Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Explainer: What you should know about the White House’s report on socialism
Explainer: What you should know about the White House’s report on socialism
Dec 15, 2025 6:38 AM

What just happened?

On Tuesday the White House released “The Opportunity Costs of Socialism,” a report outlining the “opportunity costs of socialism on the macro economy, including standards of living, and the impact on the Federal budget.”

What is the purpose of the report?

The purpose of 70-page report (the main text is 55 pages while the list of references is 15 pages), which was produced by the Council of Economic Advisers, is to “evaluate the claims of modern U.S. socialists from the perspective of economists who have extensively studied the costs and benefits of socialism. We examine socialism’s historical and modern vision and intent, its economic incentives, its impact around the world on economic performance, and its relationship with recent policy proposals in the U.S.”

What is the Council of Economic Advisers?

The Council of Economic Advisers (CEA) is an agency within the Executive Office of the President that is charged with offering the President objective economic advice on the formulation of both domestic and international economic policy. Congress established the three-member council in the Employment Act of 1946. The portion of the bill that authorizes the CEA states the duty and function of the Council is:

• to assist and advise the President in the preparation of the Economic Report;

• to gather timely and authoritative information concerning economic developments and economic trends, both current and prospective, to analyze and interpret such information in the light of the policy declared in section 2 for the purpose of determining whether such developments and trends are interfering, or are likely to interfere, with the achievement of such policy, and pile and submit to the President studies relating to such developments and trends;

• to appraise the various programs and activities of the Federal Government in the light of the policy declared in section 2 for the purpose of determining the extent to which such programs and activities are contributing, and the extent to which they are not contributing, to the achievement of such policy, and to make mendations to the President with respect thereto;

• to develop and mend to the President national economic policies to foster and promote petitive enterprise, to avoid economic fluctuations or to diminish the effects thereof, and to maintain employment, production, and purchasing power;

• to make and furnish such studies, reports thereon, and mendations with respect to matters of Federal economic policy and legislation as the President may request.”

How does the report define socialism?

The report admits that it is unclear “exactly what a typical voter has in mind when he or she thinks of ‘socialism’” yet notes that “economists generally agree about how to define socialism, and they have devoted enormous time and resources to studying its costs and benefits.” The report also acknowledges that socialism is on a spectrum and countries are rarely either all-or-nothing on socialist policies.

According to the report, whether a country or industry is socialist is a question of the degree to which “(a) the means of production, distribution, and exchange are owned or regulated by the state; and (b) the state uses its control to distribute the economic output without regard for final consumers’ willingness to pay or exchange (i.e., giving resources away ‘for free’).”

What is an “opportunity cost”?

An opportunity cost is the benefit, profit, or value of something that must be given up to acquire or achieve something else.Opportunity costs are fundamental costs in economics, and are used puting cost benefit analysis of a project or policy.

If socialism is a spectrum, what is the benchmark standard for the “opportunity costs” listed in the report?

For the basis of its empirical claims, the report takes current U.S. public policies as the benchmark standard. “This benchmark has the advantage of being measurable,” notes the report, “but it necessarily differs from theoretical concepts of ‘capitalism’ or ‘free markets’ because the U.S. government may not limit its activity to theoretically defined public goods.”

“Relative to the U.S. benchmark,” adds the report, “we find that socialist public policies, though ostensibly well-intentioned, have clear opportunity costs that are directly related to the degree to which they tax and regulate.”

What is in the report?

Below are highlights and quotes that provide an overview and summary of the contents of the report:

• In the twentieth century, socialists accused the agriculture sector of being unfair and unproductive. Today, socialists argue that healthcare, education, and other sectors are unfair and unproductive, and they promise that large state organizations will deliver fairness and economies of scale.

• Present-day socialists do not want the “dictatorship or state brutality” that often coincided with the “most extreme cases of socialism.” But implementing such policies will still cause the same problems as previous socialist states (i.e., high tax rates, large state organizations, and the centralized control of resources).

• Socialist policies tend to make countries poorer. Replacing U.S. policies with highly socialist policies such as Venezuela’s would reduce real GDP more than 40 percent in the long run, or about $24,000 per year for the average person.

• Nordic countries aren’t the socialist success stories they are often touted as being, and in many ways are no longer even socialistic. For example, Nordic healthcare is not free but rather requires substantial cost sharing. Also, Nordic countries tax capital e less and regulate product markets less than the United States does. Still, because of their existing socialist policies, living standards in the Nordic countries are at least 15 percent lower than in the U.S.

• Historical and contemporary socialists argue—despite the empirical and historical evidence—that heavy taxation need not reduce national output because a public enterprise uses its efficiency and bargaining power to achieve better es.

• Socialists in America are less concerned with state ownership of the means of production as with state control of the means of production.

• A primary challenge for socialism is that the persons deciding on resource allocations—that is, how much to spend on a product and how that product should be manufactured and delivered to the final consumer—are different from those providing the resources and different from the final consumer who is ultimately using them. Most socialist policy options ignore the distinction between spending your money on yourself and spending someone else’s money on someone else.

• “An important reason that people work and put forth effort is to obtain goods and services that they want. Under socialism, the things they want may be unavailable because the market no longer exists, or are made available without the need for working.”

• “Although socialist policies are ostensibly implemented to reduce poverty and inequality, it was the end of highly socialist policies in China that brought these results on a worldwide scale.”

