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Language matters. Words have not only technical meanings; they also summon particular attitudes and impressions. And sometimes these attitudes and impressions differ significantly from the words’ technical meanings. 

In no domain of economic policy is the confusion created by the divergence of words’ technical meanings from the attitudes and impressions conveyed by those words greater than in the domain of trade policy.

Trade Deficit

The most obvious, commonly used confusing term is “trade deficit.” “Deficit” inherently sounds bad. Everyone instinctively resists being in any kind of “deficit.” But those of us who understand the technical definition of “trade deficit” know that this “deficit” is merely the result of an accounting convention by which inflows into a country of money are counted as “positive” while outflows of money are counted as “negative.” 

Yet as many economists, including the Nobel laureate Vernon Smith, have pointed out, if the convention were instead (as it could be) to count as a positive the monetary value of imports – and as a negative the monetary value of exports – then so-called “trade deficits” would instead be “trade surpluses.”

The words “trade surpluses,” alas, are more difficult to demagogue than are the words “trade deficits.”

Concessions

Another technical term that conveys a misleading impression is “concessions,” which means agreements by governments to lower their trade barriers in exchange for other governments agreeing to lower their barriers. 

As the excellent trade-policy scholar Daniel Griswold summarizes, in trade agreements, “exports are a benefit and imports a ‘concession.’” The technical term “concession” is thus used to describe those instances in which governments allow their citizens to trade more freely. Greater freedom of trade and the additional goods and services that it makes available are bizarrely rendered as costs – as burdens – that the people of the home country endure in order to obtain the benefit of greater ease of exporting.

Dumping

Yet another term that distorts understanding is “dumping.” To accuse foreigners of “dumping” goods on our market is to suggest that foreigners are harming us by discarding their trash on our shores or otherwise burying us in things that we’d prefer not to have. No sane person wants to be dumped upon!

This suggestion is completely mistaken. The great trade economist Douglas Irwin notes that “the government’s definition of ‘dumping’ is a lower price charged in the United States than in a foreign exporter’s home market.” And so what really occurs with so-called “dumping” is that the people of the home country are offered the opportunity to buy particular goods at prices lower than foreigners must pay. If the practice of charging differentially lower prices in the US was called not “dumping” but “competitive pricing” or “bargain pricing,” perhaps domestic firms would have less success at persuading the government to use regulations against “dumping” to secure protection from vigorous foreign competition.

There is, after all, no economic reason why any particular good should sell in one country at a price identical to its price in another country. 

Plenty of factors explain why a particular model of automobile might sell for less in the US than in the producer’s home market. American demand for that model might simply be lower—perhaps because tastes differ, or because the US retail market is more competitive and offers more alternatives. It’s also possible that auto retailing in the US faces fewer costly government rules than abroad.

Whatever the reason, when imports sell here at lower prices than they do elsewhere, Americans benefit. These lower prices are a gain, not a problem to be “protected” from. Yet by labeling the practice of selling exports at differentially lower prices as “dumping,” policymakers create an unjustified bias against foreign competition.

‘Made in’ Labels

“Made in China” — or Canada, Malaysia, Namibia, or anywhere else — is now a misleading label. In today’s global economy, most goods and services are produced with ideas and inputs drawn from dozens of different countries. As I wrote in this space a few months ago,

In today’s global economy, the great majority of the manufactured goods that you consume consist of parts and ideas from around the world, including the US. A “Made in” label on some good tells you only where that good’s final assembly occurred. Bath towels at Target labeled “Made in Turkey” might well be made of cotton grown in Texas, dyed with pigments from Germany, woven on a loom made in India, and shipped to the US on a freighter made in Korea that is carrying a shipping container manufactured in Denmark. That label would be more accurate if it instead read “Final Processing Done in Turkey” — or, more accurate still, “Made on Earth.”

Americans Trade With

As a linguistic shorthand, we often describe countries as exporting, importing, and trading. 

“Germany exported $1.5 trillion of goods last year.” 

“Ireland is among the world’s leading suppliers of pharmaceutical products.” 

“America trades with China.” 

“The Netherlands ran a trade surplus.” 

We know what these sentences mean: Individuals — alone or in voluntary groups called firms — in one country engage in commerce with individuals in another. But the aggregate outcomes of all this commerce are then described in ways that imply each country itself engaged in these transactions, as if the results reflect a conscious collective choice made by its people.

Because all international commerce is carried out by individuals, and because each individual believes he or she is made better off by each transaction voluntarily conducted with foreigners, it’s difficult to see how the overall outcome could be negative. Mistakes aside — and there’s no reason to think Americans make more errors than non-Americans — every commercial exchange with a foreigner yields a gain for the American involved. The sum of these gains cannot plausibly be a negative number.

Yet it’s an easy, if careless, step from portraying trade as something done by large collective entities to concluding that these entities make choices contrary to the interests of their own people. “America,” for instance, is said to buy such large quantities of imports that most Americans supposedly suffer as a result. Somehow, “America” is acting against Americans. But once we recall that importing is done not by “America” but by individual Americans, the idea that we suffer net losses from importing becomes absurd.

It’s trite but true that language matters and can mislead. Nowhere in economic policy is this more evident than in trade.

The Federal Reserve lowered the federal funds target range by 25 basis points on Wednesday—its third consecutive rate cut—to 3.5 to 3.75 percent. Markets had anticipated the decision for weeks, reflecting growing expectations that the Fed would respond to rising downside risks in the labor market. Three officials dissented: Governor Stephen Miran again favored a larger 50-basis-point cut, while Chicago and Kansas City Fed Presidents Austan Goolsbee and Jeffrey Schmid preferred to hold rates steady. Schmid’s dissent was his second in as many meetings.

Powell used his press conference to place the decision within the broader tensions facing the Fed’s dual mandate. He emphasized that “[c]onditions in the labor market appear to be gradually cooling, and inflation remains somewhat elevated.” He noted that the government shutdown restricted access to some data, but that the available evidence suggests the “outlook for employment and inflation has not changed much” since the Fed’s October meeting.

Still, Powell said the available indicators point to moderate economic growth, supported by solid consumer spending and continued business fixed investment. He noted that the temporary government shutdown likely slowed activity somewhat, but that this effect “should be mostly offset by higher growth” in the coming months. The updated Summary of Economic Projections reinforces that outlook, with the median projection for 2025 GDP growth rising modestly from 1.6 in September to 1.7 percent. 

Looking ahead, the median GDP projection for 2026 rose more sharply, increasing to 2.3 percent from 1.8 percent in the September projections. Powell acknowledged the size of the revision when asked about it at the press conference, pointing to continued resilience in consumer spending and a pickup in business investment tied to data centers and artificial intelligence. He added that a similar upgrade in growth expectations has also appeared among private-sector forecasters, suggesting a broader reassessment of the medium-term outlook rather than a shift unique to the Fed.

Powell said the available evidence points to a softening labor market, noting that “layoffs and hiring remain low” and that perceptions of job availability and hiring difficulty continue to decline. As in recent meetings, he partly attributed the slowdown to “a decline in the growth of the labor force, due to lower immigration and labor force participation,” while noting that weakening labor demand is also playing a role. Still, the median unemployment projections for 2025 and 2026 were unchanged from September.

Powell acknowledged that inflation “remains somewhat elevated,” but said the government shutdown has limited the flow of new price data since the October meeting. At that point, the Fed had seen goods inflation pick up—likely reflecting tariffs—even as services inflation continued to ease. He added that “[n]ear-term measures of inflation expectations have declined from their peaks earlier this year” and that longer-term expectations still align with the Fed’s two percent goal. The Fed’s median inflation projection now stands at 2.9 percent for 2025 and 2.4 percent for 2026, both slightly lower than in September.

Powell said the Fed faces “a challenging situation,” with “risks to inflation…tilted to the upside and risks to employment to the downside.” He reiterated that the inflationary effects of tariffs should be temporary, describing them as “effectively a one-time shift in the price level,” and stressed that the Fed must ensure that this does not “become an ongoing inflation problem.” Because downside risks to employment have risen, he said, the balance of risks has shifted toward the employment side of the mandate—a shift he said justified lowering the policy rate.

Powell said the 75 basis points of easing over the past three meetings “should help stabilize the labor market while allowing inflation to resume its downward trend toward 2 percent once the effects of tariffs have passed through.” He added that the current stance of policy is “within a range of plausible estimates of neutral.” The newest projections put the policy rate at 3.4 percent at the end of 2026 and 3.1 percent at the end of 2027—unchanged from September. Even so, Powell stressed that the projections are not a plan, reiterating that policy “is not on a preset course.”

Beyond the stance of policy, Powell outlined several steps affecting the implementation framework. Alongside the rate cut, he announced that the Fed will “initiate purchases of shorter-term Treasury securities for the sole purpose of maintaining an ample supply of reserves over time.” He said the move responds to “continued tightening in money market interest rates relative to” the Fed’s administered rates. Such purchases, he explained, help keep the policy rate “within its target range” and accommodate the rising demand for liquidity that comes with economic growth. Powell stressed that the purchases are purely technical, though the return to balance-sheet expansion is likely to renew debate over its broader implications for monetary policy and government debt.

Powell explained that under the current framework, “the federal funds rate and other short-term interest rates are primarily controlled by the setting of our administered rates rather than day-to-day discretionary interventions in money markets.” Standing repurchase agreement operations are a key part of that framework, helping to keep the federal funds rate “within its target range” even when liquidity pressures rise. To ensure they can continue to operate effectively, the Fed eliminated the aggregate limit on their use. While not entirely new, Powell’s emphasis on administered rates—and the decision to remove limits on standing repo operations—highlighted the extent to which rate control now relies on policy-set prices rather than market clearing, raising broader questions about the future role of the federal funds rate itself.

Taken together, Powell’s remarks highlighted the inherent difficulty of balancing inflation and employment under the current mandate. The Fed continues to wrestle with competing risks on both sides of that mandate. Importantly, this tension is not imposed by external forces but created by the mandate itself, which compels policymakers to weigh higher prices against lower employment rather than focus on the underlying drivers of each. A nominal GDP target would avoid this conflict. By stabilizing aggregate demand, the Fed would allow prices and employment to adjust naturally, eliminating the need for continual fine-tuning and removing the artificial tradeoff between inflation and unemployment.

President Trump’s detractors and defenders alike have cast his federal foray into local law enforcement as a revival of “broken windows” policing. But while Americans quarrel over deploying federal troops in city streets, the president has been busy applying a different type of broken windows theory to our nation’s trade policy. 

In 1850, French satirist Frédéric Bastiat introduced – and promptly smashed – what economists call the “broken window fallacy.” Bastiat’s parable runs like this. Suppose a roving bandit smashes a shopkeeper’s window. The shopkeeper is devastated – this cruel deed will cost him $1,000. But the local mayor consoles him: “Don’t despair! This destruction creates work for our local glazier. Perhaps he’ll spend his earnings from this repair at the butcher’s, who’ll then patronize the brewer’s, who’ll then frequent the baker’s, and so on. Ultimately, Fortuna’s misfavor enriches our community!”

The mayor’s Panglossian outlook paints a pretty picture. But, as Bastiat notes, it’s wildly deceptive. Why? It focuses only on the “seen” – everyone who directly benefits from the damage: the glazier, the butcher, the brewer, the baker, and so on. This cleverly distracts us from seeing the “unseen” –  all the wealth that would’ve been created if not for this wanton act of vandalism. For had his window not been smashed, our shopkeeper could’ve spent his shekels on something else he’d surely value more than repairing a window. Perhaps he would’ve spent it on a new fireplace. This would create work for the mason. Perhaps the mason would’ve spent his earnings at the butcher’s, who’d then patronize the brewer, who’d then visit the baker, and so on. All told, society would be roughly $1,000 richer in this alternate reality. For our shopkeeper would have a new chimney and a perfectly good window.

Nearly 175 years later, Bastiat’s cautionary tale provides a window into the fallacy that lies at the heart of today’s trade war: the myth that destruction creates wealth – that breaking trade deals and global supply chains, like breaking windows, is a secret recipe for prosperity. 

Like the mayor in Bastiat’s tale, President Trump is a slick politician and a masterful spin artist. He’s exceptional at portraying his policy’s “success” by focusing our attention squarely on its visible beneficiaries. That’s why he often unveils his latest tariffs in made-for-TV spectacles where he’s encircled by jubilant workers at revived factories that directly benefit from his protectionist policies. 

Thankfully, Bastiat’s parable exposes this clever marketing ploy for what it is: cheap sophistry. For every reshored job and “Made in America” product comes at the hidden cost of whatever else we could’ve made with those resources (where that “whatever else” is something more valuable to the economy). These costs are, by definition, difficult to measure. And unlike a ribbon-cutting ceremony at a newly opened factory, they’re impossible to showcase. But they’re very real, and very damaging to the economy. The late Henry Hazlitt aptly distilled Bastiat’s insight in his classic work, Economics in One Lesson: the art of economics consists in looking beyond the immediate, visible benefits of a policy on one group to consider its long-run, “unseen” consequences on the entire economy. 

Keep your eyes peeled, and you’ll detect shards of this fallacy scattered all over the White House Rose Garden from the president’s “Liberation Day” extravaganza. You’ll also find it littered all over cable news. Indeed, viewing today’s headlines through Bastiat’s lens reveals that many of the president’s most cherished trade war “victories” are a mirage. 

In May, Trump’s Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick vowed to stick it to China by bringing iPhone assembly jobs “back” to America. “The army of millions of human beings screwing in little screws to make iPhones, that kind of thing is going to come to America!” he gushed. 

Would this bolster our economy, as Trump and Lutnick argue? Quite the opposite. Hiring an “army of millions” of Americans to assemble iPhones means drawing them away from jobs we actually excel at, like designing iPhones, developing new software, and countless others. If a $25,000 job assembling iPhones replaces a $125,000 job designing them, America isn’t $25,000 richer – we’re $100,000 poorer. Dave Chappelle is right: Americans want to buy iPhones, not make them. 

In August, the president touted July’s tariff haul as a $30 billion windfall to our economy. To the untrained eye, this appears to be welcome news. But a messier image comes into focus when viewed through Bastiat’s lens. As any economist worth their salt can attest, tariffs are a tax borne by consumers in the form of higher prices. Higher prices mean consumers have less money to spend on other things, thus crowding out growth and destroying jobs in those sectors. That $30 billion in tariff revenue isn’t manna from heaven, as Trump often portrays it. It’s a hidden tax on US consumers. 

What about the raft of “trade agreements” and investment deals the president loves to flaunt? In July, Trump touted his agreement with the EU as “the biggest deal ever made.” The EU, Saudi Arabia, Japan, South Korea, and the UAE pledged to invest $750 billion, $600 billion, $550 billion, $350 billion, and $200 billion, respectively. Corporations have also joined in. In May, Nvidia pledged to invest $500 billion in domestic chip manufacturing. In August, Apple affirmed its $600 billion investment in America. Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg also vowed to invest $600 billion. 

These headlines certainly seem propitious, even if these “commitments” are incredibly vague, and the numbers seemingly conjured out of thin air. (Lest we forget: what matters to the dealmaker-in-chief is eye-catching headlines, not empirical accuracy or sound economics.) But even if Trump’s tariffs succeed in reshoring some jobs, Bastiat’s question remains: at what cost? If other nations can manufacture iPhones and widgets more efficiently than we can, economics teaches us we’re better off importing those products. This frees our workers to specialize in higher-paying jobs they excel at – skilled craftsmen, artisans, high-skilled manufacturing, etc. – of which there’s no shortage.

Trump is a skilled promoter and a crafty marketer; he knows how to craft a compelling story. Credit where it’s due, he’s often not entirely wrong. Even his tallest tales are typically rooted in a seed of truth. Urban crime, though still fairly low by historical standards, remains inexcusably high. Foreign trade, though incredibly beneficial to our economy, does displace some domestic firms and workers. 

But he’s also a deft illusionist. Whether he’s defending his policies on crime or trade, he’s remarkably adept at drawing our attention where he wants. On crime, he tells harrowing tales of urban violence to justify federal incursions into local law enforcement. On trade, he hosts grand ribbon-cuttings at reopened factories in made-for-TV spectacles to justify taking autocratic control over trade policy. 

It’s brilliant retail politics, to be sure. That said, there’s a stark difference between broken windows policing and his broken windows trade policy. Although controversial, broken windows policing is eminently defensible. His broken windows trade policy, in contrast, is not. Economists are virtually united in condemning protectionism (with the notable exception of Peter Navarro and Ron Vara, but we repeat ourselves). They generally support free trade, only granting exceptions in rare, well-delineated circumstances.

To be clear, economists don’t claim free trade is a panacea. No profession is more fond of reminding people that every decision involves tradeoffs (hence Harry Truman’s Melvillian quest to find a “one-armed economist”). Are there tough tradeoffs that policymakers must weigh when conducting trade policy, like protecting crucial national security interests and fortifying strategically vital industries? Absolutely – though, to be fair, these concerns are often wildly overstated by lobbyists trying to hurt foreign competitors. Are there steps policymakers can take to make our economy more competitive? Sure – though, to be clear, we should start by slashing red tape, not clumsily cutting off trade. The Hippocratic Oath in medicine also applies to economic policy: “first, do no harm.” It’s one thing to attract investment with the carrot of simplifying taxes and surgically removing our most malignant policies. It’s quite another to compel it with the stick – nay, sledgehammer – of tariffs and trade barriers, with all their far-reaching negative consequences. One need not be a free trade absolutist to believe that we shouldn’t throw the baby out with the bathwater when it comes to trade. 

When it comes to trade policy, don’t fall for the president’s sleight of hand. Don’t get beguiled by propitious-sounding headlines or eye-popping investment figures. All this smoke and mirrors is a clever way for the president to distract Americans from the destructive effects of his trade war, as evidenced by the recent spate of weak jobs reports and anemic growth figures. Instead, heed Bastiat’s timeless wisdom: Behind every lofty tariff pronouncement lies a hidden cost. Like the politician in Bastiat’s tale, when Trump brags about “bringing back” jobs, all he’s really celebrating is a hefty bill for replacing windows he smashed with his tariffs. 

Despite all the sound and fury emanating from the White House, Bastiat’s lesson rings as true as ever. Destroying trade doesn’t create prosperity any more than smashing windows creates wealth.

Last month, we lamented California’s Frontier AI Act of 2025. The Act favors compliance over risk management, while shielding bureaucrats and lawmakers from responsibility. Mostly, it imposes top-down regulatory norms, instead of letting civil society and industry experts experiment and develop ethical standards from the bottom up.

Perhaps we could dismiss the Act as just another example of California’s interventionist penchant. But some American politicians and regulators are already calling for the Act to be a “template for harmonizing federal and state oversight.” The other source for that template would be the European Union (EU), so it’s worth keeping an eye on the regulations spewed out of Brussels.

The EU is already way ahead of California in imposing troubling, top-down regulation. Indeed, the EU Artificial Intelligence Act of 2024 follows the EU’s overall precautionary principle. As the EU Parliament’s internal think tank explains, “the precautionary principle enables decision-makers to adopt precautionary measures when scientific evidence about an environmental or human health hazard is uncertain and the stakes are high.” The precautionary principle gives immense power to the EU when it comes to regulating in the face of uncertainty — rather than allowing for experimentation with the guardrails of fines and tort law (as in the US). It stifles ethical learning and innovation. Because of the precautionary principle and associated regulation, the EU economy suffers from greater market concentration, higher regulatory compliance costs, and diminished innovation — compared to an environment that allows for experimentation and sensible risk management. It is small wonder that only four of the world’s top 50 tech companies are European.

From Stifled Innovation to Stifled Privacy

Along with the precautionary principle, the second driving force behind EU regulation is the advancement of rights — but cherry-picking from the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights of rights that often conflict with others. For example, the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) of 2016 was imposed with the idea of protecting a fundamental right to personal data protection (this is technically separate from the right to privacy, and gives the EU much more power to intervene — but that is the stuff of academic journals). The GDPR ended up curtailing the right to economic freedom.

This time, fundamental rights are being deployed to justify the EU’s fight against child sexual abuse. We all love fundamental rights, and we all hate child abuse. But, over the years, fundamental rights have been deployed as a blunt and powerful weapon to expand the EU’s regulatory powers. The proposed Child Sex Abuse regulation (CSA) is no exception. What is exceptional, is the extent of the intrusion: the EU is proposing to monitor communications among European citizens, lumping them all together as potential threats rather than as protected speech that enjoys a prima facie right to privacy.

As of 26 November 2025, the EU bureaucratic machine has been negotiating the details of the CSA. In the latest draft, mandatory scanning of private communications has thankfully been removed, at least formally. But there is a catch. Providers of hosting and interpersonal communication services must identify, analyze, and assess how their services might be used for online child sexual abuse, and then take “all reasonable mitigation measures.” Faced with such an open-ended mandate and the threat of liability, many providers may conclude that the safest — and most legally prudent — way to show they have complied with the EU directive is to deploy large-scale scanning of private communications.

The draft CSA insists that mitigation measures should, where possible, be limited to specific parts of the service or specific groups of users. But the incentive structure points in one direction. Widespread monitoring may end up as the only viable option for regulatory compliance. What is presented as voluntary today risks becoming a de facto obligation tomorrow.

In the words of Peter Hummelgaard, the Danish Minister of Justice: “Every year, millions of files are shared that depict the sexual abuse of children. And behind every single image and video, there is a child who has been subjected to the most horrific and terrible abuse. This is completely unacceptable.” No one disputes the gravity or turpitude of the problem. And yet, under this narrative, the telecommunications industry and European citizens are expected to absorb dangerous risk-mitigation measures that are likely to involve lost privacy for citizens and widespread monitoring powers for the state.

The cost, we are told, is nothing compared to the benefit. After all, who wouldn’t want to fight child sexual abuse? It’s high time to take a deep breath. Child abusers should be punished severely. This does not dispense a free society from respecting other core values.

But, wait. There’s more…

Widespread Monitoring? Well, Not Completely Widespread

Despite the moral imperative of protecting children — a moral imperative so compelling that the EU is willing to violate other core values to advance it — the proposed CSA act introduces a convenient exception. Anything falling under national security, and any electronic communication service that is not publicly available (i.e. available only to elected officials and bureaucrats) would remain entirely untouched. Private chats among citizens require scrutiny — but the conversations of those who claim to protect us are off limits.

As the good minister said, “behind every single image and video there is a child who has been subjected to the most horrific and terrible abuse.” If that is indeed true of every “single image and video,” why would it not also be true of the messages shielded by the CSA’s national security and non-public exceptions? Does the horror somehow dissipate when the users are politicians or bureaucrats? Is the unacceptable suddenly made acceptable when it concerns those who write the rules?

In the EU’s hierarchy of rights, protecting children trumps privacy. But protecting Eurocrats trumps protecting children. In the end, modern technology gives politicians unprecedented opportunities to monitor citizens, while exempting themselves from scrutiny.

There is no chatter yet — that we know of — about imposing similar measures in the US. But, from the wealth tax to AI regulation — and the very origins of the American administrative state — bad ideas from Europe have a nasty way of making their way across the Pond. 

The tragic assassination of Charlie Kirk has left a deep vacuum within the American right — one that various political actors are now attempting to fill. For roughly a decade, the mainstream media labeled anyone who opposed Big Government, collectivism, or high taxation as some kind of “far-right radical.” 

After years of misusing and diluting these labels, society now finds itself unable to distinguish genuine extremism from ordinary political dissent. This confusion has created the perfect environment for figures like Nick Fuentes to present themselves as merely “controversial conservatives,” when in reality their ideas sit entirely outside the American political tradition.

Fuentes began his career as yet another podcaster. His rhetorical skill is undeniable; it even earned him a seat at a dinner in Mar-a-Lago with President Trump and Kanye West shortly before he was banned from practically every major social-media platform. Even so, he eventually returned and now aspires to position himself as an ideological figure within the American right, despite the fact that his ideas cannot be placed within conservatism, or indeed any classical Republican ideology. 

In recent interviews and public appearances, Fuentes has openly expressed admiration for the communist dictator Joseph Stalin, describing him as a model of ruthless political efficiency: “Now that the dust has settled, can we admit that Stalin was a genius? Can we admit that Stalin was the most effective leader in history?” 

He has also made profoundly disturbing remarks such as: “Many women want to be raped… Many women really want a man to beat them.”

And he has declared openly and without hesitation: “Forget about liberty and safety. It’s about order… I don’t believe in the individual.”

Fuentes’s worldview places him far outside the American tradition, and to understand why, it is essential to revisit the core principles that defined American conservatism in the twentieth century.

Conservatism and the American Political Tradition

To situate Fuentes’s worldview in context, it is essential to revisit the core tenets of American conservatism as it developed in the twentieth century.

1. Individual Liberty as a First Principle

From Barry Goldwater’s The Conscience of a Conservative (1960) to Ronald Reagan’s landmark speeches, the conservative movement has consistently rejected the subordination of the individual to the state. Natural rights, as articulated in the Declaration of Independence, are inalienable and derived from the Creator — not from government authority. American conservatism is built upon the idea that the individual precedes the state, not the other way around.

2. Skepticism Toward Concentrated Power

William F. Buckley Jr. and the early National Review intellectuals positioned conservatism as an explicit counterweight to centralized control — whether communist, fascist, or bureaucratic. American conservatism is fundamentally distrustful of authoritarianism, regardless of ideological coloration. Any project that seeks to grant the state sweeping authority over society contradicts the ethos of the movement.

3. Constitutionalism and Limited Government

The Constitution begins with “We the People,” anchoring the legitimacy of government in popular consent. Its structure — federalism, separation of powers, and the Bill of Rights — was designed precisely to prevent the emergence of the all-powerful state Fuentes openly admires. The Constitution is not simply a legal document but the embodiment of the American suspicion of concentrated power and the celebration of individual autonomy.

Fuentes’s statements therefore place him outside this tradition. Admiration for Stalin, calls to abandon individual rights, and proposals to merge extreme left and right movements around illiberal ends are not deviations from conservatism — they are direct rejections of it.

The Constitution: Pillar of the American Way

Few historical documents have shaped a civilization as decisively as the Constitution of the United States. The American right, with all its internal debates and disagreements, continues to defend its principles in broad outline: political power emanating from the people; resistance to Big Government; and the protection of individual liberties. 

The Constitution’s architecture reflects an abiding commitment to individualism and an aversion to the tyrannical tendency inherent in unchecked state power. The first ten amendments explicitly enumerate what the government cannot do: it cannot silence speech, cannot restrict the press, cannot prohibit the free exercise of religion, cannot disarm citizens, cannot imprison them without due process, cannot seize their property arbitrarily, and cannot impose cruel or unusual punishments. These prohibitions were designed precisely to prevent the emergence of an all-powerful state claiming authority over the conscience, autonomy, and dignity of the individual.

Fuentes, however, does not believe in this tradition. He rejects individual autonomy and, despite claiming to be “a Christian,” does not treat rights as endowed by the Creator but as instruments to be granted or withdrawn by an authoritarian ruler imposing “order.” In other words, his worldview is not merely non-conservative; it stands in direct opposition to the constitutional foundations that define American political life.

The Problem of Empty Labels

One of the central problems in contemporary political discourse is that extremist labels have become empty from overuse. For years, commentators have called anyone who criticized socialism or Big Government a “fascist,” a practice that has left society unable to recognize actual authoritarianism when it appears. Yet Fuentes fits that description literally, not metaphorically. He is a conspiracy theorist, a neo-Nazi, and a white supremacist who believes in authoritarian state control, collectivism, and the suppression of individual and market freedoms. 

In one of his appearances, he even proposed a pact between the far left and far right under shared illiberal objectives: “The left has to give up immigration; the right has to give up on the free market.”

His appeal thrives in a cultural landscape where many young men feel alienated and stripped of meaning. They also don’t feel welcomed by mainstream institutions. After years of being branded racists or Nazis for trivial reasons, they no longer trust the moral judgments of the culture around them. As a result, they become desensitized to legitimate warnings about extremism and more willing to follow anyone who claims to speak for them. This makes them prime targets for demagogues — con men and would-be authoritarians — who offer them a ready-made identity built on grievance and a sense of belonging grounded in resentment.

There is no American conservative doctrine — historically or presently — that calls for abolishing natural rights, dismantling individualism, or submitting the population to state control. Nor has the classical American tradition been rooted in racial identity rather than ideas. 

