
Those paid to share their knowledge failed repeatedly. What dosage of radiation from a nuclear reactor was safe? Competing theories resulted in the wrong verdict (the linear no-threshold model).
What was the cost of a new reactor? Wrong again, from the turnkey contracts by GE and Westinghouse in the 1960s to the projects pursuant to the EPAct 2005.
What amended regulation was necessary to ensure safety? Much overwrought regulation came from the Atomic Energy Commission and its successor, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, in their issuances (Opinions, Decisions, Directives, Guidelines, Petitions, Rulemakings).
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“When experts disagree, whom shall we believe,” asked the editors of a 1982 book on the pros and cons of nuclear power.[181] Exploring expert failure several decades later, Roger Koppl differentiates between knowledge imposed on the system from above versus the bottom-up, fragmented, even inarticulate knowledge that flows as price signals and profit/loss.[182]
Expert error flourishes where “the object domain is complex, uncertain, indeterminate, or ambiguous,” Koppl explains, where “feedback mechanisms may be weak or altogether absent.”[183] This certainly applies to the nuclear commercialization, where natural outcomes were overridden by lawmakers pushed by self-interested businesses. Scientists joined in, enthralled by a new domain and in pursuit of “identity, sympathy, approbation, and praiseworthiness.”[184]
In the wonderland of electricity, the Big Players coalesced. But major government intervention at the federal and state level was required to let expert error win. Koppl’s closing advice, “value expertise, but fear expert power.”[185]
Public Policy Reform
“I would repeal the Price-Anderson Act and use the threat of accident liability to discipline private sector nuclear activities,” wrote one progressive left author nearly 30 years ago. “I would require the utilities and nuclear investors bear the full costs of any future nuclear power project and cost overrun risks.”[186] Such is also the free market, classical liberal view versus the bipartisan view of government reform-and-subsidy, reflecting technological optimism for some and a distrust of fossil-fuel generation to others.
The spirit for fundamental change toward a free market lurks, however. “Policymakers should create an entirely new framework for commercial nuclear energy,” states nuclear advocate Jack Spencer, “that is wholly rooted in free enterprise, innovation, and competition.”[187]
What specific reforms are called for? First, the nuclear power industry should be removed from government support, domestically and internationally (via EXIM). Three reactors owned by the US government’s Tennessee Valley Authority should be sold and privately managed. Government policy at all levels should be neutral toward all energies and related technologies, including nuclear power.
The nuclear promotional activities within the US Department of Energy should be terminated, while the Nuclear Regulatory Commission should eliminate its civilian-side programs, leaving military-related activities for transfer to the US Department of Defense.
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Defunding civilian nuclear to end subsidy programs would entail abandoning the sacrosanct Price-Anderson Act of 1957 cap on nuclear liability exposure, extended seven times to date. Far from disrupting the industry, terminating Price-Anderson could be a win-win. Collected monies in the nuclear fund ($8 billion) would help fund the transition to entirely private insurance. Each owner of a reactor would obtain insurance and, short of that, carry a potential liability against the capital of the firm.
Investors and other financial stakeholders would judge reliance and safety, not Washington, DC. Radiation (such as the controversial linear no-threshold limit) and other standards would be determined by the parties informed by science. What would a judge or jury believe in this regard?
The quasi-governmental Institute of Nuclear Power Operations, discussed above, would be central in a post-NRC environment. The experience and reputation of INPO makes this changeover doable and appealing.
§§
“To achieve free-market conditions for nuclear energy,” in Spencer’s estimation,
the federal government must create a predictable and reasonable regulatory environment, enact a market-based waste-disposition program, and stop subsidizing specific technologies and firms. Perhaps most importantly, Washington needs to stop subsidizing nuclear energy’s competitors.[188]
The premature retirement of nuclear capacity from wind and solar subsidies, namely the Production Tax Credit and the Investment Tax Credit, would cease. Nuclear itself would no longer receive the same subsidies as currently embodied in the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022.
“[N]o one truly knows how economical (or not) nuclear power could be if it were allowed to exist in a free market,” Spencer allows. Would the entry of new reactors be stymied? That verdict awaits free market conditions without subsidies on the one hand and overregulation on the other.
V. Conclusion
The perennial quest for a national energy policy—a centralized governmental approach subsidizing some energies and/or penalizing others—has prominently included nuclear commercialization. Nuclear power received almost all federal energy-related research and development monies in the second half of the twentieth century.[189] Today, under Trump II, nuclear subsidies have again risen to the top.
Has this major government foray been successful? Air-quality benefits have resulted from nuclear-for-coal and nuclear-for-oil displacement in power generation. But nuclear’s resource commitment, including decommissioning costs to come, has been enormous, even unprecedented. This economic premium is what could have gone to other, higher uses in a world of scarce resources versus unlimited wants. One opportunity cost has been technology improvement and retrofits at coal plants to reduce emissions of criteria pollutants.
The past is a sunk cost. Currently operating nuclear plants can be presumed to be economical. They deserve little political opposition or ideological spite. Their continuance should be judged in terms of incremental revenue versus incremental cost (including decommissioning costs) with neutral tax treatment between power generation energies and technologies.
Regarding new capacity, light water reactors still have not demonstrated their economic viability versus other forms of thermal generation. The Small Modular Reactor (SMR), currently in vogue, is a government-enabled backstop technology for (cost-effective) electrical generation. In nationally planned economies, on the other hand, nuclear projects are being chosen and completed for reasons of their own.
The three dimensions of commercial nuclear are science, technology, and economics. “Do not overemphasize science and underemphasize engineering,” three energy technologists warned.[190] To this it can be added: Do not overemphasize engineering and underemphasize economics. Of the technological possibilities, only a small subset is economic, defined as creating more value than cost as judged in a free market. In this sense, Vaclav Smil has called nuclear power a successful failure, “a partial (if very expensive) success.”[191]
§§
Political Economy 101 explains government promotion, indeed enablement, of nonmilitary nuclear power since the 1950s. The knowledge problem of government intervention resulted in layers of expert failure. Unintended consequences from government intervention emerged from complexity. Expanding government intervention to address the problems created by prior interference magnified problems and prevented fundamental reform.
Concentrated benefits and diffused costs drove a nonmarket “market.” Regulatory capture was in play on each side at different times, from the regulated industry to the anti-nuclear movement. The mixed economy of political capitalism provided the framework, not government ownership and control as some lawmakers wanted at the beginning.
What critics call the Nuclear Industrial Complex continues with bipartisan political support. Environmentalists critical of industrialization and growth now find opposition from other “green” groups favoring nuclear power as a much larger, scalable source of emission-free electricity. A true free market solution is not yet part of the conversation.
§§
“The first step in resolving the nuclear controversy,” noted a study more than 40 years ago, “is to bridge the gap between what the experts know and what the public needs to know.”This should have happened at the beginning, the authors added, to have avoided much of the problem.[192]
This problem continues with optimistic public pronouncements by industry and government not joined by actionable contracts and execution. The inherent complexity of nuclear fission compared to other forms of thermal generation suggests a problem that is not soon to go away.
Fundamental free market reform is the best way forward. As mentioned in the previous section on policy reform, current government subsidies should cease, and regulatory oversight privatized to the (existing) Institute of Nuclear Power Operations. Government-owned nuclear plants under the Tennessee Valley Authority should be sold, and foreign programs under the EXIM bank terminated.
The existing nuclear fleet (94 reactors) would be subject to a financial test in a true free market. Affordable capacity would cover private insurance costs in place of existing Price-Anderson protection. Collected monies under federal law for waste storage and future decommissioning would be returned to the companies with their obligations unchanged.
Margins would improve with the end of de facto predatory pricing by tax-advantaged wind and solar, preventing premature nuclear retirements (as in the past). The tax credit for production, however, would cease.
New nuclear capacity would also be determined by market forces. Current tax preferences for new investment would end, as would government-funded research and development. Insurance subsidies, too, would terminate on the government side, leaving private arrangements for presumed-to-be safe nuclear operations.
§§
“Not the soberly calculating businessman but the romantic technocrat is to blame for a delusive incomprehension of reality,”[193] observed economist Ludwig von Mises before the advent of nuclear power. With the peaceful atom, romantic, magical thinking took over with government intervention, ensuring its rushed introduction and growth—and stagnation and underperformance thereafter.
The US nuclear experience to date had been marked by analytic failure and government failure. Market failure was not to blame. The future invites an untried, practical let-the-market-decide approach to civilian nuclear policy. A classical liberal approach is marked by impartial government, taxpayer neutrality, and consumer choice. Fundamental policy reform toward these ends awaits.
Footnotes
[1] Vaclav Smil, Energy Myths and Realities: Bringing Science to the Energy Policy Debate (Washington, DC: AEI Press, 2010), p. 40. The author of nearly fifty books, Smil is the Distinguished Professor Emeritus in the Faculty of Environment at the University of Manitoba in Winnipeg, Canada.
[2] Boyd Norton, “A Brief History: The Early Years,” in Nuclear Power: Both Sides, ed. Michio Kapu and Jennifer Trainer (New York: W.W. Norton, 1982), p. 15.
[3] Norton, “A Brief History,” p. 26.
[4] Jack Spencer, Nuclear Revolution: Powering the Next Generation (Ottawa, Ontario, Canada; and Washington, DC: Optimum Publishing, 2024), p. xiv.
[5] Spencer, Nuclear Revolution, p. xi.
[6] Robert Zubrin, The Case for Nukes (Lakewood, CO: Polaris Books, 2023), p. 248. A nuclear engineer by training, Zubrin is best known as the founder of the Mars Society.
[7] James E. Hansen, Storms of My Grandchildren: The Truth About the Coming Climate Catastrophe and Our Last Chance to Save Humanity (New York: Bloomsbury Press, 2009), pp. 200–204.
[8] Bill Gates, How to Avoid a Climate Disaster: The Solutions We Have and the Breakthroughs We Need (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2021), p. 84.
[9] Pete V. Domenici, A Brighter Tomorrow: Fulfilling the Promise of Nuclear Energy (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2004), p. 181.
[10] Ralph Nader and John Abbotts, The Menace of Atomic Energy (New York: W. W. Norton, 1977), p. 368.
[11] Nader and Abbotts, p. 367.
[12] Nader and Abbotts, p. 369.
[13] M. V. Ramana, Nuclear Is Not the Solution: The Folly of Atomic Power in the Age of Climate Change (New York: Verso, 2024), pp. 224, 231.
[14] Al Gore, Earth in the Balance: Ecology and the Human Spirit (New York: Houghton Mifflin, 1992), pp. 317, 328.
[15] Mark Z. Jacobson, No Miracles Needed: How Today’s Technology Can Save Our Climate and Clean Our Air (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2023), pp. xv, 164–66.
[16] Nuclear expenditure was closely tied to Los Alamos National Laboratory (New Mexico: established 1943); Oak Ridge National Laboratory (Tennessee: established 1943); Argonne National Laboratory (Illinois: established 1946); Brookhaven National Laboratory (New York: established 1947); and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (California: established 1952).
[17] United States Atomic Energy Commission, Fourth Semiannual Report (Washington DC: GPO, 1948), p. 48. Quoted in Arjun Makhijani and Scott Saleska, The Nuclear Power Deception (New York: Institute for Energy and Environmental Research, 1999), p. 53.
[18] Arjun Makhijani and Scott Saleska, The Nuclear Power Deception, p. 1. Makhijani is president of the anti-nuclear Institute for Energy and Environmental Research. Saleska is a professor of ecology at the University of Arizona.
[19] Pub. L. 83-703, 68 Stat. 919 at 921 (1954).
[20] George T. Mazuzan and J. Samuel Walker, Controlling the Atom: The Beginnings of Nuclear Regulation, 1946–1962 (Berkley, CA: University of California Press, 1984), pp. 21–22. Mazuzan and Walker were at the time employees of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. “The [pro-nuclear] zealots, including many prominent scientists and engineers … persevered into the 1970s.” Smil, Energy Myths and Realities, p. 32.
[21] David Lilienthal, the first chairman of the AEC, was driven by a revulsion of nuclear weapons in this regard, although he had had nothing to do with the decision to use the bomb in World War II. Vaclav Smil, Invention and Innovation: A Brief History of Hype and Failure (Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 2023), p. 81.
[22] Mazuzan and Walker, Controlling the Atom, pp. 13, 22–23, 280, 313–14.
[23] James M. Jasper, Nuclear Politics: Energy and the State in the United States, Sweden, and France (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1990), p. 43.
[24] Glenn T. Seaborg, chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission, Civilian Nuclear Power—a Report to the President—1962. Cover letter, first page, November 20, 1962.
[25] AEC, Civilian Nuclear Power—a Report to the President—1962, p. 5.
[26] William Tucker, Terrestrial Energy: How Nuclear Power Will Lead the Green Revolution and End America’s Energy Odyssey (Savage, MD: Bartleby Press, 2008), p. 277.
[27] Smil, Invention and Innovation, p. 83. When asked about the high cost compared to the proposed nuclear plants at far cheaper projected cost, the construction manager (John Gray) answered: “Shippingport was built, and we kept books.” Quoted in Ramana, Nuclear Is Not the Solution, p. 213.
[28] Richard Rhodes, Nuclear Renewal: Common Sense About Energy (New York: Whittle Books, 1993), p. 40.
[29] Mazuzan and Walker, Controlling the Atom, p. 77.
[30] Mazuzan and Walker, Controlling the Atom, pp. 77, 78. The program ended in 1963. States welcomed “a glamorous new field of technology” with here-and-there subsidies. Mazuzan and Walker, Controlling the Atom, p. 302.
[31] Mazuzan and Walker, Controlling the Atom, chapter V. A partial meltdown at Detroit Edison’s Fermi 1 in 1966 is described in James Mahaffey, Atomic Accidents; A History of Nuclear Meltdowns and Disasters (New York: Pegasus Books, 2014), pp. 208–218. A nuclear engineer, James Mahaffey was for 25 years a senior research scientist at the Georgia Tech Research Institute.
[32] Atomic Insurance Project, Preliminary Report on Financial Protection against Atomic Hazards (New York: Atomic Industrial Forum, 1956), p. 16. Principal author Arthur W. Murphy was a law professor at Columbia University.
[33] Edward J. Calabrese, “LNT and Cancer Risk Assessment: Its Flawed Foundations. Part I; Radiation and Leukemia: Where LNT Began.” Environmental Research 197 (June 2021), Article 111025.
[34] Mazuzan and Walker, Controlling the Atom, p. 93. The private court system’s predilection toward excessive tort damages were in the background.
[35] Mazuzan and Walker, Controlling the Atom, chapter IV.
[36] Quoted in Mazuzan and Walker, Controlling the Atom, p. 103.
[37] Mazuzan and Walker, Controlling the Atom, p. 112.
[38] Mazuzan and Walker, Controlling the Atom, p. 8.
[39] Quoted in Mazuzan and Walker, Controlling the Atom, p. 95.
[40] Pub. L. 85–256, 71 Stat. 576 (1957). The dollar figures can be multiplied by ten for an inflation adjustment (2025 dollars).
[41] Wilson Clark, Energy for Survival: The Alternative to Extinction (Garden City, NY: Anchor Books, 1974), p. 278. Clark was an energy consultant who advised California governor Jerry Brown.
[42] Mazuzan and Walker, Controlling the Atom, p. 199.
[43] Price-Anderson extensions continued in 1975 (12 years), 1988 (15 years), 2002 (a 17-month bridge extension), 2003 (a 14-month bridge extension), 2005 (20 years), and 2024 (40 years).
[44] The 1964–65 revision to WASH-740 used extreme assumptions and would be replaced by the Rasmussen Report in 1975 and then updated in 1982 and 1991 reports.
[45] Mazuzan and Walker, Controlling the Atom, p. 419.
[46] Clark, Energy for Survival, p. 278.
[47] Irvin C. Bupp and Jean-Claude Derian. Light Water: How the Nuclear Dream Dissolved (New York: Basic Books, 1978), pp. 91–92. Bupp was a professor at Harvard Business School; Derian was a science advisor to the French government. Also see Stephen Mark Cohn, Too Cheap to Meter: The Economic and Philosophical Analysis of the Nuclear Dream (Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 1997), pp. 36, 39–40. Cohn was a “heterodox” (that is, radical Left) economics professor at Knox College in Illinois. Too Cheap to Meter began as his 1986 UMass economics dissertation, done under the Marxist Samuel Bowles.
[48] William J. Barber, “The Eisenhower Energy Policy: Reluctant Intervention,” in Energy Policy in Perspective: Today’s Problems, Yesterday’s Solutions, ed. Craufurd D. Goodwin (Washington, DC: Brookings Institution, 1981), pp. 281–82. Barber was a professor of economics at Wesleyan University, from 1957 to 1993. Permitting was very lax in the period following Price-Anderson. J. Samuel Walker, Containing the Atom: Nuclear Regulation in a Changing Environment, 1963–1971 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1992), p. 35. Walker was the official historian of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission for 31 years, from 1979 to 2010. This book is a sequel to Mazuzan and Walker’s, Controlling the Atom.
[49] Barber, “The Eisenhower Energy Policy,” p. 282.
[50] Cohn, Too Cheap to Meter, p. 32.
[51] Thomas R. Wellock, Safe Enough? A History of Nuclear Power and Accident Risk (Oakland: University of California Press, 2021), p. 15. This contract was inflation-adjusted but otherwise turnkey; later contracts skipped price and delivery guarantees. (Wellock is the official historian of the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission.)
[52] “Commencement Address at Holy Cross College,” June 10, 1964, Public Papers of the Presidents: Lyndon B. Johnson 1964 (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1965), pp. 763–64.
[53] Alvin M. Weinberg and Gale Young, “The Nuclear Energy Revolution—1966,” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 57, no. 1 (January 1967), p. 1. Weinberg and Young were leading physicists associated first with the Manhattan Project and later with Oak Ridge National Laboratory.
[54] Bupp and Derian, Light Water, pp. 42–44. This technology had rivals, but “early public-private cooperation” resulted in “government intervention [that] locked [the industry] into technological approaches … that primarily define the industry and policy today.” Spencer, Nuclear Revolution, p. 72.
[55] Cohn, Too Cheap to Meter, pp. 32–33.
[56] Cohn, Too Cheap to Meter, p. 33.
[57] Joseph V. Rees, Hostages of Each Other: The Transformation of Nuclear Safety Since Three Mile Island (Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Pess, 1994), p. 13. “The AEC, JCAE, and reactor venders’ promotional campaigns helped induce a bandwagon psychology among passive firms.” Cohn, Too Cheap to Meter, p.47 Trade journals and AEC materials extolled “the coming technology.” Cohn, Too Cheap to Meter, 48, 50.
[58] Cohn, Too Cheap to Meter, p. 9.
[59] Smil, Invention and Innovation, p. 85.
[60] Philip Sporn, “Developments in Nuclear Power Economics, January 1968–December 1969,” A Report Prepared for the Committee on Atomic Energy. Cited by H. Peter Metzger, The Atomic Establishment (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1972), p. 246. Sporn was a nuclear enthusiast but economic realist.
[61] “Each 1,000 MW nuclear plant can reduce global oil demand by 9.4 million barrels a year.” Oversight Hearings on the Export-Import Bank: Hearings Before the Subcommittee on International Trade, Investment and Monetary Policy of the House Committee on Banking, Currency, and Housing, 94th Cong. 2nd sess., May 10 and 11, 1976(Statement of Stephan M. Minikes, Senior Vice President, Research and Communications, Export-Import Bank, May 10, 1976), p. 159.
[62] “GAO Report to the Congress—Improved Management Information System Needed for Export-Import Banks Capital Loan Program,” February 12, 1973. Quoted in Oversight Hearings on the Export-Import Bank.Staff Report and Recommendations on the Export-Import Bank of the United States, (“Exim Involvement in Nuclear Reactor Loans: General Overview”), p. 83. The Staff Report assessed that the GAO statement “may not be completely accurate considering US dominance in the nuclear field,” p. 83.
[63]Oversight Hearings on the Export-Import Bank (Statement of Stephan M. Minikes), pp. 166–67.
[64]Comparing Government Financing of Reactor Exports. Columbia University, Center on Global Energy Policy, August 2022, p. 28. EXIM is still in business with nuclear projects in mind, extolling its more than five decades of experience.
[65]Oversight Hearings on the Export-Import Bank (Questions submitted to the EXIM Bank by Subcommittee Chairman Thomas M. Rees [D-CA], together with their answers.), p. 206.
[66] Nader and Abbotts, The Menace of Atomic Energy, p. 298. The State Department and the Energy Research and Development Administration (est. 1975) also facilitated foreign nuclear projects.
[67] Vaclav Smil, Energies: An Illustrated Guide to the Biosphere and Civilization (Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 1999), p. 152.
[68] Jasper, Nuclear Politics, pp. 60–1.
[69] Energy Information Administration, Nuclear Plant Cancellations: Causes, Costs, Consequences,DOE/EIA-0392 (Washington, DC: DOE, April 1983), p. x. Prepared by DC consulting firm J.A. Reyes, principal researcher Robert L. Borlick.
[70] Wellock, Safe Enough? p. 78.
[71] “Nearly Completed Nuclear Plant Will Be Converted to Burn Coal,” New York Times, January 22, 1984.
[72] “Half-Built Indiana Nuclear Plant Abandoned at a $2.5 Billion Cost,” New York Times, January 17, 1984. Other troubled reactor projects cited in this article were Shoreham (Long Island Lighting Company) and Seabrook (Public Service of New Hampshire).
[73] Leslie Eaton, “Utility Trying Hard to Sell Reactors,” New York Times, July 14, 1994.
[74]Richard C.Hellman and Caroline J. C. Hellman, The Competitive Economics of Nuclear and Coal Power (Lexington, MA: LexingtonBooks, 1983), pp. 4–7. Richard Hellman (1913–2005) was a professor of economics at the University of Rhode Island.
[75] Vaclav Smil, Energy, Food, Environment: Realities, Myths, Options (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1987), p. 73. The Clinch River breeder reactor project, “the largest public works project in the US,” launched in 1971, was cancelled in 1983 after incurring $8 billion in costs. Smil, Invention and Innovation, p. 90.
[76] Jasper, Nuclear Politics, pp. 55–6.
[77] President Jimmy Carter, “Address Delivered Before a Joint Session of the Congress on the National Energy Plan,” April 20, 1977. Quoted in Jay E. Hakes, Energy Crises: Nixon, Ford, Carter, and the Hard Choices in the 1970s (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2021), p. 213. Carter’s directive against private reprocessing of spent fuel “dealt the industry one of its greatest setbacks.” Spencer, Nuclear Revolution, p. 76.
[78] Price, Political Electricity, p. 108. Price (1921–2013) was a high-ranking science advisor to the British government.
[79] The drive for mandatory open access is discussed in Robert Bradley, Enron Ascending: The Forgotten Years (Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons/Scrivener Publishing, 2018), pp. 596–605. In this makeover, utilities “unbundled” rates for transmission, versus one rate for the commodity and transmission-distribution services.
[80] Cohn, Too Cheap to Meter, p. 47. See ibid., p. 104–5 for cost forecasting errors.
[81] Spencer, Nuclear Revolution, p. 19. These numbers came from the Energy Information Administration (US Department of Energy).
[83] Michael Shellenberger, Apocalypse Never: Why Environmental Alarmism Hurts Us All (New York: HarperCollins, 2020), p. 151.
[84] Petr Beckmann, The Health Hazards of Not Going Nuclear (Boulder, CO: Golem Press, 1979, 1976), p. i. The damage and cleanup at TMI cost $1 billion, and 35 nuclear utilities formed the self-financed Nuclear Electric Insurance Limited, a step toward self-help. Jasper, Nuclear Politics, pp. 212.
[85] Kaku and Trainor, Nuclear Power: Both Sides, p. 84.
[86] Smil, Energy Myths and Realities, p. 37. Seventy coal plants were cancelled in this period too. Terence Price, Political Electricity: What Future for Nuclear Energy? (New York: Oxford University Press, 1990), p. 10.
[87] Quoted in Kaku and Trainor, Nuclear Power: Both Sides, p. 84.
[88] Price, Political Electricity, pp. 227–28.
[89] “Standardization [of design] requires industrial collaboration, and that has been discouraged by US anti-trust law. Without standardization not only do construction costs go up—almost every reactor is a ‘one off’ prototype—but climbing the learning curve, which is essential for safety, is also delayed.” Price, Political Electricity, p. 12.
[90] Smil, Energies, p. 152. Also see Richard Hellman and Caroline J. C. Hellman, The Competitive Economics of Nuclear and Coal Power, p. 7.
[91] For five alternative technologies that were not tried, losing out to Rickover’s light-water reactor, see Thomas H. Lee, Ben C. Ball Jr., and Richard D. Tabors, Energy Aftermath: How We can Learn from the Blunders of the Past to Create a Hopeful Energy Future (Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press, 1990), p. 84.
[92] Cohn, Too Cheap to Meter, p. 109. Also see Hellman and Hellman, The Competitive Economics of Nuclear and Coal Power, pp. 17–18. “Historically, the process of decommissioning takes decades and cost estimates are often in excess of $1 billion.” Ramana, Nuclear Is Not the Solution, p. 118.
[93] Rees, Hostages of Each Other, p. 17.
[94] Clark, Energy for Survival, pp. 289–90.
[95] Rees, Hostages of Each Other, p. 15.
[96] Carl Walske, Atomic Industrial Forum. Quoted in Rees, Hostages of Each Other, p. 18.
[97] Lee, Ball, and Tabors, Energy Aftermath, p. 88.
[98] Smil, Energy Myths and Realities, pp. 42–43.
[99] Smil, Energy Myths and Realities, p. 43. In 1998 dollars, the nuclear take was $145 billion. In 2025 dollars, this would be about $300 billion.
[100] Victor Gilinsky, Nuclear Regulatory Commission (1982). Quoted in Hellman and Hellman, The Competitive Economics of Nuclear and Coal Power, p. 3.
[101] Hellman and Hellman, The Competitive Economics of Nuclear and Coal Power, p. 17.
[102] Tucker, Terrestrial Energy, p. 280.
[103] Jasper, Nuclear Politics, pp. 108–9.
[104] Jack Devanney, Why Nuclear Power Has Been a Flop (Stevenson, WA: CTX Press, 2022), p. 213.
[105] Shellenberger, Apocalypse Never, p. 161.
[106] Spencer, Nuclear Revolution, p. 73.
[107] Spencer, Nuclear Revolution, p. 73.
[108] A. B. Lovins, Soft Energy Paths: Toward a Durable Peace (San Francisco, CA: Friends of the Earth, 1977), chap. 2. Lovins would coin the term negawatts to quantify the electricity not used.
[109] Smil, Energy, Food, Environment, p. 73.
[110] Arnold P. Fickett, Clark W. Gellings, and Amory B. Lovins, “Efficient Use of Electricity,” Scientific American, September 1990, p. 31.
[111] Price, Political Electricity, p. 13.
[112] Lee, Ball, and Tabors, Energy Aftermath, p. 84.
[113] Cohn, Too Cheap to Meter, p. 116. Cohn estimated the forecasting error at $0.04 per kWh, and government subsidies at several cents per kWh. Ibid., p. 123.
[114] Cohn, Too Cheap to Meter, p. 97.
[115] Cohn, Too Cheap to Meter, p. 105.
[116] Cohn, Too Cheap to Meter, p. 107.
[117] Cohn, Too Cheap to Meter, p. 105.
[118]Hellman and Hellman, The Competitive Economics of Nuclear and Coal Power, p. 158. This was the last sentence of their book.
[119] Lee, Ball, and Tabors, Energy Aftermath, pp. 88–89.
[120] Mazuzan and Walker, Controlling the Atom, pp. 29–30.
[121] Mazuzan and Walker, Controlling the Atom, p. 215.
[122] Mazuzan and Walker, Controlling the Atom, pp. 56–58.
[123] Wellock, Safe Enough? p. xiii. AEC was focused on new-generation design. Bupp and Derian, Light Water, p. 51.
[124] Wellock, Safe Enough? p. 16.
[125] Wellock, Safe Enough? p. 17.
[126] Bernard L. Cohen, The Nuclear Energy Option: An Alternative for the 90s (New York: Plenum Press, 1990), p. 152.
[127] Metzger, The Atomic Establishment, p. 15.
[128] Metzger, The Atomic Establishment, p. 17.
[129] Jasper, Nuclear Politics, p. 57.
[130] Aaron Wildavsky, Searching for Safety (New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Books, 1988), pp. 21, 53.
[131] Wildavsky, Searching for Safety, p. 54.
[132] Wildavsky, Searching for Safety, p. 134.
[133] Wildavsky, Searching for Safety, pp. 206–207.
[134] Price, Political Electricity, pp. 114, 105, 115. In the 1970s, construction time swelled to ten years or more. Spencer, Nuclear Revolution, p. 74.
[135] Rees, Hostages of Each Other, pp. 19–20.
[136] Rees, Hostages of Each Other, pp. 21, 20, 23.
[137]Nuclear Powerplant Design Standardization. Hearings Before the Subcommittee on Energy Conservation and Power of the Committee on Energy and Commerce, House of Representatives, 99th Cong., 1st sess. (July 25, December 10, 1985), p. 165 (Statement of John H. Crowley, manager of advanced engineering, United Engineers and Contractors).
[138]Nuclear Powerplant Design Standardization, p. 207 (Crowley). Wildavsky noted in regard to nuclear power that increasing safety in one area may lead to decreased safety in another area….” Searching for Safety, p. 137.
[139]Nuclear Powerplant Design Standardization, pp. 165, 166 (Crowley). Crowley listed 11 areas of requirement (Crowley, p. 178).
[140] Price, Political Electricity, p. 9.
[141] Price, Political Electricity, p. 54. This is a view that Price completely rejects, pp. 294–295.
[142] Price, Political Electricity, p. 170. Again, this is a view Price himself rejects.
[143] See, generally, Charles Seife, Sun in a Bottle: The Strange History of Fusion and the Science of Wishful Thinking (New York: Viking, 2008). The 40-year-old International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER) project cannot even be seen as a backstop technology for electrical generation. Seife is a professor of journalism at New York University.
[144] US Department of Energy, National Energy Strategy (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1991/1992), p. 13.
[145]National Energy Strategy, p. 108. Nuclear generated electricity of 9.9 cents per kWh was envisioned to fall to 6.6 cents, “comparable to other sources.” National Energy Strategy, p. 109.
[146] Statement by the National Coal Association to the JCAE. Quoted in Nucleonics 21, no. 5 (May 1963), p. 21. Quoted in Cohn, Too Cheap to Meter, pp. 50–51.
[147] Vaclav Smil, Natural Gas: Fuel for the 21st Century (Sussex, UK: Wiley, 2015), p. 83. Robert H. Williams and Eric D. Larson, “Power Generation with Natural Gas-Fired Gas Turbines,” in Natural Gas: Its Role and Potential in Economic Development, ed. Walter Vergara et al. (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1990), p. 138.
[148] Smil, Natural Gas, pp. 83–84.
[149] Smil, Natural Gas, p. 85. Also see Bradley, Enron Ascending, p, 165.
[150] Lee, Ball, and Tabors, Energy Aftermath, p. 128.
[151] Lee, Ball, and Tabors, Energy Aftermath, pp. 128, 137.
[152] Helen Caldicott, Nuclear Power Is Not the Answer (New York: The New Press, 2006), p. 129.
[153]National Energy Policy, Report of the National Energy Policy Development Group (May 2001), Appendix One, Chapter 5. Nuclear critics noted how Bush downplayed global warming except to promote nuclear power.
[154] Caldicott, Nuclear Power Is Not the Answer, p. 129.
[155] Spencer, Nuclear Revolution, pp. 56–57.
[156] Alan M. Herbst and George W. Hopley, Nuclear Energy Now (Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, 2007), p. 30. A similarly sized coal plant was estimated to cost $1.2 billion, and a combined cycle gas plant $500 million, with construction in three-to-four years.
[157] Spencer, Nuclear Revolution, p. 57. The cost of the two plants is closer to $40 billion when the Westinghouse loss (bankruptcy) is included.
[158] Spencer, Nuclear Revolution, p. 92. “Subsides undermine the two things that any successful commercial enterprise requires,” he added, “a concrete grasp of the current market and an ability to prepare for a future that is essentially unknowable.” Spencer, Nuclear Revolution, p. 93.
[159] Spencer, Nuclear Revolution, p. 70. The Production Tax Credit and Investment Tax Credit allowed wind and solar to enter the grid and lower rates and margins for legacy nuclear capacity.
[160] Peter Z. Grossman, US Energy Policy and the Pursuit of Failure (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2013), p. 319.
[161] Quoted in Ramana, Nuclear Is Not the Solution, p. 159.
[162] Price, Political Electricity, p. 297.
[163] Spencer, Nuclear Revolution, p. 106.
[164] Ramana, Nuclear Is Not the Solution, p. 202.
[165] Smil, Invention and Innovation, p. 90.
[166] U.S. Department of Energy, “9 Key Takeaways from President Trump’s Executive Orders on Nuclear Energy,” June 10, 2025.
[167] Spencer, Nuclear Revolution, p. 107.
[168] Spencer Kimball, “Michigan Nuclear Plant Shows the Challenges the US Will Face in Safely Restarting Old Reactors,” CNBC, March 22, 2025.
[169] Spencer, Nuclear Revolution, p. 72.
[170] Lee, Ball, Tabors, Energy Aftermath, p. 126.
[171] Rees, Hostages of Each Other, p. ix.
[172] Rees, Hostages of Each Other, p. 20.
[173] Rees, Hostages of Each Other, p. x.
[174] Rees, Hostages of Each Other, 43.
[175] Rees, Hostages of Each Other, p. 23, 49.
[176] Price, Political Electricity, p. 250.
[177] Daniel Yergin, The Quest: Energy, Security, and the Remaking of the Modern World(New York: Penguin Press, 2011), p. 407.
[178] “After World War II a number of big business corporations in the United States … would turn their swords into plowshares…. A type of parental priesthood developed among the scientists, engineers, and members of government agencies such as the old Atomic Energy Commission.” Karl Z. Morgan, “Underestimating the Risks,” Nuclear Power: Both Sides, p. 44.
[179] Roger Koppl, Expert Failure (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2018), pp. 189, 222.
[180] Kaku and Trainor, Nuclear Power: Both Sides, p. 57.
[181] Koppl, Expert Failure, pp. 7, 236. He posits (p. 11), “the division of knowledge must be at the center of a theory of experts.”
[182] Koppl, Expert Failure, p. 203.
[183] Koppl, Expert Failure, pp. 159, 197. His “ecology of expertise” (p. 159) encompasses biases and conflicts of interest between the “pure truth seekers” and the “willful frauds” (pp. 154–55).
[184] Koppl, Expert Failure, p. 237.
[185] Cohn, Too Cheap to Meter, p. 319.
[186] Spencer, Nuclear Revolution, p. 146.
[187] Spencer, Nuclear Revolution, p. 40.
[188] Smil, Energy Myths and Realities, p. 43 n47.
[189] Lee, Ball, and Tabors, Energy Aftermath, p. 212.
[190] Smil, Invention and Innovation, p. 92. Also see Smil, Energy Myths and Realities, p. 42.
[191] Kaku and Trainor, Nuclear Power: Both Sides, p. 250.
[192] Ludwig von Mises, Human Action (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1949), p. 510.
President Donald Trump’s renewed push to acquire Greenland is now framed not as a novelty or negotiating stunt, but as a foreign policy and national security imperative. Administration officials argue that Greenland’s Arctic location, proximity to emerging shipping lanes, and potential role in countering Russian and Chinese influence make US control strategically essential.
That framing has now been paired with explicit economic pressure: in a recent social media post on Saturday, January 17, 2026, Mr. Trump announced that Denmark — the sovereign power over Greenland — will face a 10 percent tariff on all goods exported to the United States beginning February 1, with the rate rising to 25 percent on June 1 if Denmark does not agree to a “Complete and Total purchase of Greenland.” He further stated that Norway, Sweden, France, Germany, Britain, the Netherlands, and Finland — NATO allies that have expressed solidarity with Denmark — will be subjected to the same escalating tariffs unless they relent.
Even granting the strategic premise, the proposal collapses under basic economic reasoning. The problem is not subtle. It lies in valuation, incentives, and the institutional foundations that make both markets and geopolitics workable.
Valuation, Optionality, and Contradictions
Supporters of the acquisition often cite estimates suggesting Greenland holds between roughly $2 trillion and $4 trillion i n natural resources, including rare earth elements, hydrocarbons, and other critical minerals. At the same time, media reports and policy commentary have floated a hypothetical purchase price in the range of approximately $500 billion to $800 billion. Taken together, these two claims reveal a glaring contradiction.
Natural resources are not cash balances. They represent long-dated option value: future streams of potential revenue that may or may not be realized depending on extraction costs, infrastructure investment, environmental constraints, political consent, and commodity prices. From an asset-pricing perspective, the relevant concept is net present value (NPV). Even after aggressive discounting for uncertainty, time, and development costs, the expected present value of trillions of dollars in underlying resources would still far exceed a one-time payment at a steep discount.
Put differently, if Greenland truly contains assets worth multiple trillions of dollars, then even a willing seller would have no rational incentive to part with it for $500 to 800 billion. Strategic assets with long horizons and geopolitical relevance command premiums, not bargain prices. The administration’s argument defeats itself: the more economically valuable Greenland is claimed to be, the less plausible a discounted sale becomes. If Greenland were a firm, no board would approve selling the entire enterprise for a fraction of its discounted asset value simply because a buyer found it strategically useful. Sovereign assets follow precisely the same logic.
The Symmetry Test
Even setting aside valuation, the Greenland proposal fails a more basic test: symmetry. If historical ties, strategic relevance, and latent economic value were sufficient grounds for territorial acquisition, then several European powers could assert claims to US territory with equal legitimacy.
Spain governed Florida, Texas, and much of the American Southwest for centuries. France once controlled the Louisiana territory, sold under geopolitical pressure in 1803, which now represents tens of trillions of dollars in economic value. Britain administered the original colonies and left behind enduring legal and institutional frameworks. Russia sold Alaska in 1867 for a sum that dramatically undervalued its eventual strategic and resource significance, particularly in today’s Arctic context.
Yet no serious policymaker treats these historical facts as grounds for modern claims. The reason is economic as much as legal. Once sovereignty becomes contingent on strategic usefulness or newly discovered resource value, borders lose durability. Risk premia rise. Long-term investment becomes fragile everywhere. The modern economic order depends on the expectation that territorial arrangements are not perpetually renegotiable under pressure.
Tariffs as Coercion: A Misuse of Trade Policy
The Trump administration’s sharp turn back toward mercantilism was initially justified as a necessary response to claims that the United States had been systematically mistreated by trading partners, hollowed out by unfair competition, and weakened by chronic trade imbalances. That same framework now appears to license something more troubling: the use of economic pressure as a form of geopolitical arm-twisting — leaving governments around the world to wonder what assertions Washington might make next — while the balance of trade and the cost of living for American households hang in the balance.
As mentioned, the Trump administration has floated tariffs against Denmark and other European Union governments if they refuse to cooperate. This reflects a persistent misunderstanding of trade economics. Tariffs are not fines paid by foreign governments; they are taxes borne largely by domestic consumers and firms. Using tariffs as leverage in a territorial dispute would raise costs for US businesses, invite retaliation, and disrupt transatlantic supply chains.
Denmark is neither an isolated counterparty nor a lonely national pariah, and any punitive action would almost certainly provoke coordinated EU responses. From a strategic standpoint, this is self-defeating. If the goal is to strengthen US geopolitical positioning in the Arctic, alienating allies through trade coercion weakens, rather than enhances, that stance. Economically, it introduces uncertainty (not, unfortunately, an unfamiliar consequence of this administration’s policies), raises the cost of capital, and undermines trade relationships the United States itself depends on.
The Cost of Norm Erosion
The administration’s most serious defense of the Greenland gambit is national security. But even here, the logic is mislaid, with severe economic consequences.
Modern economies rely on stable borders and predictable sovereignty. Foreign direct investment, infrastructure finance, and long-term capital allocation all assume that territory is not subject to purchase or coercive transfer. When a major power signals otherwise, perceived geopolitical risk rises, particularly for smaller states. That risk translates directly into higher borrowing costs, reduced investment, and slower growth. Ironically, the erosion of these norms weakens the very strategic environment the policy claims to protect. And international moves one may have never expected to see are materializing with rapidity.
People Are Not Balance-Sheet Items
Finally, Greenland is not some unoccupied resource cache. It is home to a population with political institutions, cultural identity, and stated preferences. Treating territory as a tradable asset abstracts away governance and consent, precisely the factors that determine whether resource wealth becomes long-run prosperity or stagnation.
Even if one accepts the administration’s claim that Greenland holds genuine strategic importance, the proposed means of acquisition are outside the pale of conduct and economically indefensible. The valuation logic violates basic NPV reasoning, the tariff threats misuse an already tattered US trade policy, and the broader approach undermines the fundamental institutional norms that support economic stability and growth. Economic realism requires coherence, not spectacle. On those grounds, the Greenland push is not a hard-nosed or well-calculated stratagem. Dismissing it as ridiculous is accurate, but not sufficiently analytical: it represents a fundamental, deeply troubling misread of the way in which assets, incentives, and institutions interact and work.
In his latest book, The Heir, author Matthew Palumbo provides a well-researched exposé of the left-wing globalist network developed by billionaire George Soros and the recent hand-off to his son, Alex. Palumbo chronicles Alex Soros’ assumption of his father’s political activism empire and his continuation of his father’s activist path, perhaps even more radical and brazenly public.
Born in 1985, Alex grew up in a 14-room estate in an upscale New York City suburb. He attended an elite private school where tuition for the 2024–25 school year exceeds $50,000.Alex succeeded his father as chair of George’s primary philanthropic organization, the Open Society Foundations (OSF), in December 2022. George, one of the most successful hedge fund managers in history, founded OSF in 1993 to support his philanthropic and political causes.
Alex had started his own foundation in 2012, the Alex Soros Foundation (ASF), that would be a strong indicator of how he would run OSF. From 2012 to 2021, ASF gave most of its $8.8 million in donations to environmental groups and almost half to hardcore leftist groups.
After assuming control of OSF, Alex reallocated much of the group’s resources away from Europe and toward the “global south.” Alex continued, however, George’s longstanding involvement in Ukraine and Albania in an effort to change those countries’ judicial systems to benefit left-wing political positions. The younger Soros also aggressively pushed support for environmental activist groups, announcing a $400 million commitment to support “economic and climate prosperity” in the global south.
Palumbo references a study by the Media Research Group that OSF donated the enormous amount of $193.9 million to 347 radical climate change activist groups from 2016 to 2023 under both George and Alex. But with the additional $425 million in donations referenced above, that amount increased to a whopping $618.9 million.