• Democrats in the Senate and House support “Medicare for All” (M4A) plans which make it unlawful for a private business to sell health insurance, or for a private employer to offer health insurance to its employees. “The quality or productivity of the monopoly plan would be determined through centrally planned rules and regulations. As opposed to a market petition, if a patient did not like the tax charged or the quality of the care provided by the government monopoly, he or she would have no recourse.”

• “If financed solely through higher taxes, we find that the program would reduce long-run GDP by 9 percent and household es after taxes and health expenditures by 19 percent. Evidence on the productivity and effectiveness of single-payer systems suggests that M4A would reduce longevity and health, particularly among the elderly, while only minimally increasing the fraction of the population with health insurance.”

• “The historical evidence suggests that the socialist program for the U.S. would make shortages, or otherwise degrade quality, of whatever product or service is put under a public monopoly. The pace of innovation would slow, and living standards generally would be lower. These are the opportunity costs of socialism from a modern American perspective.”

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Video: Rev. Sirico on Pope Francis and the Mafia
Earlier today, Rev. Robert Sirico spoke with Fox News’ Lauren Green on ‘Spirited Debate’ about Pope Francis’ decision to municate members of the Italian mafia. From Heard on Fox: “Italy has e increasingly more secular and that has impacted the secularity of the mafia – they don’t have the kind of dramatic religious ties that they might have had at one time … the stuff of which movies portray,” said Sirico. He added, “they [the mob] have an appearance of...
Using Drones for Good
Drones, or unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), have been a prominent and controversial topic in the news of late. Today, the Washington-based Stimson Center released its mendations and Report on US Drone Policy. The think tank, which assembled a bipartisan panel of former military and intelligence officials for the 81-page report, concluded that “UAVSs should be neither glorified nor demonized. It is important to take a realistic view of UAVs, recognizing both their continuities with more traditional military technologies and the...
Justice Alito: ‘For-Profit’ Businesses Pursue More Than Material Gain
In a 5-4 decision, the Supreme Court just announced its ruling in favor of Hobby Lobby, holding that, “as applied to closely held corporations, the government’s HHS regulations imposing the contraceptive mandate violate the Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993 (RFRA).” The full opinion, written by Justice Samuel Alito, can be read here. Although there is still much to digest, and although the majority opinion still leaves quite a bit of room for related battles to continue, it’s worth noting...
A Cultural Case for Capitalism: Part 11 of 12 — The Challenges
[Part 1 is here.] Economic freedom does generate certain challenges. The wealth that free economies are so effective at creating brings with it temptation. Wealth can tempt us to depend on our riches rather than on God. The temptation can be resisted, as we see with wealthy biblical characters like Abraham and Job. But it’s a challenge the church should be mindful of, helping its members cultivate a balanced view of money and of our responsibility and opportunities as stewards...
From Steadfast Conservatives to the Faith and Family Left: Highlights from Pew Research’s Political Typology Survey
In discussions of political issues, the American public is too often described in a binary format: Left/Right, Republican/Democrat, Red State/Blue State. But a new survey by the Pew Research Center takes a more granular look at our current political typology by sorting voters into cohesive groups based on their attitudes and values: Partisan polarization – the vast and growing gap between Republicans and Democrats – is a defining feature of politics today. But beyond the ideological wings, which make up...
Key Quotes from the Hobby Lobby Decision
Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito wrote the majority (5-4) opinion in Burwell v. Hobby Lobby. The decision was decided in large part because it aligns with the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, a law that passed the U.S. Senate 97-3 and was signed by President Bill Clinton in 1993. The law is intended to prevent burdens to a person’s free exercise of religion. At the time, it had wide ranging bipartisan support and was introduced in the House by current U.S....
A Cultural Case for Capitalism: Part 12 of 12 — Beyond Marxism
[Part 1 is here.] That most colossal blunder of Marxist experiments, the Soviet Union, collapsed more than twenty years ago, and yet Marxist thinking still penetrates the warp and woof of contemporary culture, so much so that it’s easy even for avowedly anti-Marxist conservatives to think from within the box of Marxism when considering the problem of cultural decay. Breaking out of that box means emphasizing but also stretching beyond such factors as insider cronyism, class envy, and the debilitating...
What You Should Know About the Contraceptive Mandate Decision
This morning the U.S. Supreme Court issued a ruling on the Health and Human Services (HHS) contraceptive mandate (see here for an explainer article on the case). The Court ruled (5-4) that that employers with religious objections can opt out of providing contraception coverage under the Affordable Care Act. Here are six points you should know from the majority opinion written by Justice Samuel Alito: 1.The “Hobby Lobby” decision is really a collection of three separate lawsuits. Although the focus...
Video: Rev. Sirico on Hobby Lobby Ruling
Earlier today, Rev. Sirico spoke with WSJ Live’s Mary Kissel about the contraceptive mandate ruling, religion’s place in the public square, and the historical context of the Supreme Court’s decision. Watch below: ...
Finding Meaning in Blue-Collar Work
Over at the Patheos Faith and Work Channel, Larry Saunders shares about his journey from pastor to grocery-store clerk to blue-collar factory worker to current MBA student in search of a white-collar job, offering deep and personal reflections on faith, work, and meaning along the way. When he became a United Methodist pastor, Saunders enjoyed certain aspects of what he calls the “white collar work of ministry,” finding “a strong correlation between my personal sense of vocation and my gifts.”...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved