Tariffs Won't Fix What's Ailing American Men in the Work Force
If anything, they sabotage the very forces—dynamism, adaptability, innovation—that create the economic opportunities struggling workers need.

When President Donald Trump reentered office in 2025, he inherited a strong economy partly fueled by the possibility of lower taxes on capital, fewer overbearing regulations, energy abundance, and the rise of artificial intelligence (AI). Instead of stewarding that prosperity and optimism, Trump quickly upended it through a reckless love affair with tariffs and a flair for insulting allies. The result is a shrinking economy and the biggest stock market drop of any early presidential administration since the Nixon era.
The fiasco is made sadder by the fact that Trump's heart appeared to be in the right place.
At the core of Trump's economic vision is sincere worry, I think, about the decline in prime-age male labor-force participation. Over the past 50 years, the percentage of 25-to-54-year-old men participating in the work force has fallen from the mid-90s to the high 80s, with an especially pronounced drop-off among less-educated men.
This has real social consequences. Men without stable employment are far less likely to marry and form lasting families, and are more vulnerable to addiction, isolation, and what economists call "deaths of despair"—suicide, drug overdoses, and alcohol-related mortality.
The connection is clear. Research shows that economic insecurity among non-college-educated men fuels declining marriage rates, weaker communities, and more public health crises. Without access to meaningful work, men struggle to build lives of stability and upward mobility.
This sad trend is rooted in problems that tariffs and industrial policy won't fix. If anything, these policies sabotage the very forces—dynamism, adaptability, innovation—that create the economic opportunities struggling workers need. They also double down on the root cause of the problem: government intervention.
Start with the big picture. Americans today are vastly better off than they were 50 years ago. After adjusting for inflation, household incomes have risen by about 50 percent—more than double what raw census data suggest. Unemployment remains near historic lows. Over the past three decades, the private service sector has created about 40.5 million net new jobs, many in high-wage, high-skill fields like health care, finance, and professional services.
Meanwhile, U.S. industrial output has surged. It's now at its all-time high but with fewer workers thanks to stunning productivity gains. As economist David Autor notes, the so-called hollowing out of the middle class involves many workers moving up into higher-skill, higher-paying occupations.
None of this means that the labor-force detachment problem should be ignored. It does mean that the story is more complicated than Trump's "China stole our jobs" narrative suggests.
Take the famous "China shock" study that pointed to up to 2.4 million American jobs displaced in particular locales, mainly in manufacturing, after China joined the World Trade Organization and ramped up exports. Many subsequent studies that accounted for jobs created elsewhere in the economy show that, at the national level, the overall job impact was neutral.
The deeper problem exposed by the China shock wasn't trade—it was America's fading economic dynamism. In past generations, when industries declined, workers moved. They retrained. They found new opportunities. Today, many displaced workers simply stay put even as jobs emerge elsewhere.
Government policy plays an enormous role. Over time, policymakers have built a dense thicket of regulations and disincentives that trap people where they are and discourage adaptation.
Restrictive zoning and land-use legislations have sent housing costs in high-wage cities through the roof, pricing out workers who would otherwise migrate toward opportunity. Economists estimate that even modest housing deregulation would allow more Americans to live and work where their skills are most valued.
Another culprit is occupational licensing. Today, nearly one-third of U.S. workers must obtain some kind of government license to do their jobs, up from just 5 percent in the 1950s. These barriers disproportionately affect low-income workers and create huge hurdles to interstate mobility, effectively locking people into stagnant local economies.
Then there's Social Security Disability Insurance. Reforms in the 1980s expanded eligibility with broader, more subjective criteria. Today, many prime-age men outside the labor force report being disabled even as overall health has improved and physically demanding jobs have declined. The effect is less labor-force reentry—and, thus, worse long-term prospects—for workers on the margin.
There's more: Subsidies for homeownership tether people to declining regions; minimum-wage hikes price out low-skill workers and deny them valuable experience; poorly designed job-training programs often slow the path back to employment. And don't forget that growing public debt is a drag on economic growth, with economy-wide ramifications.
We must remove the obstacles and perverse incentives that make living with economic stagnation too rational a choice for too many people. If policymakers are serious about restoring work force participation, the answer isn't tariffs or industrial policy. It's tearing down barriers that government itself erected.
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This article talks about all the things that Trump defenders say Reason never talks about. That means the article doesn't exist. So ignore it and move along.
Get a new act.
What do you want from a degenerate alcoholic?
The "bad news" is the good news that few are saying: We don't need as much work as we used to, and soon will need even less.
It's time to start culling from the work force those whose net productivity can be easily enough projected to be negative. They should be made to play instead of working. As progress continues, you'll need to be more and more special to work for the rest of us, and their rewards will need to be spectacular — mostly in terms of recognition.
This may actually be the case. It would certainly be better than the current thinking - pay people for fake work in 'regulation compliance' which while keeping the masses employed, puts a massive brake-weight on the rest of the economy.
On the other hand - at some point the 'productive' are going to be in a position to just . . . cut loose those people who aren't pulling their own weight.
But the load will be so light with machines doing the lifting, nobody will care.
Except those who were living a life at the expense of the productive - they'll care when the machines stop working.
It's fashionable now to make fun of those who want to make a career of being, for instance, an online influencer or something like that with no obvious product. Just as it's always been fashionable to make fun of the aspiring artist or musician or sports figure. It occurs to me now that the people being so mocked are either already right or soon will be.
Given the long lead times, the process should start in childhood. Most children won't need much schooling. Their learning will only be for the purpose of getting the jokes in Shakespeare. On the other hand, teaching them should similarly be recognized as a hobby.
And we'll develop better, safer recreational drugs and devices.
Time to bring back Jonathan E.
>If anything, they sabotage the very forces—dynamism, adaptability, innovation—that create the economic opportunities struggling workers need.
Well, we don't seem to have that. Which is why we have this problem in the first place. I know your preferred solution is to continue doing the things we've been doing - which have lead us to having this problem - but some of us would like to try something else.
The country is already set to crash (thanks Obama) so, worst case, this will just make the crash happen faster and the sooner we crash the sooner something else can be built from the wreckage.
Reason has gone fully into the keep printing money to hide the problem argument.
How can this rag keep beating the drum that we NEED foreigners to fill our labor needs and yet they keep blowing off the fact that we have all the labor available, but the lazy fucks are on the government dole. I know she vaguely addresses this, but it needs to be fully explored here.
You can't force people to work. Well you can, but society has decided that slavery is bad. The only option then is to find people willing to work, and people on the dole are not willing to work. That leaves foreigners. Unless you want to enslave people on welfare. And that's fine if you do. But you could at least be honest about it. I'm kidding of course. I'd never accuse a Trump defender of being capable of honesty.
Dummy still hasn’t figured out you can’t have both open borders AND a welfare state.
You can force them to work if they want to eat. Tie the handout to an incentive to earn. Earn more, get more. You are always talking about subsidizing what we want to incentivize. This is the moment.
Yes, it's not perfect, we will need exceptions and the lazy and the poor will always be with us. There will be errors. As we have today. We are looking for capture on the middle of the bell.
You can force them to work if they want to eat.
Not if the work they're capable of doing simply isn't needed.
Unless you want to enslave people on welfare.
Funny story. They already are.
I sincerely hope you say something similar to some descendants of some actual slaves, and they then beat you to within inches of your life or kill you.
Wow. I have certainly watched enough PBS - Find your Roots - to understand the dichotomy and complication involved with descending from another human being. Some tales, tragic. Others, 'wow, I really came from that? And they did that? For me? To be where I am today?' No white oppression required. check what we actually did.
And you are posting from Main? You (Maine) are the least diverse of the nation. Literally.
some descendants of some actual slaves
Really. Those ancient beings are 'beating me within in inches of my life?'
Some descendants of actual slaves. I'm sure you're finding those in your hood, Yo Aright?
I don't need to use the GFY emoji douche.
Second response:
Fill in the blank: Give me the Maine points.
I use to engage. But what a fucking idiot you are. You can't even go away, as much as you profess to wanting to. You wouldn't know a descendant of an actual slave if you dug them up in your government sponsored and supported job and then traced their DNA. You'd get that wrong too.
Hey now. His county is 98% white. He knows tons of them!
And they all work at one restaurant.
Oh shit sarc got ahold of some everclear or something.
blah blah blah
Not for nothing that blacks per capita are the largest welfare recipients.
But the drunkard hates everyone who points out that slavery was never dead.
the lazy fucks are on the government dole
One of the reasons this doesn't get enough attention is that it's masked by many of the "lazy fucks" not being directly on any dole, but rather living off the doles of baby-mommas, parents, and other relatives. A guy living illegally in his girlfriend's Section 8 apartment, eating food bought with his mom's SNAP card, and getting some spending money by stealing his dad's SS check, doesn't show up in the stats as "on the dole".
So exactly how do American men get the jobs that stay overseas?
That little detail is missing from your fantasy.
Know why jobs go overseas? Because they don't pay enough for Americans to want them. Sure you can spend all day screwing in the same part over and over all day long, like people did in the romantic 1950s. But you'll also get paid romantic 1950s wages. Actually you won't, because it's against the law to pay people a few dollars a day.
And the companies often get the quality of workers that they pay for, with the resulting lack of quality of product.
OK, so we still require manufacturing. Is that kind work only appropriate for those lesser benighted people in other lesser countries?
Sarc is pretty racist. But so are most leftists and globalists with these arguments.
It really is hilarious when you think about it They’re the people who want to cross to the other side of the street if they see a black guy approaching.
That's often a good idea.
We still do manufacturing. We just do it with fewer people because we're so wealthy that the work is done with automated machines, not hands. Back in the days when manufacturing in this country was done with people instead of machines, we were also a lot poorer. We owned less stuff, and most of that stuff was of lesser quality than what we own today. But it was a step up compared to what we had before. It's the same with countries that do menial manufacturing. It pays shit by our standards, but it's better than what they had before. And that's why a lot of these factories move. They bring up the standard of living for the nation where they are located, to the point where it's no longer economical to produce there. So they move to another country and the process repeats. You're so willfully ignorant of economics and of history that you will never understand this. Because if you did you'd see Trump is a liar. So you'd rather be ignorant and defend Trump than learn things that would get you kicked out of your tribe. Fucking caveman.
That’s true for the manufacturing jobs lost in the 1980s…but the jobs we lost to China after they entered the WTO under Bush/Cheney were good paying safe jobs. Remember that core PCE inflation remained low during those years as CPI elevated above target because of outsourcing good jobs to China. Had Trump somehow defeated Bush in 2000 we would be much stronger today.
Golgafrinchans are fiction.
Inflation from 2005-2008 was very real even though Bernanke pretended it wasn’t happening. Greenspan and Bernanke and Hank Paulson are the 3 Wise Monkeys.
When you are replaced by the "job creators" as too costly or too inefficient or too inconvenient, what do you expect working age men to do? Futurist described a time where work was not necessary, as robots did "all the things" from chores to heavy labor. There was only room for intellectuals, and anybody else was cast aside by the wealthy elite ruling class. With no jobs, men turned listless and violently anti-social. There is going to be a point where you can't get a job because machines do it better (cheaper) and capitalist don't care about your needs. The common man will be stuck between not being able to afford anything because they have no money & not having money because they can't gain compete with machines & AI for employment.
This should come as no surprise, this stock literary stuff from the industrial revolution up to the cyberpunk genre of the 80s.
They won't have money, but they won't need money. The price of everything will drop to 0. We'll all have everything we want. Why do these dystopian writers think readers are dumb enough to think goods and services will be hoarded when there's no scarcity?
I just can't see the Maga majority agreeing to give anything to anybody outside their tribe. The robots will have to convince them that they earned all the goodies and show them holograms of the undeserving poor suffering so they can feel better about themselves in contrast.
Then join the tribe.
What bout apartments?
You are jumping the shark a little. Cyberpunk dystopias aren't post-scarcity , they are post-labor focus; meaning you'll either work for pittance, if at all, to compete with machines or have some hyper specialized job that allows you to buy the robots to do all the things you don't want to. There is nothing that makes the price of living drop to zero, else there wouldn't be any wealthy people. Things still cost, that is the dystopia ... the need without the means to resolve. Sure, there are robots to do anything imaginable ... can you, the common man, afford them ? No.
You're not seeing it. Gadgets are cheaper, sometimes so cheap that if you broke one, you just throw it out and get a new one. On the other hand, other things are getting way more expensive such as housing, education, medical services, and of course, government. You don't think those things are hoarded?
With no jobs, men turned listless and violently anti-social.
Happened in many of the Muslim countries. Oil wealth, and the state dependents. Through in weird sex laws and watch men implode.
After adjusting for inflation
So - bullshit from that point on
Vance just held a rally at a Nucor steel mill—Nucor’s technology bankrupted Big Steel in the 1970s and 1980s!! So the company that bankrupted Big Steel now benefits from steel tariffs!! That’s called “crony capitalism”! And Nucor doesn’t burn coal which is why steel mills were located around coal country—mini mill technology uses electricity which thanks to hydropower the Carolinas had some cheap electricity which is renewable and clean!!! Trump supporters just eat up the slop they are fed…pigs to slaughter!
Still need coke.
Sam wishes he could afford coke.
Nope. Mini mills use scrap, coke isn’t used. So why was Vance talking about his skanky violent drug addicted relatives?? Because Trump supporters are skanky drug addicts with fried brains…don’t be like Hegseth and raw dog the Trump sluts, use condoms!! 😉
"You Will Work in the Factory and You Will Like It." Oh, wait....
I started college treaching 10 years ago. Is this article writer a teacher? Almost certainly not.
Just 4 things to munch on for a taste of reality
1) Harvard now has a remedial course in Math (Algebra!!!!) and I get kids who don't know the most basic things about English grammar.
2) Whatever you claim as an educational accomplishment, kids do not learn how to learn. They leave school and experience what my brilliant father did getting his Electrical Engineering degree on the GI BIll....he said that within 5 years half of what he was taught was outdated. The analog gave way to the digital. microcircuits and comptuers came in. NOt to mention Gene splicing. AI, nuclear energy, Climate Science , and Space travel. You cannot live on what you learn in college , hoping that the gas of data poured into your gas tank mind runs out just before you die. NO, you think that and you will spend maybe 3 decades a stranger in the world
3) They do not know American History or Civics and -- this you miss--- nor do a scary number of their younger teachers !!!!
"National Survey Finds Just 1 in 3 Americans Would Pass Citizenship Test"
4) What are you getting in most cases if you do go to college?
The total cost of attendance at Brown University for the 2025-2026 academic year is $93,164...and since the Demographic Cliff (15% decline in students over next few years) costs will BOOM or teachers will get the boot --- deduction from that good ole Austrian Economics you claim to love
Don’t Confuse the Cost of College with the Cost of an Education
https://mises.org/mises-wire/dont-confuse-cost-college-cost-education
"Student loan subsidies have so distorted the market for higher education that we can’t even tell the difference anymore. In a world of more market-oriented colleges, we’d be seeing colleges that work strenuously to reduce costs while increasing the quality of faculty instruction. Instead, what we find is a race to produce ever more luxurious amenities or funnel more and more money to six-figure-salaried administrators and staff to run a high-end rec center for students.
Colleges would focus on providing easy-to-attend classes for part-time workers (many of whom are low-income) who must attend college at the lowest cost possible. Students would focus on fulfilling basic requirements at lower cost schools and community colleges while waiting to access more costly lab facilities and other resources in the junior and senior years. (Many low-income students already do these things, but in the absence of subsidized loans, the total numbers using these strategies would be far greater.)
Certainly, those with the means would still attend costly luxurious schools, but most would recognize that those students are paying for something other than education. Far larger numbers of students, though, would attend colleges that specialize in delivering an education in a timely and cost-effective manner with few frills. The number of students attending amenity-laden schools would fall considerably, and many small liberal arts colleges would go out of business. Urban and suburban campuses, while less “sexy,” would benefit instead as students turned toward more economical easy-to-access colleges that are more focused on job skills and integrating students into the larger community that includes employers and industries that need employees.
As long as government student loans remain a dominant factor in the pricing of higher education, though, we’ll continue to see more and more growth in the cost of higher education which will continue to be a boon for the colleges themselves, while placing a heavy burden on students who don’t understand how little of what they pay actually goes to education."
don't know the most basic things about English grammar.
Or in an increasing number of cases, are actually illiterate. Voice-to-text technology enables students who can't read or write to fake it all through high school, listening to texts and sources read to them, and speaking their written assignments to devices that write for them.
Where I work, they recently had to let a employee go because he could not pass a required certification test. His manager helped him by going over the material to make sure he knew it, but he failed the test repeatedly. Turned out that, although he had a good grasp of the material, he repeatedly failed the test because he couldn't read. He was a public high school graduate.