The United States was founded on the belief that all who are willing to work, contribute, embrace the culture, and honor the American tradition can belong, regardless of creed or race. Fuentes seeks to redefine American belonging on illiberal, identitarian, and authoritarian terms, a vision incompatible with both conservatism and the founding principles of the republic.

A Warning About the Present Moment

Perhaps one could simply note that Fuentes openly admires Joseph Stalin, architect of one of the deadliest totalitarian regimes in human history, and leave it at that. But the reality is that thousands of Americans are being radicalized daily by figures like Fuentes — individuals who, instead of appreciating the privilege of having been born in the most prosperous nation on earth, seem determined to undermine it from within, dividing the population, degrading public discourse, and empowering America’s adversaries. 

The American tradition does not silence dissent; it confronts it with arguments and moral clarity. If Fuentes wishes to pursue an illiberal political movement, he is free to do so. But no one should mistake his project for conservatism or for any authentic expression of the American right. His admiration for Stalin, his rejection of individual rights, and his calls to fuse the extreme left and right around authoritarian objectives are not expressions of the conservative tradition — they are categorical repudiations of it.

When Sen. Bernie Sanders and New York City Mayor-Elect Zohran Mamdani recently rallied with striking Starbucks workers, they trumpeted a “New York where every worker can live a life of decency.” Mr. Mamdani promised a $30 minimum wage in the name of dignity on the campaign trail. Their intentions might be noble; their logic isn’t. By artificially hiking entry-level wages through political mandates rather than skills, productivity or experience, they don’t lift up workers; they wall off the very on-ramp to mobility.

We know this firsthand. Neither of our first real jobs was glamorous. They were at McDonald’s in Iron Mountain, Michigan (Scott) and Kmart in Midland, Michigan (Dan). We started at fries and collecting carts, but gradually both moved up to drive-thru, cashier and managing people and closing shifts. Eventually, our responsibilities included inventory, scheduling, customer-service recoveries and profit margins. It was the best business education of our lives. Call it a ketchup-stained, “blue light special” MBA. We didn’t have elite networks, legacy connections or wealthy mentors. We had a crew uniform and accountability. McDonald’s and Kmart didn’t just teach us how to work — they taught us how to lead. 

People sneer at “burger-flipping” and “cart-pushing” but many of America’s best managers, franchise owners and entrepreneurs cut their teeth behind those stainless-steel counters and carts. One in eight Americans has worked at McDonald’s at some point. Entry-level jobs are not “traps” that freeze workers in poverty. They are on-ramps: the place where inexperienced workers merge into the labor market and start accelerating. Even a glance at the numbers dispels the caricature. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, only about one percent of hourly US workers — roughly 842,000 people — earn at or below the federal minimum wage. Nearly half are under 25. Most work part-time. Many are students or first-time entrants. These roles are training grounds, not endpoints. Teens in low-wage jobs tend to move to higher-paying ones. Wages tend to rise as productivity rises, not because lawmakers decree it.

In language everyone can understand: You don’t learn to merge onto the interstate by starting at highway speed. You start slowly, learn the feel of the wheel and build momentum. Raise the minimum speed of the on-ramp to 70, and a lot of young drivers will never get off the shoulder. 

Politics cannot eliminate the realities of the labor market. If you force employers to pay $25 or $30 an hour for roles designed for inexperienced workers, businesses respond the only way they can: fewer openings, more automation, tighter hiring criteria and restricted hours. You don’t have to theorize about it; we’ve seen it. As David Neumark and William Wascher conclude in a paper for the National Bureau of Economic Research, “A sizable majority of the studies surveyed in this monograph give a relatively consistent…indication of negative employment effects of minimum wages.” 

Critics say this is “corporate propaganda” — that higher wages prevent exploitation. But this assumes employers are static and workers have no agency. It also assumes people come to the labor market perfectly prepared. They don’t. Some students arrive from failing K-12 systems. Some lack soft skills such as showing up on time, resolving conflict and taking directions. Some are single parents navigating childcare regulations that raise prices and push them out of the workforce. These barriers are real, and they explain far more worker stagnation than starting wages at Starbucks. 

The irony is that a higher minimum wage doesn’t attack any of these root issues. Instead, it blocks the path to improvement. Think of it like a grading curve: if you can’t submit an essay until it’s already an A paper, many people will simply never write. 

The McDonald’s and Kmart story described above isn’t rare; it’s American. The first job is rarely glamorous — but it teaches responsibility, teamwork and consequences. It shows you how to deal with angry customers, how to meet targets, how to win a promotion and even how to manage people. You learn that work is not punishment; it’s the means to your future. 

If lawmakers want to improve income mobility for young and low-income Americans, they should tackle the real bottlenecks: dysfunctional schools, needless occupational licensing (hair braiding and floristry should not require bureaucratic rituals) and childcare regulations that price parents out of the job market. Those reforms widen the on-ramp. Wage floors barricade it. 

America’s economic ladder is sturdy at the bottom, not because entry-level work pays extraordinarily well, but because it opens doors to a lifetime of skill acquisition and upward movement. The Golden Arches and Kmart didn’t just give us money. They gave us momentum. Don’t deny that opportunity to the next generation.

On almost every page of The Socialist Calculation Debate and the Relevance of Economic Knowledge, I found myself thinking, “I can’t believe a monograph like this still needs to be written in the year 2025,” but here we are. 

A self-described “democratic socialist” has just been elected mayor of arguably the world’s most important city. The Trump administration is buying ownership stakes in large corporations, which leaves me wondering what Republicans who ran against socialism believe “socialism” is. But maybe I shouldn’t be surprised: the right has long embraced border socialism. Why not take increasing control over the material and intellectual means of production?

Peter J. Boettke, Rosolino A. Candela, and Tegan L. Truitt explain in a welcome and important contribution to the Cambridge “Elements” series, launched by Cambridge University Press to disseminate focused scholarly works that are a little too long to be journal articles and a little too short to be books (I reviewed Austrian Perspectives on Entrepreneurship, Strategy, and Organization for AIER in 2021). 

The authors emphasize a point that Austrian economists have reiterated for decades, but that does not seem to have made its way into the mainstream literature. The “calculation problem” is not a computational problem. It’s an epistemic problem. It isn’t that it was too hard to gather the necessary data and do the required calculations in 1920 (when Ludwig von Mises published “Economic Calculation in the Socialist Commonwealth”) or 1945 (when F.A. Hayek wrote “The Use of Knowledge in Society”) or 1985 (when Don Lavoie published Rivalry and Central Planning: The socialist calculation debate reconsidered). Nor was it difficult in December 2022, when generative AI was in its infancy and I introduced a Southern Economic Journal symposium on the 100th anniversary of “Economic Calculation in the Socialist Commonwealth” and the 75th anniversary edition of “The Use of Knowledge in Society” with an article titled “Economic planning must be polycentric, not monocentric.” The problem is that the data don’t exist unless the means of production are bought and sold in free markets – which means that modern technosocialists enamored with generative AI as the technology that will finally solve the calculation problem are missing the point. Oskar Lange called the market a “computing device of the pre-electronic age,” but he is making a category mistake. The market is much more than this.

How do we know? Prices aren’t just what we get when we crunch numbers correctly. They embody the judgments people make in real time in response to real tradeoffs and genuine uncertainty. To borrow a phrase from Deirdre McCloskey, prices are conjective: they represent a social consensus emerging from shared bets on what something is worth given Hayek’s “particular circumstances of time and place.” And yet they confront us as immutable and seemingly objective facts about the social world. Collard greens were $3.99, and ham hocks were $6.06 at Publix earlier this afternoon, representing not an objective fact about the universe but our best guess at a social consensus about all the ways people could use those collard greens and ham hocks a few days before Thanksgiving. With market prices, the people who run Publix can ex ante estimate whether they can buy collard greens and ham hocks and then sell them at a markup sufficient to turn a profit. They can also ex post evaluate their ex ante estimates and learn whether they have wasted resources. 

Importantly, prices are not just “data.” They are conjectures about value that resolve the problem of economic rivalry, which Lavoie defined in Rivalry and Central Planning as “the clash of human purposes.” Those human purposes “clash” because people have fundamentally different ideas about what it means to live well, and they converse about it by “higgling and bargaining” in the marketplace. The process itself generates knowledge that cannot otherwise exist. Economic knowledge cannot be stored in spreadsheets and processed by supercomputers. Entrepreneurial judgment has no algorithmic substitute. Economic knowledge, to borrow from James M. Buchanan’s classic essay, is defined in the process of its emergence.

Their analysis, though brief, is historically rich, as they describe how liberal politics and classical and neoclassical economics emerged side by side. Thinkers from Smith through Mill (and beyond) understood that markets are embedded in a social, cultural, and legal milieu of property, contract, and consent that makes voluntary exchange – and meaningful economic knowledge – possible. It is rooted in the most fundamental of liberal rights: the right to say “no, thank you.”

The Socialist Calculation Debate and the Relevance of Economic Knowledge gives added depth to the history of economic thought over the last century by exploring how the themes in the calculation debate appear in Ronald Coase’s work on transaction costs originating in his classic article “The Nature of the Firm,” the UCLA property rights school, and public choice. Drawing on the economists Ennio Piano and Louis Rouanet, they explain that the choice between managerial hierarchies and spot markets is a kind of economic calculation that entrepreneurs and managers cannot do without private property and the possibility of exchange.

So why does socialism still attract enthusiastic adherents, especially among educated elites one might think would know better? As Boettke et al. argue, socialism survives in part because these educated elites have not actually grappled with Mises’s economic calculation argument and mistakenly believe that it is a computational problem. However, knowledge does not just exist “out there” waiting to be found and analyzed. It emerges in exchange itself.

It also survives because people have redefined it — not as “common ownership and control of the means of production,” but as “a set of egalitarian, redistributive normative commitments.” For the true believer, socialism’s desirability isn’t a hypothesis we can test with theoretical or empirical inquiry. It’s an axiom that produces a series of “if only” statements that commit what the philosopher, Adam Smith scholar, and The End of Socialism author James R. Otteson calls the “nice if” fallacy. If only people were better. It would be nice if everyone had better, cheaper health care. If only they weren’t so rich. And so on. Boettke, Candela, and Truitt remind us that these hopes and ifs, no matter how nice, keep running aground on the fact that central planning creates Planned Chaos.

Until very recently, the Federal Reserve had been ratcheting up bank regulations. Economists generally agree that excessive bank regulation dissuades banks from extending credit for some productive projects. In a recent speech, Fed Governor Stephen Miran points to another problem with excessive regulation. In brief, “regulations enacted to shore up financial stability have constrained the Fed’s control over some elements of monetary policy transmission and the size of the balance sheet.” He refers to such a situation as regulatory dominance, since monetary policy takes a back seat to the regulatory framework.

Miran has a point. But the problem is even bigger than he suggests. The entire post-2008 system of monetary control is not just misguided, but likely illegal. Congress has known this for seventeen years, and has not done a thing about it. Without concerted action by legislators, monetary policy will remain activist and the balance sheet bloated.

Bending the Rules

When Congress expanded the Fed’s authority to pay interest on reserves in October 2008, the law was clear. Section 19(b)(12) of the Federal Reserve Act said the interest rate the Fed pays on reserves cannot “exceed the general level of short-term interest rates.” This wasn’t some throwaway line. Congress meant what it said: interest on reserves was supposed to eliminate the implicit tax that had previously existed on reserve balances. It was not supposed to subsidize reserve holding, let alone revolutionize the monetary policy operating framework.

But the Fed had bigger plans. Facing an explosion of emergency lending, officials decided to pay banks more than comparable market rates, such as Treasury yields. This kept banks from lending out their excess reserves, which would have caused inflation.

As George Selgin documented in his book Floored!, the Fed’s creative solution was to reinterpret the statute. Officials decided that “rates on obligations with maturities of no more than one year,” including the primary credit rate, counted as short-term interest rates. The primary credit rate is an administered rate set by the Fed. In other words, the Fed is following the letter of the law (if not the spirit) provided the rate it pays on reserves is less than the rate it charges on loans.

Ignore the fact that obligations with maturities of not more than one year may have greater duration risk (and hence, should generally command a higher interest rate) than an overnight loan, which is effectively what the Fed gets when it pays interest on reserves. The Fed can set its primary credit rate as high as it wants! Again, it is an administered rate, not a market rate. If the primary credit rate determines the upper bound on the interest rate the Fed can pay on reserves and the Fed can set the primary credit rate as high as it wants, then there is no binding constraint on the rate the Fed can pay on reserves. That’s a clear subversion of Congressional intent.

As Milton Friedman remarked, “Nothing is as permanent as a temporary government program.” What started as an emergency measure has lasted nearly two decades. Paying a premium rate of interest on reserves fundamentally changed American monetary policy. Instead of carefully managing scarce reserves through open market operations, the Fed now floods the system with reserves and controls rates by paying banks to keep them idle.

To put it bluntly: to prevent emergency lending from depreciating the dollar, the Fed broke the law by deliberately paying a premium rate on reserves. It ignored Congress’s judgment and substituted its own.

Back to Miran

As Miran explains, excessive regulations boost demand for reserves. Banks worried about heightened scrutiny “can raise demand for bank reserves above and beyond what’s required” in order to assure bank regulators that the bank is safe and sound. Those reserves are necessarily supplied by the Fed. Our central bank currently holds a $6.6 trillion balance sheet and pays roughly $200 billion annually to banks — with megabanks and foreign institutions reaping the lion’s share.

But here’s what Miran gets wrong: regulatory reform treats the symptom, not the disease. Even with lighter regulations, the Fed would still be operating in a floor system, where it pays banks a premium to hold reserves. And that framework may have no legal basis whatsoever.

Congress Shrugs

The floor system isn’t a secret. The Fed operates it openly. Economists regularly debate its merits. Miran just gave a whole speech about its implications. Yet Congress has done nothing. It has neither authorized nor prohibited the Fed’s activities. All the public has gotten is occasional pointed questions at hearings, followed by studied inaction.

Miran himself notes that “several times now, the Senate has debated whether the Fed ought to be stripped of its statutory authority to pay [interest on reserve balances].” Sadly, this is concern without consequence. Congress’s oversight failure borders on dereliction of duty. If Congress thinks the floor system is good policy, write it into law. Remove the “not to exceed” language. Give the Fed explicit authority to use interest on reserves as its main policy tool.

If, on the other hand, Congress thinks the Fed exceeded its authority, do something about it. Restore the statutory limit. Require a return to traditional open market operations. Make clear that emergency measures don’t automatically become permanent powers.

This matters for more than legal niceties. If we’re serious about constitutional government and the rule of law, Congress can’t just shrug when agencies rewrite their mandates. The Fed isn’t special. The complexity of monetary policy doesn’t exempt it from following the law. And seventeen years of “everybody knows” doesn’t make an illegal system legal.

Conclusion

Miran is right to worry about regulatory dominance of the Fed’s balance sheet. But the real problem isn’t regulations forcing banks to demand more reserves — it’s that the entire system enabling those dynamics was never supposed to exist. Regulatory reform is certainly warranted. But it won’t fix the fundamental problem. We need legal fixes to target monetary policy directly.

Congress must explicitly authorize what the Fed has been doing, or require it to stop. Anything less is an abdication of its constitutional responsibility — and a betrayal of the principle that in America, no institution is above the law.

Guess who’s coming home for Christmas? Many college graduates are getting fired just five or six months into their first “real world” jobs. Sixty percent of the 1,000 employers surveyed by Intelligent.com last October said they’d already dismissed graduates hired in May or June of 2024.

Seventy-five percent of companies reported that some or all of the recent college graduates they hired were unsatisfactory. According to the same survey, over half of businesses hiring Gen-Z employees believed these young professionals lacked motivation, communication skills, and readiness for the workforce. Many who hadn’t already fired recent graduates they hired this summer said they’d seen enough to avoid hiring from next year’s cohort.

Such reports invite skepticism; older generations have always criticized the younger for perceived shortcomings. It’s not uncommon for aging generations to despair of those who follow them. Poor work ethic and reliance on technology are the usual culprits. In Ancient Greece, teachers at Aristotle’s Lyceum supposedly complained of the slowest and dullest students resorting to writing things down on parchments (taking notes) because they couldn’t be bothered to use their brains. 

But the modern culture clash is likely to be acute: corporate norms bear little resemblance to the post-pandemic campus culture from which young people are emerging. But this isn’t just a story of generational tension. It’s a direct reflection of the US university system — and its failure.

Bureaucratic Growth In Education Undermines Workforce Readiness

Business leaders complain that recent graduates are unable to work independently, lack motivation and problem-solving abilities, and are easily offended. 

“Many recent college graduates may struggle with entering the workforce for the first time as it can be a huge contrast from what they are used to throughout their education journey,” Intelligent’s chief education and career development adviser Huy Nguyen said in the report.

Universities are pouring resources into defining welcoming spaces, lowering barriers, policing microaggressions, and establishing safe spaces. So recent products of that pipeline are paying the price. And lest we forget, most will keep paying it. University graduates owe an average of $28,244 one year after they leave school. 

Columnist and podcaster Brad Polumbo was still in college at Amherst when he told Fox News his dorm’s university staff had tried to soothe stressed-out students using “Carebears to Cope” during finals week. He found it condescending, and he’s excelled in a competitive, skills-based career since. Many of the kids who’ve been fired from their first jobs, though, are emerging from a world that coddles them and prioritizes their emotional vulnerability and intellectual comfort. But your comfort zone is a terrible place to build any intellectual muscle. 

Campus Culture Could Be Limiting Kids’ Earning Potential 

What college kids are trained to believe change looks like (campus protests, broad collective action, sit-ins and occupations) tends to be unsuccessful and frustrating. The heated, hyperbolic tone of politics — including on campus but more broadly among young people online — would lead many well-intentioned souls to believe their moral duty is to disrupt and complain and point out wrongthink.

Intellectual statements of conformity were required for university hiring and promotion. Whole departments emerged to attack any hint of grievance or prejudice. In a tense political moment and a tough market, colleges couldn’t be seen failing to invest in anti-racist guest lecturers and Offices of LGBTQ Inclusion. All the campus-wide initiatives competed to make kids feel safer — not stronger.  

The requirement that an employee create more value than he costs, and save more trouble than he creates, comes as a surprise to people educated to conform and demand others comply, rather than innovate and improve. We’ve taught them to fear being wrong: don’t offend, don’t take risks, don’t try anything new. In short, try not to learn. 

Even the censorship and chill on speech in elite colleges is a symptom, not the sickness. College freshmen escape the force-fed requirements of high school to find college is more of the same, but with higher stakes, more stress, and the ticking clock of mounting debt. 

Kids who work hard and excel in a university environment will learn little that’s valued by private sector businesses among young employees: self-regulation, initiative, the ability to get along with people, and independent problem-solving. Those are the very muscles the Deanlets prevented them from strengthening by protecting them from any intellectual heavy lifting.

How Deanlets Broke the Pipeline

Administrative bloat — the phenomenon of nonteaching administrative positions outpacing the growth of faculty for face-to-face instruction — largely exists to generate evidence of compliance with federal dictates about education fairness and access, but has not been concerned with the quality of education offered. Bureaucratic growth not only diverts attention from core skills but also erodes overall workforce readiness.

 

Benjamin Ginsberg, who published Fall of the Faculty: The Rise of the All-Administrative University and Why it Matters in 2013, and too late to keep me out of a PhD program, called these well-intentioned bureaucrats “Deanlets.” They have multiplied to far outnumber teaching or research faculty (and in a few cases actually outnumber students) and are focused on how to keep students engaged on campus and moving swiftly through the program. 

“Retention” of students became the metric of success in education. Efforts to keep students enrolled (and taking on loans) focused initially on those whose parents hadn’t attended college, and increasingly on immigrant, gender-queer, and other minority identity students. “Cultivating community” became the measure of institutional success. While empowering students to succeed is laudable, considerably less emphasis, and certainly far less federal scrutiny and institutional funding, was placed on the actual curricula and skills students were “retained” on campus to learn. 

Administrators staffing  Departments of Student Validation are tasked with keeping young people happy and enrolled, all to keep the gravy train of parent investment and federally guaranteed loans flowing. Administrators don’t answer to employers for the quality of education and long-term value to the student. They answer to university leadership, and in turn, federal regulators.

The Opportunity Cost of Ineffective Schools

Unfortunately, the problems precede university education.

From kindergarten on, the 30-to-a-classroom ZIP code government school model has rewarded conformity and compliance, fragility, and intellectual dependence. Schools focus on standardized testing, rigid curricula, and a bureaucratic obsession with credentials over skills. Independent problem-solving, initiative, and resilience — the traits employers prize — are stifled. By the time kids arrive at the cusp of adulthood, with a fraction of the literacy that more selective, more rigorous programs offered decades ago, college can’t possibly provide what it promises.

Precious few in the current K-12 and higher education system have incentives to prepare students to thrive in today’s workplace. Public schools and universities are modeled on a top-down, industrial-era approach to employment that prepares people for jobs now done by machine. 

For 13–17 years, we give students little ability, capacity, scope, or reward for planning their own time, pursuing independently a curiosity or problem they take an interest in. Colleges have become a linear, adult-driven, box-checking exercise more than a flourishing place of ideas, factories of knowledge driven by a search for the truth. Even many kids who are great at getting good grades may never connect meaning or passion to what they have learned. And they won’t have much experience testing their findings on people who disagree. 

While it might be in the best interests of colleges to open departments of Student Validation, those who fund schools and centrally planned curricula have no strong incentive to provide the education that’s empowering for the individual.

Campus Activism and Conformity Clash With Workplace Realities

John Taylor Gatto’s The 7-Lesson Schoolteacher explained decades ago how the educational system produces conformity, not competence. Now, under expanded federal control since the Department of Education was established, every measurable educational outcome has declined — literacy, numeracy, critical thinking. Federal intervention promised equity but delivered calamity; mediocrity, not meritocracy; compliance and recall, but no initiative or imagination. 

Critics like President Trump have called for abolishing the Department of Education, but the problem isn’t limited to federal overreach. States, too, have prioritized a one-size-fits-all approach over local innovation. The stagnation and decay of education isn’t just a failure of policy — it’s a failure of imagination.Young people are emerging from this environment ill-equipped for workplaces that demand adaptability and collaboration. College campuses, often detached from real-world stakes, amplify this misalignment with “safe spaces” and ideological homogeneity in both faculty and classrooms. Graduates are unready to face the workplace, a diverse, high-stakes learning environment — one where they have to figure things out and get along without oversight — because they haven’t yet been exposed to one.

In the modern world, prices always seem to be rising. With the exception of technology and maybe a few other industries, no one wonders whether prices will rise. The only question is how much they will go up.

But in recent years, the housing market has been challenging this trend. Believe it or not, average rental rates are actually going down. “October 2025 marks the 27th straight month of year-over-year rent decline for 0-2 bedroom properties,” notes a recent report from Realtor.com. “…Asking rents dipped by $29, or -1.7 percent, year-over-year.”

“The median asking rent in the 50 largest metros registered at $1,696, $63 (-3.6 percent) lower than its August 2022 peak,” the report continues. True, we are still above pre-pandemic levels, but the fact that rents are lower than they were three years ago is still something to celebrate. The report also notes that rents are down across all size categories, including studio, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units.

Naturally, this change is not uniform across the US. Some areas are seeing bigger drops in rental rates, while others are seeing smaller drops or even increases. In a September article, Realtor.com highlighted three metros that are seeing the biggest declines. 

“Rents in Las Vegas (-13.6 percent), Atlanta (-13.6 percent), and Austin, TX (-13.4 percent), are seeing the largest price cuts from their peaks, highlighting prime opportunities in these markets,” writes Joy Dumandan. She notes that median rents in these cities in August were $1,443, $1,572, and $1,436, respectively, dropping from peaks of $1,671, $1,820, and $1,659, respectively. The peaks for these cities, as with most of the US rental market, were set between 2021 and 2022.

Economist Jiayi Xu offered an explanation for these trends. 

“Las Vegas, Austin, and Atlanta saw the largest rent declines from their peaks due to rapid rent growth during the pandemic, when many people moved to warm Sun Belt areas, creating a high starting point for corrections,” she said. “Migration trends have slowed, and significant new multifamily supply has increased options for renters, exerting downward pressure on prices,” she continued. “Combined, these factors have pushed rents down more sharply than in other markets.”

Xu’s comment about “significant new multifamily supply” is key. Like all prices, rents are ultimately determined by supply and demand. If cities build more housing, economic reasoning says that this will put downward pressure on the cost of housing.

If this is correct, then we would expect that the cities with the biggest price drops would also be among the cities that are building the most housing. As it happens, that’s exactly what we’re seeing.

Austin and Atlanta provide especially good case studies.

Austin, Texas

An August report from RentCafe looked at new apartment construction in 2025 across the US and identified the places that are building the most units. The South overall had a strong showing, accounting for 52.5 percent of the 506,353 units that are expected to be opened nationwide by the end of the year. Within the South, Texas is experiencing some of the biggest housing growth, fueled especially by growth in Austin.

The report presented a ranking of the US cities that are building the most housing this year, as well as a separate ranking for US metros. Austin took the top spot in the country on the city level, with an estimated 15,195 units expected to be completed this year. Austin came third in the country on the metro level with 26,715 units expected to be built, behind Dallas (28,958) and New York City (30,023).

The impetus for all this building is an influx of demand. “From 2020 to 2024, Austin’s population grew by 10.9 percent, making it the fastest-growing large metro in the US,” the report notes. What’s crazy is that, despite this surge in demand, rental prices in Austin are still seeing big drops. 

This suggests Austin is building so fast that its supply growth is well outpacing its demand growth.

Atlanta, Georgia

Atlanta is another city where nation-leading rent reductions are being accompanied by nation-leading supply growth. Atlanta came sixth in the country on RentCafe’s list of cities, with 6,359 new units expected to be completed this year. The Atlanta metro area took fifth place on the metros list, with 17,512 units expected.

Atlanta’s recent supply growth is no accident; it’s the result of a deliberate decision on the part of the city to make building more housing a priority. In May 2022, a few months after assuming office, Mayor Andre Dickens created the Affordable Housing Strike Force, bringing together a wide variety of stakeholders with the aim of finding innovative solutions to the housing issue. “Housing is foundational to a community’s health, and simply put, Atlanta doesn’t have enough of it,” he said. The goal was to build or preserve 20,000 units of affordable housing by 2030.

Atlanta has made significant strides with this approach, partly thanks to some creative maneuvering. In one story highlighted by Realtor.com, the city realized it was using a valuable 10-acre lot to store new trash cans, which could easily be stored elsewhere. They decided to move the cans so that the land could be redeveloped. “It’s not the highest and best use of the land,” said Josh Humphries, the mayor’s senior policy adviser on housing.

Realtor.com also pointed to a story where “a downtown fire department that desperately needed a renovation agreed for the city to build 30 stories of housing units above it in exchange for the rehab.”

According to recent studies, Atlanta is making good progress toward its goal. Referring to the 20,000-unit target, a November report from JPMorgan Chase notes that “In less than four years, over 12,000 units have been completed, with funding secured for thousands more.”

The Manufacture of Scarcity

The cities of Austin and Atlanta show us the real-world impact of economics. It’s easy to think of supply and demand as concepts that only live in economics textbooks, but the truth is that they are all around us, shaping the prices we pay for the things we need — and hence, the cost of living. If we want housing prices to come down, adding more supply needs to be a big part of that conversation.

How can we add more supply? One of the best ways is deregulation. As economist Bryan Caplan explains in his recent illustrated book Build, Baby, Build, the main reason housing is so expensive is because of manufactured scarcity — restrictions on the supply of housing created by government regulations. 

“Housing prices stay high in desirable areas,” Caplan writes, “because most governments strictly regulate new construction.”

Caplan anticipates a common reaction: “Sounds more like Right Wing Ideology 101 to me.” This is understandable, but Caplan stresses that housing deregulation is a bipartisan issue that even non-right-wingers should be able to champion. He points to progressive thinkers like Paul Krugman, Obama-advisor Jason Furman, and Matt Yglesias as people whose left-wing credentials are not in doubt, yet who acknowledge that strict regulation really is a big part of America’s housing problem.

Rents coming down is not just a happy stroke of luck. It is a policy choice, one that is available to every municipality and township in the country. There is no economic mystery to be solved. We know what works. The only question is whether we care enough about the cost of housing to administer the treatment that will cure the disease.