Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
America suffers from economic nationalism
America suffers from economic nationalism
Oct 27, 2025 6:57 PM

In the long term, economic nationalism is bad for American business, American consumers and the American economy’s health. What is patriotic about that?

Read More…

One of the biggest political upheavals in America over recent years has been a resurgence in economic nationalism. Given the amount of regulation with which it is burdened, America’s economy can hardly be described as laissez-faire. But what’s not in doubt is that skepticism about free trade and free markets has grown across the American political spectrum.

This is especially evident on the right. Just pick up a copy of your nearest conservative magazine and I guarantee you’ll find a conservative politician or thinker arguing for greater use of tariffs and more extensive use of industrial policy across America. Such shifts away from free market positions, we’re told, are necessary if America is to address challenges like saving blue-collar jobs peting with China.

Much of this is dressed up in the language of patriotism. Only a soulless globalist, it’s argued, could oppose greater use of tariffs. Real Americans, the argument goes, should buy American, favor protection for American businesses and demand that government act to do what market forces apparently can’t in the American economy.

The problem with all this rhetoric is that it legitimizes policies that raise living-costs for millions of American consumers, incentivizes rampant cronyism on the part of American politicians and business leadersand gradually undermines America’s petitiveness.

Take, for instance, industrial policy. This is when the government intervenes in a sector of the economy on the assumption that, by bination of subsidies, tax breaks, below-market interest-rate loans and other measures, it can engineer more optimal results than would otherwise occur absent such intervention.

What industrial policy advocates won’t tell you is that industrial policy assumes that political leaders and technocrats possess the knowledge prehend all the technical details, possible production methods, range of incentives, actual and future prices, unintended consequencesand alternative uses of resources (to name just a few data points) that they would need to know to enable them to decide accurately the most optimal resource-allocation and course of action.

But no one can know all these things about a given economic sector (let alone an entire economy). Policymakers cannot know either the optimal allocation of capital and labor in any industry or the ever-changing preferences of millions of consumers and producers at any one moment in time.

Even those attempting to implement industrial policy on a relatively small scale have to confront the fact that all the information which they need is dispersed among thousands of people and is constantly changing. Some of the information that they need does not even exist yet. How, for instance, do we know which technologies will be valuable in the future and which won’t?

Then there are the mountains of ever-growing and changing tacit knowledge possessed by humans which undoubtedly exists, even if it is difficult to articulate or measure. Moreover, the more knowledge we accumulate, the more we e aware of the importance of other datapoints we did not previously know about.

All of this helps to explain why industrial policy — whether in Europe, Japan, Asia or America — has such a lousy track record in delivering on its promisesand ends up costing taxpayers billions of dollars in failed investments. But even worse is the cronyism that industrial policy breeds.

A good example was the Obama administration’s attempts to promote clean coal and carbon capture technology via the 2009 American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. The overwhelming majority of energy technology demonstration projects went to coal-related projects. Technologies like nuclear power, renewables, and gas-fired electricity plants went largely ignored. Why? Because the coal lobby was more powerful and politically connected than the others.

A similar dynamic manifests itself with protectionism. Tariffs and import quotas are designed to make American consumers pay more for foreign-made goods. The objective is to push consumers into buying American-made products at a higher price than they otherwise would in the absence of a tariff.

So if consumers don’t benefit from this, who does? The answer is that tariffs quotas directly benefit those businesses who resent the disciplines petition and are determined to make it harder petitors to enter “their” markets.

Unlike consumers, such businesses have the resources, political contacts and incentives to lobby legislators and governments for preferential treatment. Ergo, special interests tend to prevail in trade policy debates, even if most people happen to favor greater trade liberalization.

Norare tariffs very proficient at saving American jobs, it turns out. Consider the Trump administration’s imposition of steep tariffs on steel and aluminum in March 2018. Analysis of a Federal Reserve study released in December 2019 estimated that, on balance, these tariffs resulted in a net loss of 75,000 jobs.

The reason is that, as a 2020 Brookings Institution study illustrated, “any gains in peting sectors appear to have been more than offset by losses in industries that use imported inputs and face retaliation on their foreign exports.”

Incidentally, those 75,000 jobs lost as a consequence of the March 2018 tariffs were mostly blue-collar jobs located in largelyblue-collar towns.

I could provide literally hundreds of other examples of how protectionism increases costs for American consumers, contributes to job lossesand breeds unhealthy relationships between privilege-seeking CEOs and crony legislators anxious to get support from some of their most economically influential constituents at everyone else’s expense.

The more you look at these policies, the more you realize that they are not about promoting the mon good. On the contrary, economic nationalist policies cannot help but promote sectional and special interests because that is what they are designed to do.

America needs economic policies that promote the United States’ well-being. But let’s not kid ourselves that economic nationalism is the way forward. In the long term, it is bad for American business, American consumers and the American economy’s health. What is patriotic about that?

This article originally appeared in The Detroit News on July 21, 2021

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
Acton Rome Office Hosts PovertyCure Conference for Seminarians
On Tuesday Istituto Acton, the Acton Institute’s Rome pleted its two-day PovertyCure conference for seminarians and faculty of the Pontifical Urban College in Rome. The conference served as part of the students’ pastoral formation before the academic year begins next week. The event also marked the first full and official screening of the PovertyCure DVD Series in the Italian language. Episodes 1-4 of the DVD Series were shown on day one of the conference, Sept. 29, and Episodes 5-6 were...
‘Abraham Kuyper Goes Pop’ In For The Life Of The World Series
Andy Crouch, Christian author, musician and former Acton University plenary speaker, reviews For the Life of the World, a new curriculum series produced by the Acton Institute. In the newest edition of Christianity Today, Crouch discusses how this series takes the Dutch Reformed theology of Abraham Kuyper and “pops” it in a whole new direction. The result, Crouch says, is inventive, profound and rewarding. With the intention of attempting to “articulate core concepts of oikonomia (stewardship), anamnesis (remembering), and prolepsis...
The Employer-Employee Relationship as an Opportunity for Worship
Employer/employee relationships, in themselves, are not morally neutral, says Wayne Grudem, but are fundamentally good and pleasing to God because they provide many opportunities to imitate God’s character and so glorify him. Employer/employee relationships provide many opportunities for glorifying God. On both sides of the transaction, we can imitate God, and he will take pleasure in us when he sees us showing honesty, fairness, trustworthiness, kindness, wisdom, and skill, and keeping our word regarding how much we promised to pay...
Northern Iraq: 2000 Years Of Christianity Wiped Out By ISIS
This past Sunday, for the first time in 2,000 years, no Christians received Holy Communion in Nineveh. The Islamic militants have eradicated the Christian population in the northern Iraqi city. The few Christians that remain are either too old or sick to escape. Canon Andrew White, Anglican vicar of Baghdad, told The Telegraph that churches have been turned into offices for the Islamic militants, crosses removed. No Christians, he says, want to be there. Last week there was munion in...
Provoking Backlashes to Shut Down ALEC, Political Debate
I listen to National Public Radio nearly on a daily basis even though I know there are far-more productive ways to spend one’s time. On today’s “Diane Rehm Show,” the discussion was on the American Legislative Exchange Council, how much cash it received from bogeymen-of-the-left Charles and David Koch, and climate change. ALEC Chief Executive Officer Lisa B. Nelson appeared on the program and predictably endured rude interruptions from her host, ical charges from fellow guests, Tom Hamburger, Washington Post...
‘What Our Schools Need’
The Faith Movement, based in the United Kingdom, seeks to bring clergy, religious and lay faithful together to advance the Catholic faith, educating both believers and non-believers regarding the Church. Their website includes book reviews, and Eric Hester currently has a review of the Acton Institute’s Catholic Education in the West: Roots, Reality and Revival. Hester writes: At the heart of this most important little book is what The Catechism of the Catholic Church states: “the right and duty of...
You Are in the Image of God
The theme for this week’s Acton Commentary, “The Image of God and You,” struck me while I was rocking my baby son in the early morning hours. In the dim light he reached up and gently touched my face, and it occurred to me how parents are so prone to see the image of God in their children. And yet I wondered what it might be like for a child to look into the face of a parent. What would...
Profiting from Prisoners: How Prisons are Exploiting the Poor
Imagine you have a family member who has been in prison for a month. You decide to send them some money to buy a tube of toothpaste from the prison store. How much would you need to send them? At some prisons you’d need to send $130. Jails often deduct intake fees, medical co-pays, and the cost of basic toiletries first, leaving the prisoner’s account with a negative balance. To provide enough money for them to buy that initial tube...
Samuel Gregg: Europe Is Rotting
Sam Gregg, Acton’s Director of Research, bemoans the state of Europe in The American Spectator today. In a piece entitled, “Something is Rotten in the State of Europe,” Gregg begins by noting that Germany seems to have lost mon sense. William Shakespeare knew a thing or two about human psychology. But he also understood a great deal about the body-politic and how small signs can be indicative of deeper traumas. So when Marcellus tells Horatio at the beginning of Hamlet...
Education And Mental Health: Will Assessments Stop School Shootings?
that would require homeschooled and public school students to undergo mandatory mental health assessments. The bill aims to “provide behavioral health assessments to children” and states the following: “That section 10-206 of the general statutes be amended to require (1) each pupil enrolled in public school at grades 6, 8, 10 and 12 and each home-schooled child at ages 12, 14 and 17 to have a confidential behavioral health assessment, the results of which shall be disclosed only to the...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved