Departures From Free-Markets Aren't New

Recently, due to deals President Trump is making, some are saying the United States has embarked on a version of Chinese-style “state capitalism” – directly entangling markets and government. No one is claiming that the US is as involved as the Communist Party dictatorship in China or authoritarian Russia, but certainly more entangled than a normal US free market approach would permit.

There are plenty of examples to go around, like the Trump Administration putting pressure on Intel to replace its CEO, wanting Goldman Sachs to fire an economist, demanding 15% of revenue from AI chip sales to China, creating a government-owned Golden Share in Nippon Steel’s purchase of US Steel, and pursuing pledges of hundreds of billions of investment from our trading partners to buy-down tariff rates.

On top of all this, the US is developing a system of tariffs that relies on the discretion of the president (and his team), varying from country to country, and in many cases product to product.

On the surface, the argument that the US is moving toward “state-run capitalism” seems to have a lot of evidence in its favor. What the argument ignores is that this started long ago.

Starting back in the 1930s, the government paid farmers either not to farm, or farm certain crops. In the 1970s, the US instituted price controls and differentiated between industries and even individual companies within industries. The US also capped oil prices, restricted branching by Savings and Loans and would not let banks pay interest on checking accounts.