Trump Is Embracing 'Daddy State' Economics
Markets thrive on predictable rules, but when the president takes equity stakes or pressures firms at will, investment and risk-taking give way to hesitation.

The question of whether President Donald Trump has turned the United States toward a new "state capitalism"—one in which the government is not just economic referee but active player—has been answered. His second term brings policies that go well beyond traditional Republican pro-market orthodoxies, such as tax cuts and deregulation, and into direct involvement with production and capital. Yet this doctrine is less a coherent grand strategy than a set of ad hoc deals, sometimes pro-market and sometimes interventionist.
Some Trump policies—tax cuts, deregulating, talk of budget-deficit reductions—retain a traditional Republican tone. On the other hand, this administration's protectionism and tariffs would have been inconceivable a decade ago. Republicans would also traditionally label the government's acquisition of a 10 percent stake in Intel as socialism if proposed by anyone other than Trump. And other policies have the feel of mafia tactics made possible by the exercise of leverage, like letting Nvidia and AMD sell their chips to China in exchange for a 15 percent cut back to the U.S. government.
Trump also departs markedly from the past GOP playbook in his lack of recognition that the market allocates resources much better than politicians and bureaucrats do. He treats the market as a stage for negotiation to reorganize the world's economies. Old-guard Republicans were globalists, whereas Trump built his appeal on "America First" nationalism and protectionism.
Earlier Republicans valued predictable rules, but as Cambridge legal scholar Antara Haldar noted in a Project Syndicate symposium this month assessing the direction of "Trumponomics," the president "is willing to break any rule, norm, or promise…in the name of striking ad hoc corporate-style 'deals.'" Where conservative-minded leaders of the past obscured the state's role, Trump "flaunts it."
Yet Haldar correctly argues that Trump's approach differs from other forms of heavy-handed state control. It is neither the Chinese model nor that of the developmental state. It is "erratic, transactional, and short-sighted" and a rejection of the "quietly overbearing 'Nanny State'…in favor of a commanding, patriarchal 'Daddy State.'"
Princeton University historian Harold James, another participant in the symposium, sees Trump as a break from the past due to his revival of state-directed "industrial policy." This started under former President Joe Biden's administration, but there is no doubt that Trump's pursuit of a manufacturing revival and reshoring of global supply chains, along with his tariffs and equity stakes in private companies and his overall aim to rebuild U.S. strategic capacity, fall well into that category.
Unfortunately, as James argues, Trump's brand of industrial policy encourages "hyper-activist corporate lobbying, with large and well-connected enterprises getting the best 'deals.'" In my opinion, all industrial policies end up this way, not just Trump's.
In this case, I find it particularly interesting that even industrial-policy advocates like Mariana Mazzucato, author of The Entrepreneurial State, seem displeased with Trump's version. Done right, she claims in her contribution, industrial policy can support innovation and inclusive growth. She sees Trump's approach as "gestures without purpose, interventions without coordination, and spending without strategy."
That's because Trump's approach isn't part of any coherent vision. It's just transactional. He looks at it in isolation, and if he believes it is a good deal, he does it. That's what makes the behavior especially damaging: It creates profound uncertainty. Markets thrive on predictable rules, but when the president takes equity stakes or pressures firms at will, investment and risk-taking give way to hesitation.
Soon, companies learn that success depends less on innovation or competition than on currying political favor. Resources shift from productive activity to lobbying, undermining both fairness and growth. Because these actions are purely transactional, they entrench the worst aspects of state capitalism: politicized resource allocation, favoritism for the well-connected, and erosion of the rule of law. This isn't new, but Trump brings a new scale and unique pride in breaking with time-honored conventions of governing.
The inevitable result is slower growth, less dynamism, and a political economy driven by rent-seeking instead of entrepreneurship.
Michael Strain of the American Enterprise Institute, however, reminds us that despite Trump's many exercises in state capitalism, his most enduring legislative achievement, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, moves the tax code in a more pro-market direction. Strain concludes that the old classical liberal consensus will endure because its past success "will help to ensure its longevity."