Ah so he graduated in the top 89%
Alegebra. 10th grade. Required.
When I went back to college later in life to finish my degree I had an old school teacher, close to retirement. He reminded the students that in his day, when there was a test. HIS professors watched the clock and locked the doors for entrance at the start of class. Late to class, fail the course. Simple rules. Simpler expectations.
Those lessons continues on through the rest of your life regardless of subject.
My kid is learning it in 6th ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
The result is a shrinking economy and the biggest stock market drop of any early presidential administration since the Nixon era.
And there it is. That qualifier (bold) that makes Trump's policy SO MUCH MORE bad than any that came before him.
And Trump was president before and the deficit exploded…shouldn’t libertarians care more about that than anything else?? A president that leaves with a surplus like Bill Clinton actually has done very little damage if you think they did a poor job…while a president like Bush did a poor job as president (95% of Americans now believe that) and stuck the bill with future generations!
>Start with the big picture. Americans today are vastly better off than they were 50 years ago.
Then later in the article:
The deeper problem exposed by the China shock wasn't trade—it was America's fading economic dynamism.
So which is it?
Both, of course. The two statements aren't inconsistent at all.
Two points:
1. The big problem with SSDI is arguably not the loosening of eligibility so much as the fact that it's a roach motel. Once you start collecting it, there are huge disincentives to returning to the work force.
2. Tariffs have historically reduced what dynamism is left in an economy by making domestic producers fat and complacent. See the cartoon Jason Zweig of The Wall Street Journal linked to, drawn in response to Wilson's 1913 proposal to reduce tariffs: https://www.loc.gov/item/2011649382/
Lively discussion and thanks to all. Just a couple of observations from a personal perspective. I had a small business that failed due to government economic policy in the early 21st century specifically Chinese competition. Every business failure is a failure of management because in theory there's always an alternative so I took the hit. And creative destruction is always ultimately beneficial in the macro. Or so I'm told. But that doesn't change the fact that I lost all of the equity I spent 20 years trying to accumulate. And my little business was one of millions that was creatively destroyed. Yeah I get that we don't need buggy whips and phone booths anymore but let's not pretend that government managed economies don't leave behind real damage to real people. It's the same mindset that led to the Covidians destroying small businesses while giving big business a free ride financed by federal Covid bucks. Was the consumer better off? Well certainly the pundits and pajama class consumers were.
Secondly. I've been reading Reason since the early 80s and always found it thought provoking at least until the TDS infection. But I always had to scratch my head when Virginia Postrel described a future wherein technology was poised to solve every problem and create endless wealth for all of humanity. I learned pretty early on that the only thing that creates wealth is labor. Even animals work to feed themselves and while humans can multiply their labor by hiring employees sooner or later somebody has to get up and go to work. Trying to imagine a world where their is no cost because robots provide every need for free raises questions that I've never seen anyone attempt to answer logically. Will the companies that spent billions designing these technologies just give them away for the betterment of the species? Who decides who gets what? Will armies of robots descend on Appalachia and replace the trailers on the hillsides with McMansions? Will the robots forsee their own obsolescence and build new robots or will there be robot wars with humans in the crossfire. Now forty years later I don't see any evidence that this brave new world will ever happen. Which leaves me with the world in which I find myself. It's the same world that failed me forty years ago but Reason thinks it should be perpetuated. Meh.
Did you use slave labor? If not then you loose
I made this same exact point like, yesterday or the day before in about three sentences.
The tariffs and the mass deportations are a GREAT first step. But those are the easy steps. The much more difficult ones are going to be the full blitzkrieg attack on the minimum wage (and as others kindly and correctly pointed out, the unions), as well as hobbling the EPA/OSHA/EEOC, and forcibly breaking the nation of their A) grossly mistaken (and very dangerous) "we have a right to healthcare" mentality; and B) grossly mistaken "you need a degree to succeed" scam. I also like Ronnie's mention of reigning in occupational licensing. I didn't think to include that problematic aspect as well.
If he's smart - and I wouldn't call him a dullard - he'll start easing folks into the merit of that kind of thing now. Lay the groundwork, get the ball rolling, and then wait for Vance's 2nd Term to put it all into action.