Aside from his massive monetary support for climate activism, Alex has also become a major donor to left-wing political groups and Democratic Party candidates at the highest levels. He donated tens of millions of dollars to Democratic candidates in 2020, including $720,000 to the Joe Biden presidential campaign. Alex’s donations enabled him to gain dozens of visits to the White House throughout the Biden presidency.
Palumbo writes that after the 2020 election, the incoming Biden administration engaged 17 members of OSF and other Soros-funded organizations to serve on the new administration’s transition teams. This enabled OSF to propagate its left-wing ideology across the State Department, the US Mission to the United Nations, the Defense Department, the National Security Council, the Treasury Department, the Labor Department, the Interior Department, the Federal Reserve, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, banking and securities regulators, and others. Some of these transition team members stayed on for positions in the Biden administration.
President Biden’s first chief of staff, Ron Klain, served on the board of the prominent leftist lobbying group, the American Progress Action Fund, whose largest donor has been the OSF-linked Open Society Action Fund.
Turning to foreign affairs, Palumbo’s book explores the long history of George’s involvement in the small eastern European country of Albania and its implications for Alex. Palumbo writes that George’s claimed post-communist mission to plant the seeds of an “open society” in a depressed Albania in the 1990s has morphed into state capture by the Soros empire. With the wholesale remaking of Albania’s judiciary under his influence, George revealed his vision for a society – one that is not indifferent to its communist past with its current Socialist Party, corrupt institutions, and silenced opposition. Albania today stands as a paradox: a pro-American nation where US aid and Soros millions have created a society that contradicts the very values it claims to uphold. For Alex Soros, Albania is a proven template where his father’s vision has been realized—not as a beacon of freedom, but as one of successful outside influence.
Both George and Alex have also been involved in Ukraine, especially since Russia’s invasion of the country in February 2022. While the US government has expended hundreds of billions of dollars in support of Ukraine (both before and after the start of the war), the Soros influence in the country has gone largely unnoticed. Palumbo explains that George Soros has been engaged in Ukraine for more than 30 years, as he saw it as an opportunity to spread his vision of a so-called “open society” and a platform to attack his political adversaries in the United States.
George’s initial meddling in Ukraine began in the post-Soviet upheaval in the 1990s, and likely Alex sees a war-torn country as an opportunity to gain influence over it by funneling billions of dollars into the prospective reconstruction of the country. He has made repeated visits to Kyiv to meet with Zelenskyy. Palumbo states that this pattern indicates more than charitable philanthropy; that it shows an attempt by Alex to proactively establish OSF influence over the country whenever a post-war reconstruction may occur. The most recent OSF data shows a 2023 funding budget for Ukraine of roughly $19 million. Since 1991, George and Alex have spent $230 million in Ukraine.
The one federal agency that probably best exemplifies the Soros influence in the United States government is the US Agency for International Development (USAID). Palumbo states that George has had a working relationship with USAID since at least 1993. Notable early cases of Soros’ involvement with USAID include his International Renaissance Foundation, partnering with it to support Ukraine’s “Orange Revolution” (November 2004 to January 2005). Another was the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP), which was one of the groups cited in the (first) attempt to impeach President Trump.
Also, the East-West Management Institute – the Soros family’s most influential group in Albania – had taken $270 million from USAID. In addition to using USAID for projects advancing his interests, George himself has rewritten the rules to allow USAID political funding under the heading of “humanitarian aid.”
During the Obama years, USAID partnered with George to promote policies abroad that served no clear American interests. It was at this time that USAID started tying development funding to countries that aligned with leftist social causes, such as promoting LGBTQ rights, legalizing prostitution, and decriminalizing drugs. Much of the money purportedly ended up directly in Soros’ hands.
After the revelations in early 2025 about USAID’s reckless funding of leftist causes, Alex tried to deny USAID was funding OSF. In February 2025, OSF issued a public statement refuting claims that OSF was funded by USAID or was directing its funding. Only a few months earlier, however, OSF had issued a press release boasting about one of its major education development projects, the Central European University, being funded by USAID with commitments through 2032 and beyond.
USAID has now been effectively shut down, with over 5,000 programs terminated and $30 billion in funding ended. Palumbo describes this as not just a setback for Alex and OSF, but a gut punch. The money machine was unplugged.
Near the end of his book, Palumbo examines Alex’s first year as OSF chairman (in 2023) by reviewing OSF’s largest grants. Because of the high volume of grants made in 2023, a total of 2,166, Palumbo divides the grants into five main categories: (1) fund of funds (meaning OSF funds groups who fund other groups); (2) think tanks; (3) voter mobilization groups; (4) news media; and (5) civic engagement groups. The table below shows OSF’s largest grants in 2023 for each of the five recipient categories:
Recipient Type
Recipient Name
Recipient Description
Grant Amount
Fund of funds
Sixteen Thirty Fund
The “hub of dark money spending on the Left.” Administered by Arabella Advisors.
$13,665,000
Think tanks
New America Foundation
Progressive think tank focused on five core policy areas: technology and democracy, family economic security, people and planet-centered politics, education from birth to workforce, and political reform and civic cohesion.
$5,000,000
Voter mobilization
America Votes
Nonprofit political organization established to advance progressive policies and increase voter turnout for Democratic Party candidates.
$4,400,000
News media
Courier Newsroom
Operates 11 news outlets, primarily in swing states, with political content intended to support Democratic Party candidates.
$15,000,000
Civic engagement
Accelerate Action, Inc.
Develops and tests models for citizen organizing that can move people to take action, particularly in communities of color.
$12,600,000
In short, Alex is funding the same kind of leftist groups that his father always had.
Palumbo outlines the incredible influence and control that the Soros empire has over the major media. From 2004 to 2011, George spent nearly $50 million funding about 180 American media organizations, and “news infrastructure,” such as journalism schools and media industry organizations. The Media Research Center has found Soros links at over thirty mainstream news outlets.
Palumbo concludes his book with the following comments about Alex Soros:
The new Soros is just like the old Soros, and the only ways they differ are the ways in which Alex is even more radical, and that, unlike his father, he’s openly boasting about his influence. The Soros agenda is still globalism.
Palumbo’s The Heir serves as a warning that well-connected actors with enormous financial resources can buy political influence and steer government funding towards their own ideological objectives and personal enrichment. It highlights the need for greater transparency and accountability in our public institutions.
Tempting as it may be, I have no business assigning homework to readers of The Daily Economy. Perhaps, however, I can inspire with enthusiasm.
Every year on the Fourth of July, while others are already enjoying grilled meat and fireworks, I reread the Declaration of Independence. This year’s reading, on the Declaration’s 250th anniversary, will be particularly special. I love the simple and elegant bridge that Thomas Jefferson constructed between abstract political philosophy and applied constitutionalism.
“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.” There is the philosophy, a pithy distillate of the Enlightenment. Applied politics follows: “to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed.” The rest is magnificent. But it is secondary.
Alas, it’s become too fashionable to bash the American Founding, and jettison its myriad achievements because it wasn’t perfect, and its bounty did not extend immediately to all.
The 1619 Project is one such example, initially the 2019 brainchild of The New York Times and a flagrant example of yellow journalism that puts impressionism and ideology over historical accuracy. The Project’s main attempt at historical revisionism is twofold. First, it contends that America was born in sin – the sin of slavery – rather than conceived in liberty, with slavery as a disgraceful part of an overall noble project.
Second, it claims that American history did not begin in 1776 (with the Declaration of Independence), but in 1619 (the year the first African slaves arrived in Virginia). Among other outlandish claims, the Project claims that the American Revolution was fought primarily to preserve slavery. Prominent historians have condemned the 1619 Project (which was led by a journalist, rather than a professional historian).
Setting aside the avoidance of careful scholarship to fit an ideological bias, there is a deeper problem: the Project’s emphasis on slavery is divisive and misses the point about the Enlightenment and its promise. Slavery is a stain on American history, of course – but it does not encapsulate American history.
The American Founding as Part of the Bigger Enlightenment Project
Consider the Enlightenment – an intellectual, then a political, revolution. This radical shift gradually moved humanity from the Ancient and Medieval pre-modern world to the modern world. In the pre-modern world, individuals were born with a specific role in the grand order of things: kings ruled, nobles supported the king and defended the commoners, and commoners worked for the noble on whose estate they were born. With the modern turn, the divine right of kings gave way to constitutions, hereditary privilege gave way to democracy, a static world order gave way to meritocracy, and superstitious fear of nature was replaced by the scientific method and technology. As with any intellectual and political change, the process was not immediate. The Enlightenment is generally considered to have taken place between the mid-17th century and the early 19th century. But the process was gradual. And it is still unfolding.
French serfs were formally liberated in 1789, with ripples across Eastern Europe over the next half-century. Russian serfs were not legally emancipated until 1861, then debts kept them tied to the nobles’ land until the 1917 Revolution (and their lot hardly improved under the communist dictatorship). American women did not gain the national right to vote until 1920, with the Nineteenth Amendment. Their French sisters had to wait until 1946, the Portuguese until 1976, and those in the recalcitrant Swiss Canton of Appenzell Innerrhoden until 1991. Today, women’s suffrage is shaky, at best, in Pakistan, Afghanistan, or Qatar. Slavery, which had existed since biblical times and throughout the Ancient world (much as we ballyhoo the achievements of the Greeks and Romans), was abolished by Britain in 1833, the French Empire in 1848, the US in 1865, and Brazil in 1888; Libya, Mauritania and North Korea still have open slavery, and more than 40 million people in the world were recently estimated to be in some form of involuntary servitude. Today, many humans still lack access to global markets, just as half the countries in the world are not (yet) democracies. The Enlightenment is still a work in progress.
Though incomplete, the Enlightenment has astonishingly bolstered human flourishing. Before 1800, effectively 100 percent of humanity was poor (sure, some had gold or land, but none had modern plumbing or medicine, air travel or modern dentistry). Before 1776, no part of the world lived in a constitutional democracy. In 1900, the percentage was about 10 percent (but there was no universal female suffrage). By 2000, with the fall of the Soviet Empire, about 63 percent of the countries in the world were democracies. Alongside this progress, economic freedom continued to expand, with China’s partial experiment with markets, the relaxation of India’s licensing Raj, and globalization. In 2015, for the first time, the world’s extreme poverty fell below 10 percent (unfortunately, it has plateaued since then, as the world endures a decade of democratic backsliding, and a post-COVID drop in economic freedom).
The success story of the last 250 years is the same as the remaining challenge: more and more people, in more and more countries, have been brought into the fold of the Enlightenment. But many remain excluded.
Martin Luther King and the Enlightenment
One of the many groups that has been – and continues to be – incorporated only slowly into the Enlightenment Project is black Americans. Most arrived enslaved, just as the Enlightenment was starting to question the old ways. Slavery ended in 1865; the Fifteenth Amendment (1869) prohibited the denial of the right to vote on the grounds of race, color, or previous servitude. But it was not until the 1950s and 1960s that the Jim Crow establishment was dismantled. And disparities remain. The poverty rate for Black Americans (about 19 percent) is much higher than the poverty rate for white Americans (about seven percent). The average net household wealth for the former is about nine times lower than the latter. The unemployment rate for Blacks is twice as high as for Whites, with the median household income half. Blacks constitute 38 percent of federal inmates (for 12 percent of the population), with Whites at 57 percent (for 63 percent of the population).
Alas, many responses to these discrepancies are as facile as they are wrong-headed. They follow the ideological tenor of the 1619 Project: blame racism and the legacy of slavery. Focus on DEI hires and quotas. Emphasize division, rather than unity. Implement yet another federal program, rather than boldly unfettering markets.
Despite the astonishing gains in human flourishing, such critics are rejecting the Enlightenment project and the American Experiment as fundamentally flawed. By contrast, Martin Luther King embraced the Enlightenment and called for more of it (he did support affirmative action and other race-based policies, but only as a temporary measure, and not as a fundamental philosophy). He had a dream, as expressed in his 1963 speech:
I have a dream that one day on the red hills of Georgia, sons of former slaves and the sons of former slave-owners will be able to sit down together at the table of brotherhood…
I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character. . .
I have a dream that one day in Alabama, with its vicious racists, with its governor having his lips dripping with the words of interposition and nullification, one day right there in Alabama little black boys and black girls will be able to join hands with little white boys and white girls as sisters and brothers…
This will be the day when all of God’s children will be able to sing with new meaning: “My country, ’tis of thee, sweet land of liberty, of thee I sing. Land where my fathers died, land of the pilgrim’s pride, from every mountain side, let freedom ring.”
In that same speech, Martin Luther King embraced the American Founding, the Declaration of Independence, and, a fortiori, the Enlightenment itself. Rather than rejecting it, he demanded that hitherto excluded Black Americans be included:
In a sense we’ve come to our nation’s capital to cash a check. 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. . . .
I say to you today, my friends, though, even though we face the difficulties of today and tomorrow, I still have a dream. It is a dream deeply rooted in the American dream. I have a dream that one day this nation will rise up, live out the true meaning of its creed: “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal.
Sadly, six decades later, Martin Luther King’s dream has not come to full fruition.
Dream to Reality: The Work That Remains
Space prohibits a full assessment of poverty and race in America.
I blame a failed K-12 government-run educational system. I blame invasive policing and runaway legislation, under which Americans unwittingly commit three felonies a day. I blame federal regulations, which cost 10 percent of GDP in annual compliance, and have a disparate impact on the poorest Americans. And, yes, I blame lingering racism – the ugly, old-fashioned kind, but also the racism of DEI, affirmative action, and targeted federal programs. As Ayn Rand so crisply wrote, “Racism is the lowest, most crudely primitive form of collectivism. It is the notion of ascribing moral, social or political significance to a man’s genetic lineage—the notion that a man’s intellectual and characterological traits are produced and transmitted by his internal body chemistry. Which means, in practice, that a man is to be judged, not by his own character and actions, but by the characters and actions of a collective of ancestors.”
Martin Luther King was first and foremost an advocate for expanding the umbrella and bounty of the Enlightenment. But when he was assassinated in 1968 at the Lorraine Motel (a chilling museum that is well worth visiting), he was supporting workers seeking better pay. Perhaps the best way of advancing his legacy is to dismantle the administrative state and the welfare state, to bring more people, and more fully, into the promise of the Enlightenment Project. Let economic freedom ring, indeed!In the meantime, I have a second reading assignment (err… suggestion) for you, dear reader. Every year on Martin Luther King’s birthday, I reread one of his works. Usually, it’s the “I Have a Dream” speech or his Letter from the Birmingham Jail.
In a stunning development, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz dropped out of the 2026 gubernatorial race after his state was exposed for massive fraud in taxpayer-funded childcare programs. The Trump administration has halted federal childcare funding nationwide while it investigates the scope of fraud.
Independent journalists like Nick Shirley have been exposing what looks like a massive scam in taxpayer-funded childcare programs. Shirley and his team visited addresses listed as childcare centers in Minnesota — places supposedly serving vulnerable kids — and found empty lots, abandoned buildings, or no sign of any children being cared for.
Some of these operations have raked in hundreds of millions of dollars in government subsidies over just a few years, even though state databases show they’re only licensed for a handful of kids, if any at all. It’s the kind of story that makes your blood boil: hard-earned tax dollars vanishing into thin air, funneled away from those who might really need it.
And it isn’t limited to Minnesota. Internet sleuths and investigators have uncovered similar patterns in states like Washington, where childcare centers — many tied to Somali communities, as in Minnesota — have been accused of the same shady practices. What’s more, many of these centers have donated thousands to politicians, raising serious questions about where the public’s money is going. The whole thing reeks of corruption. Federal agents are now probing nationwide fraud in these programs.
But as outrageous as this daycare scam is, it’s small potatoes compared to the massive, ongoing fraud perpetrated by teachers’ unions every single year, in every state, right under our noses. These unions advocate to pour billions of taxpayer dollars into public schools, only to funnel a huge chunk back out — and into Democratic politics. It’s a closed-loop racket that’s been running for decades.
While there are key differences — the daycare fraud often involves phantom centers with no children at all and a shocking lack of state oversight, whereas public schools do have students they consistently fail to educate — the underlying incentive structure is frustratingly similar. In both cases, taxpayer dollars are poured into failing or fraudulent public initiatives, with little accountability, perpetuated by political alliances that prioritize funding over results.
In the 2024 election cycle, a staggering 99.89 percent of the campaign contributions from the American Federation of Teachers (AFT) went to Democrats. This isn’t a fluke — it’s been that way for over three decades, with the union acting as a reliable cash machine for one party. Similarly, 98.24 percent of contributions from the National Education Association (NEA) flowed to Democrats in the same cycle.
And that’s just the tip of the iceberg. The latest publicly available LM-2 report for the NEA reveals it spent more than $39 million on political activities and lobbying alone. Yet only about nine percent of their total budget went toward actually representing teachers — their supposed core mission. Keep in mind, that’s just one national union; it doesn’t include the political spending by hundreds of local affiliates across the country. For instance, the Chicago Teachers Union (CTU) has failed to produce its required audits for five years in a row now, and a congressional committee is formally investigating the CTU for violating union bylaws and federal transparency laws.
This political machinery is fueled by the enormous river of taxpayer money pouring into K–12 education: nearly a trillion dollars annually, or more than $20,000 per student. That’s your money, funding a system that’s become a political slush fund.
Prepared by Melanie Hanson for EducationData.org, February 2025.
Unions and the Democratic Party share more than just dollars and donors. In many cases, they actually overlap. NEA President Becky Pringle serves as an at-large member of the Democratic National Committee, blurring the line between union leadership and party apparatus. AFT President Randi Weingarten held a similar position for decades before stepping down last year.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, these unions lobbied the CDC to keep schools closed longer than necessary, aligning perfectly with Democrats who criticized President Trump for pushing to reopen them. Kids suffered massive learning losses while unions protected their power.
The teachers’ union scam involves laundering taxpayer dollars to Democratic politicians and wasting those dollars on schools that fail children year after year. Remember that misspelled sign at one of the alleged fraud centers in Minnesota — “Quality Learing Center“? It was probably made by a graduate of a public school controlled by the teachers’ unions, where about two-thirds of US students aren’t proficient in reading, according to the Nation’s Report Card.
In fact, only 33 percent of fourth-graders and 33 percent of eighth-graders are proficient in reading. Math fares even worse, with just 36 percent of fourth-graders and 26 percent of eighth-graders reaching proficiency. And recent reports show continued declines, with twelfth-grade math and reading scores dropping further since 2019.
In Minnesota specifically, the situation is equally dire and has only worsened. The share of eighth-graders meeting basic reading standards hit a record low in 2024, fourth-grade reading and math scores have dropped steeply since 2019, and overall proficiency rates in math and reading have reached their lowest marks in decades. Meanwhile, Education Minnesota, the state’s largest teachers’ union, hosts trainings on “Interrupting Whiteness” through their FIRE (Facing Inequities and Racism in Education) program. The guiding minds of the public school system are plainly more interested in politics than education.
To keep the scam alive, unions fight tooth and nail against school choice programs that would introduce competition. Trapping kids in their failure factories with no escape is essential to maintaining the flow of funds. Then, unions point to their own dismal results as proof they need even more taxpayer money. It’s a never-ending, vicious cycle.
The dues-to-donations kickback loop is just as insidious. Unions collect dues — from salaries they negotiate and taxpayers must fund — and pour them into Democrats’ campaigns. Those same politicians then approve bigger budgets for public schools, which means more dues for the unions, which means more campaign cash. Wash, rinse, repeat.
If we’re outraged about daycare fraud, we should be furious about the teachers’ unions’ scam. It’s time to break the cycle: empower parents with school choice, hold unions accountable, and stop the flow of tax dollars into political machines.
On top of a mountain in Yosemite in September last year, with the nation’s fiscal troubles and the size of the federal government about as far from my thoughts as could be, I would suddenly be reminded of the deeply entrenched divides of American society and contemporary politics.
As my travel companion (a highly educated, woke, fairly average Californian in her 30s) and I approached the peak, we encountered an odd-looking man in a hat. He and his half-dozen collaborators were finding the optimal camera angles and comparing the sun-blistered vistas of the surrounding mountains to century-old drawings. Our new acquaintance turned out to be a filmmaker, until recently employed by PBS.
“These guys are my friends,” he said, gesturing toward the remarkably fit crew of men roughly our age. “Because of the cuts, there’s no money for anything anymore; they’re here on their own dime, helping to make this documentary happen.”
Our hat-wearing filmmaker and my friend looked at each other with quick, pained smiles and “hmm” that only two artsy, big-government types can, the words “tragedy” and “cultural decline” visible across their faces. And there we stood, lamenting in no uncertain terms the “destruction of America” that a sum — all $1 billion of it, spent by the federal government in about an hour — had needlessly brought to our attention. What’s a billion among friends, when the federal government dashes out seven thousand such billions every year?
I’m reminded of that moment as the Corporation for Public Broadcasting this month finally threw in the towel, having had its allocated money cut and canceled in July. The House and Senate attributed the move to a request from the White House and a lingering consequence of DOGE.
CPB was set up by Congress in 1967 to foster educational programming and has acted as a public body of media subsidy ever since. Most of its revenues flow directly to local radio and TV stations (of which NPR affiliates and PBS member stations are the most recognizable).
From its beginning to its whimpering end, many observers inside and outside government considered it vital to facilitate, in the words of its current president and CEO, “trustworthy, educational, and community-centered media” free of commercial interests. In the digital era of the 2020s, you’d think technologies including the internet, having dramatically lowered the bar for all such efforts, have readily achieved that. Besides, whether Republican or Democrat, Americans’ trust in local or national news organizations has fallen by double-digits in a decade. Why pay for a thing you don’t trust?
DOGE, the brief effort in the spring of 2025 to cut government waste and shrink the deficit, has mostly failed and fallen out of favor. There was a brief, shallow moment when proposing to cut government spending was cool: Elon Musk wielded the memetic chainsaw, a poor impersonation of Argentina’s Javier Milei, and Mr. Trump spoke of “tremendous waste” and “bad spending.” Of course, that impetus didn’t last too long. The total waste cut from the outsized federal government amounted to a rounding error, of which CPB might become the most lasting icon.
The estimated savings involved are strangely disproportionate to the outsized media and political reaction it garnered. We spent six months or more viciously arguing over, and ultimately passing, a bill, that did nothing but marginally shift around some of the vast funds coming out of DC.
The political-media industrial complex, which idolizes all things public and taxpayer-funded, howled in pain. Lots of words about “democratic values” and the integrity of the media system were thrown around. But less, if anything, was said about whether taxpayers ought be forced to bankroll radio programs and TV shows they don’t consume — or at least don’t value enough to pay for.
As a fiscal business, if you’re not touching entitlement programs (Medicaid, Medicare, VA benefits) or the defense budget — and there’s nothing you can do about the interest on the national debt — you’re out of luck for reining in the runaway train that is the federal government.
As a deficit-fighting funding cut, the CPB money is irrelevant — keep it or don’t, it matters not. As a political signal of the government’s role in society, it’s weak but perhaps directionally laudable. As a measure to filter out supporters and opponents of “owning the libs,” it’s ingenious.
You could probably predict a person’s political leanings from their reactions to whether or not the government ought to be funding media outlets. My friend and the PBS filmmaker were certainly upset about it. Given these relative truths, the move reeks of political revenge rather than pragmatic politics. Remarked Jesse Walker for Reason, “Sometimes the king would rather lop off a head than watch someone bend the knee.”
CPB claimed to be the single-largest funding source for thousands of public radio and local TV stations, including NPR and PBS affiliates. If those media outlets provide good, valuable content, they’ll find their audience and stay in business. Why the federal government ought to provide means (read: make-work programs) for a small number of journalists and podcasters, in an era when everyone can effortlessly listen to and voluntarily support whichever show they want, makes no sense.
Financing media outlets with public money is tragically unfit for purpose, a legacy of a time when airwaves were scarce and national attention carefully gatekept. Of course, then, we should be happy to see CPB go. But it was too much political bang for too few bucks, purchased by further alienating half the country. Absent national divorce, I have no proposals for how to address that problem, but removing select media funding from Congress’s overburdened plate was not worth anybody’s time.
There are much bigger fish to fry, and a billion is, among friends, practically nothing.
The White House announced last week that it is “taking steps” to ban large institutional investors from buying single-family homes. It’s unclear whether the President has legal authority to do this without action from Congress. But setting aside that issue, let’s investigate the merits of the policy.
Many commentators have pointed out that institutional investors have such a small presence in the single-family market that it is implausible to attribute much of the recent appreciation in house prices to their activities. Institutional investors, defined as those owning 100 or more homes in their portfolios, own less than 1 percent of the single-family housing stock nationally and only about three percent of single-family homes for rent. Their purchasing activities have declined since 2022, but even at the peak the largest (1000+ homes) investors accounted for under three percent of single-family house purchases nationally. Institutional investors matter more in some markets than in others, but in no metro area do companies with 100+ home portfolios own more than five percent of the single-family stock.
What commentators have so far left unsaid is just how beneficial the small amount of institutional investment is for the American housing market. It’s not just not a big problem; it’s not a problem at all, but rather something to be welcomed.
Institutional investors help make the housing market more liquid and less cyclical. They upgrade the quality of the housing stock, typically at lower cost than smaller renovation outfits. They make desirable neighborhoods accessible for households that could not afford to buy in those neighborhoods. Increasingly, they are directly increasing housing supply.
Institutional investors first started to take interest in single-family houses in 2012, at the bottom of the last housing cycle. They are less capital-constrained than smaller investors, let alone most owner-occupiers. As a result, they are better able to use cash reserves to identify good deals and the market and buy them at prices that make sense over the long run. The ability of institutional investors to support the housing market after a financial crisis will help prevent future liquidity problems in the mortgage finance sector from spiraling into a housing crash.
Why have institutional investors only emerged as players in single-family housing so recently? Economists point to technological advances such as cloud computing and mobile connectivity that have helped with acquisition and management of single-family houses. Machine learning (artificial intelligence) may have helped develop forecast models for acquisition as well. To be sure, some buyers became overconfident in their forecast models and ended up losing a lot of money — most famously Zillow. But Zillow’s model was to buy low and sell dear, rather than manage rental properties. Most institutional investors tend to focus on particular neighborhoods or cities to reduce the per-unit costs of property management.
Mortgage underwriting standards tightened dramatically after the Great Recession, making it difficult for younger Americans and those with a lot of income from “side gigs” and self-employment to qualify. As a result, homeownership rates declined. By making more single-family homes available to renters, buy-to-rent institutional investors have helped families that could not afford to buy or qualify for a mortgage to move into desirable neighborhoods.
The most recent and careful paper on the subject finds that large institutional investors slightly raise house purchase prices and reduce rents. The effect on prices is truly tiny: for every percentage point of the total single-family housing stock owned by large institutional investors, house prices go up 1.7 percent. Since these investors own less than one percent of the single-family housing stock nationally, counterfactually eliminating all large investor ownership of single-family housing would decrease national house prices by less than 1.7 percent. And even Trump is not proposing to force investors to sell what they already own.
The effect on rents is slightly bigger: for every percentage point of the single-family rental stock that institutional investors own, rents fall 0.7 percent. Since institutional investors own about three percent of the national single-family rental stock, the total effect on rents is around negative two percent. While small investors substitute to some extent for large investors, the Coven paper still finds that large investors increase the total supply of single-family rental homes by 0.5 for every home that they purchase.
Foreclosures are a disproportionate channel by which institutional investors acquire homes. For example, INVH reported that 37 percent of the houses they acquired between September 2015 and September 2016 were from distressed sales. Typically, large investors renovate homes before renting them out. Invitation Homes reported spending about $39,000 per purchased home on renovations in 2021. Large investors may have a comparative advantage in buying and renovating homes because they have full-time teams working in specific regions according to established procedures and buying materials in bulk. Thus, large institutional investors increase the average quality of the US housing stock.
Increasingly, large institutional investors expand total housing supply directly, through build-to-rent developments. In the Q2 2024 last year, build-to-rent (BTR) developments were 7.2 percent of all single-family house starts. BTR isn’t useful for getting renter households access to desirable neighborhoods, but it is especially useful for increasing overall housing supply, decreasing both sale prices and rents because the rental and for-sale markets are connected. When BTR drives down rents through new supply on the market, that encourages some households to rent rather than buy and reduces for-sale prices for buyers of the remaining homes on the market. BTR has been especially desirable in unfreezing a housing market challenged by mortgage lock-in. Unfortunately, HUD Secretary Bill Pulte reportedly wants to crack down on BTR as well as institutional purchases of existing homes.
In the last year, housing prices have declined the most in markets where large institutional investors are concentrated. If we look at the largest 15 metro areas in the country, house prices have grown 0.5 percent in the markets with under one percent institutional ownership and fallen 3.6 percent in the markets with 1-3 percent institutional ownership. In the only market with over 3 percent ownership (Atlanta), prices have fallen 2.9 percent. While correlation does not equal causation, these data certainly cast doubt on any claims that banning institutional investment will reduce house prices.
Left- and right-wing populists that want to ban institutional ownership of single-family homes will hurt the average American if they get their way. Institutional investors are increasing housing supply and making housing markets more liquid and less volatile. They help younger families and those of modest income gain access to desirable neighborhoods. Their upward impact on prices is tiny, and could even have reversed once we consider the new impact of build-to-rent development.
Note: The December 2025 readings for both the Consumer Price Index and the Everyday Price Index should be viewed as provisional rather than definitive. A temporary government funding lapse interrupted standard federal price collection, leaving gaps that could not later be filled and forcing reliance on limited alternative inputs. Data collection resumed partway through November, restoring more normal coverage only as the month progressed.
The AIER Everyday Price Index (EPI) ended 2025 by rising a scant 0.04 percent in December, essentially flat for the month. The annual change in AIER’s EPI for 2025 was 3.02 percent versus our CPI proxy’s increase of 3.10 percent. Of its 24 constituents, December 2025 saw the prices of 15 rise, six decline, and three remain unchanged. The largest price increases within the EPI were seen in the food-at-home, food-away-from-home, and fuels and utilities categories. Motor fuel, information technology hardware and services, and alcoholic beverages at home saw the steepest declines in price.
AIER Everyday Price Index vs. US Consumer Price Index (NSA, 1987 = 100)
(Source: Bloomberg Finance, LP)
Also on January 13, 2026, the US Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) released Consumer Price Index (CPI) data for December 2025. Headline inflation rose 0.3 percent in December, meeting surveyed expectations. Core inflation rose 0.2 percent, less than the 0.3 percent that was forecast.
December 2025 US CPI headline and core month-over-month (2015 – present)
(Source: Bloomberg Finance, LP)
Consumer prices in December 2025 were shaped in part by continued firming in food costs, with overall food prices rising 0.7 percent on the month. Grocery prices posted a similar increase, as most major store categories moved higher, led by notable gains in “other food at home,” dairy products, cereals and bakery items, fruits and vegetables, and nonalcoholic beverages, while declines in meats, poultry, fish, and eggs — driven by a sharp drop in egg prices — partially offset those increases. Dining out also became more expensive, as prices for meals away from home rose 0.7 percent, reflecting higher costs at both full-service and limited-service establishments. Energy prices edged higher as well, increasing 0.3 percent in December, with a sizable jump in natural gas prices outweighing modest declines in gasoline and electricity.
Excluding food and energy, the core index advanced 0.2 percent for the month, as upward pressure from shelter, recreation, medical care, apparel, personal care, education, and airline fares more than offset declines in communication services, used vehicles, and household furnishings. Shelter costs remained a key contributor to underlying inflation, rising 0.4 percent, with rents and owners’ equivalent rent posting steady increases and lodging away from home recording a notable gain. Among other components, recreation prices surged, airline fares climbed sharply, and medical care costs rose on the back of higher hospital and physician service prices, while categories such as communication services and used vehicles continued to exert downward pressure on the overall index.
On the year-over-year side, December 2025 headline data rose to 2.7 percent, which matched forecasts. The core index, which excludes food and energy, rose 2.6 percent — slightly less than the expected 2.7 percent.
December 2025 US CPI headline and core year-over-year (2015 – present)
(Source: Bloomberg Finance, LP)
Over the twelve months from December 2024 to December 2025, food prices continued to rise at a moderate but uneven pace, with grocery costs increasing 2.4 percent overall. Within food at home, price gains were led by meats, poultry, fish, and eggs, which rose 3.9 percent, alongside notable increases in nonalcoholic beverages and other food at home, while cereals and bakery products and fruits and vegetables posted more modest advances. In contrast, dairy and related products declined slightly over the year. Prices for meals away from home increased more rapidly than grocery prices, rising 4.1 percent on a year-over-year basis, reflecting stronger gains at full-service restaurants and a more moderate increase at limited-service establishments. Energy prices also moved higher over the year, increasing 2.3 percent, as sizable advances in electricity and natural gas more than offset a decline in gasoline prices.
Over the past 12 months, shelter costs have remained a primary source of underlying inflation in the core index, increasing 3.2 percent. Additional upward pressure came from medical care, household furnishings and operations, recreation, and personal care, all of which posted solid year-over-year gains, reinforcing the persistence of price increases across a broad set of service-oriented categories.
December’s CPI report reinforced the idea that the October-November release’s softer inflation reading was not merely a statistical fluke but part of a broader cooling pattern, particularly in goods prices. Headline inflation rose modestly on the month, while core inflation again came in below expectations, leaving both measures unchanged on a year-over-year basis at roughly the mid-2 percent range. A key takeaway was that core goods prices remained flat, driven in part by further declines in used vehicle prices and broad-based price cuts in tariff-exposed categories including appliances, electronics, and certain household goods. That pattern aligns closely with private sector tracking of online prices, which suggests that tariff passthroughs peaked in early autumn and have since faded. While food prices accelerated in December 2025 — especially for both grocery and restaurant categories — and energy made a small positive contribution, the broader inflation picture increasingly reflects stabilization rather than renewed pressure.
Service prices remain the central battleground. Shelter costs rebounded modestly in December after being artificially restrained by shutdown-related data distortions in the fall, but rent and owners’ equivalent rent increases remained consistent with their average pace for the year. Outside of housing, service price pressures were mixed: travel-related categories such as hotels and airfares bounced back following the end of the government shutdown, while medical services rose steadily, reflecting persistent labor cost pressures in healthcare. Importantly, measures closely watched by the Federal Reserve — such as services inflation excluding housing and energy — continued to trend lower on a year-over-year basis, suggesting underlying progress even as monthly readings fluctuate. At the same time, consumers remain acutely aware of specific high-profile price pressures, most notably in food. Beef prices reached new records in December, driven by structural supply constraints in the cattle industry and resilient demand that may be reinforced by new dietary guidelines emphasizing protein, underscoring how individual categories can feel inflationary even as overall price growth moderates.
The December data reinforce a cautious but increasingly constructive outlook. Federal Reserve officials are widely expected to hold rates steady at their January meeting, preferring to see several more months of confirmation that inflation is leveling off rather than reaccelerating. Financial markets, meanwhile, interpreted the report with some ambivalence: equities rallied briefly on the cooling signal, but bond yields and rate expectations moved little, reflecting lingering uncertainty about whether recent softness represents a durable signal or informationless noise. Still, the broader message from December is that inflation dynamics are becoming more balanced, and that as of now tariff effects appear to have largely run their course. Core goods prices remain subdued and real wage growth has turned positive, both setting the stage for gradual easing later in the year if labor market conditions soften or price pressures continue to fade.
With its recent announcement of a trade deal with China, the White House intended to reassure markets, manufacturers, and the military that China would not sever the supply lines of “rare earths” to the United States. Among other concessions, Beijing committed itself to avoid restricting exports of rare earth elements and related critical minerals essential to advanced manufacturing, clean “green” energy, and modern weapons systems. The agreement was described as a win for American economic strength and national security. But the very need for such a promise reveals an uncomfortable truth: the United States, long the world’s leading industrial power, has become dependent on the goodwill of a strategic rival for materials central to its economy and its defense.
That dependence did not arise because rare earth minerals are scarce. They are not. Nor did it arise because China alone possesses the technical capacity to mine or refine them. It arose from a long chain of economic and political decisions — made largely in free societies — that concentrated production in a country willing to accept costs others would not.
Understanding how that happened is essential to understanding why China’s apparent monopoly is far less “coercive,” and far less durable, than it looks.
Not Rare, Just Hell To Process
Rare earth elements are a group of seventeen metals mostly in the first row below the main periodic table in the lanthanide series (elements 57-71), plus Scandium (Sc, #21) and Yttrium (Y, #39), which share similar properties and are found in the same deposits as the lanthanides. They are “transition metals” with distinctive magnetic and fluorescent characteristics. The first was identified in 1787, and by 1947 all had been identified. (“Earths” is an archaic term for oxides, the form in which these elements are found.)
Think of these elements not as bulk materials but as metallurgical spices, used in tiny quantities to produce dramatic improvements in performance. Add neodymium to iron and boron and get the strongest permanent magnet known. Add yttrium to turbine alloys and jet engines can tolerate extraordinary heat. Europium makes modern display screens possible; terbium enables efficient electric motors; samarium strengthens guidance systems and sensors.
Despite their name, rare earths are widespread. Significant deposits exist in the United States, Australia, Brazil, India, and elsewhere. What makes them challenging is not their scarcity but their processing. The essential problem is that they are chemically almost identical, so how do you devise subtly different processes to separate them? More generally, they are chemically stubborn — for example, often intermingled with radioactive materials, and require dozens — sometimes more than a hundred — separation and purification steps. Each step consumes energy and produces toxic waste, making rare earth refining among the most environmentally punishing metallurgical processes in the modern economy.
The crux of the matter is straightforward. Mining rare earths is manageable. Processing them cleanly and at scale is hard, expensive, and politically fraught.
How China Built Dominance
China’s rise to dominance in rare earths was neither accidental nor inevitable. Beginning in the 1980s and accelerating through the 1990s and 2000s, China’s one-party dictatorship made a deliberate choice to invest heavily in mining and processing capacity. It did so under the conditions of a command economy that differed starkly from those in the West. Environmental controls were lax or poorly enforced. Local opposition carried little weight. State support absorbed losses and encouraged long-term specialization.
The outcome was leadership — at a price paid largely by Chinese communities and ecosystems. In Inner Mongolia, the world’s largest rare-earth mining region, toxic tailings ponds and contaminated water became infamous. Workers there suffered severe health issues from chronic exposure to toxic dust, heavy metals, and radioactive materials. There were — and are — high rates of respiratory, bone, and other diseases, compounded by environmental devastation and working conditions in the heavily polluting industry. Those costs, however, paid by workers and nearby communities for decades, translated into lower global prices. Western manufacturers benefited as consumer electronics became cheaper, and electric motors became smaller and more efficient. Companies like Apple could embed rare earth magnets throughout their products because the marginal cost was low. Magnets made of rare earth alloys like neodymium, the strongest by weight we know, give that satisfyingly decisive “click” when your laptop closes — and have uses in EVs, phones, and defense systems.
Over time, markets adapted rationally to these price signals. Western processing facilities closed. The United States, once a major producer, allowed its separation capacity to disappear. Even when rare earths were mined in California or Australia, the ore was shipped to China for refining. By the early 2020s, China accounted for roughly 70 percent of global rare-earth mining and more than 90 percent of processing and finished metal production.
Laissez-faire indifference did not produce this concentration. It owed as well to asymmetric regulation. Western governments imposed strict pollution controls and heavy liability that raised domestic costs, while China tolerated environmental and human damage in pursuit of strategic advantage. Markets responded to prices and rules as they existed, and production flowed — over time — to where it was cheapest and easiest to operate, even when that ease was politically manufactured. In this sense, China’s dominance was market-mediated, but politically orchestrated.
(In fact, a few analysts warned for years that China’s tolerance for environmental damage and state-directed investment would translate into strategic leverage. They included Jack Lifton of Technology Metals Research, Dudley Kingsnorth of Industrial Minerals Company of Australia, and researchers at the Congressional Research Service and RAND Corporation — warnings that were widely noted but largely discounted at the time.)
From Specialization to Vulnerability
For years, this arrangement appeared stable. Rare earths are used in surprisingly small quantities, even at scale, and the total global market is modest — comparable in value to the North American avocado market. Shortages were rare. Prices generally trended downward. Supply chains became hyper-specialized, optimized for cost rather than resilience.
The strategic implications were visible, but easy for businessmen and politicians alike to ignore — until China began to test its leverage.
In 2010, during a diplomatic dispute with Japan, Chinese rare-earth exports suddenly slowed. Prices spiked. Panic followed. Although China denied imposing a formal embargo, the message was unmistakable.
A decade later, amid rising trade tensions with the United States — intensified by the Trump administration’s abrupt pivot from free trade toward the glorification of tariffs — Beijing made its intentions clearer. Export controls were tightened. Licensing requirements expanded. Restrictions on rare-earth processing technologies were imposed.
By 2025, China was openly treating rare earths as a strategic asset, one that could be weaponized in response to tariffs, sanctions, or military pressure. The risks could no longer be ignored. Modern defense systems depend heavily on rare earths. An F-35 fighter jet contains hundreds of pounds of rare-earth materials. Missiles, radar, satellites, and secure communications systems all rely on specialized magnets and alloys for which there are no easy substitutes.
And 2026 continues the uncomfortable dilemma. The United States has the resources, capital, and technical expertise to rebuild domestic capacity — but not quickly. Processing facilities take years to permit and construct. Skilled labor must be trained. Supply chains must be reassembled. In the short run, dependence remained. Trump’s sudden tariff war, framed by Beijing as yet another affront to China’s long-promised redemption from its “century of humiliation,” sharpened the confrontation between what the Chinese Communist Party perceives as a resurgent Middle Kingdom and a declining hegemon.
All of this helps explain the White House’s eagerness to secure Chinese assurances. The deal bought time. It did not solve the problem.
Coercive Monopolies Are Fragile
It is tempting to describe China’s position as a market failure or a natural monopoly. Neither description is quite right. China’s dominance is better understood as a coercive monopoly — one sustained not by insurmountable efficiencies, but by political and regulatory asymmetries. It exists because the command economy of one country accepted environmental and social costs that others rejected, and because governments elsewhere constrained domestic production without fully accounting for strategic consequences.
Coercive monopolies are inherently unstable. They persist only so long as the costs of entry exceed the perceived risks of dependence. Once that balance shifts, the monopoly begins to erode. China’s own actions are now accelerating that shift.
Export restrictions and licensing regimes raise prices and introduce entrepreneurial uncertainty. Those effects are painful in the short term, but they also activate powerful counterforces. Higher prices make alternative supply economically viable. Unreliable supply makes diversification valuable. Strategic risk becomes something investors and manufacturers are willing to pay to avoid. This is the market logic that China cannot escape. By tightening its grip, Beijing invites others to loosen it.