Boy, do I hope he's correct. The risk is not that Trump has built a sustainable model of state capitalism but that his erratic improvisation is eroding institutional safeguards and trust in markets without delivering durable alternatives.
So, is Trump a state capitalist? He certainly acts like one, but "daddy capitalist" is more descriptive. This is little comfort.
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Trump is a different type of central planner, but a central planner none-the-less.
That would require him to actually have a plan.
His plan is whatever comes to mind for that day. And if you don't do what he wants, he'll hit you with a tariff, take a stake in your company, apply a 15% export tax, an FCC threat, or a lawsuit.
Oh yeah? Well whatabout whatabout? Huh? Whatabout?
More broken than jeff’s diet.
Or Jeff’s chair.
Who’s your daddy?
Now that the economic apocalypse didnt happen, what's the next anti trump narrative we can use. - reason.
What the fuck does reason think those large manager trade deals were?
What the fuck does reason think the hundreds and billions in federal subsidies were?
What the fuck does reason think the 5T in regulations were?
Apocalypse might be a bit of a strawman. Economic indicators are not great. Q1 GDP was negative. Q2 rebounded mostly because he delayed his tariffs, who knows what he does going forward (which is kind of the point of the article.) Hiring is down because nobody knows how to plan for Trump's "plan." The bond yield curve is at least no longer inverted, but it is flat (signals uncertainty). The market is up, yes, but S&P 500 PE ratio is on the overvalued side and we're probably heading for a correction soon.
Trump even admits that his economy needs a shot in the arm which is why he's been pressuring the Fed for a rate cut. He's sowing uncertainty into the market and the evidence above correlates.
I don't think you know what the word "correlates" means. This all reduces down to the age old "The market could go up, unless it goes down or doesn't move one way or the other." handwaving to cover your "But I'm sure Jessie is wrong and the future is bad because of Trump" pre-ordained conclusion.
Didn’t you predict the actual apocalypse when Biden was elected in 2020?? Biden gave poor people another $1000 dollars!?!! Only Trump can give poor people free money!!! Biden is destroying America!!! OUTRAGE!!!!
He's Obama the 2nd
Not close. Obama was a free trader (TPP) and steadily reduced the deficit from $1.2 trillion to $500 billion.
Trump is a big government mob boss. Donnie is running $3 trillion deficits and brags about it.
https://psychcentral.com/disorders/treating-pedophilia#aversion-therapy
Obama and Trump:
1.Take golden shares , check
2.Budget busting "health" bills, check
3. Military interventionalism without Congressional authority, check
4. Rule by Executive Order, check
Your hero is just like your villain. I could go on and on.
Your villain is just like your hero. I could go on and on.
Nope, Obama had the deficit to a manageable level by 2014. Trump spiked the deficit for .1% more GDP growth.
Libertarians for National Socialism
Republicans would also traditionally label the government's acquisition of a 10 percent stake in Intel as socialism if proposed by anyone other than Trump.
That's not true. What about George Dubya?
Republicans disowned Dubya. He isn’t even welcome at their convention.
Same will happen with Donnie in 2028. MAGA will be a rotting stench by then.
https://psychcentral.com/disorders/treating-pedophilia#aversion-therapy
I really hope you're right about MAGA, but I'm not getting my hopes up. MAGA is a cautionary tale about what can happen to a political party when its "useful idiots" reach critical mass. I don't think we're getting that genie back in the bottle. I think GOP politics will be driven by incoherent populist rage for the foreseeable future.
Actually Republican thought leaders rejected Trump in 2022 and got behind DeSantis. By 2024 the MAGA faithful steamrolled them just like they did in 2016. Don’t let establishment Republicans pretend they supported Trump the entire time. Oh, and DeSantis is far worse than Trump and he ended killing more Americans than Osama Bin Laden and George W Bush combined!!
MAGA is a cautionary tale about what can happen to a political party when its "useful idiots" reach critical mass.
Wrong. MAGA, as with Trump, is a reaction to a government deaf to the will of the people.
Nope, we’ve added manufacturing jobs since 2010. So MAGA is reaction to Republicans thrusting Bush/Cheney onto America.
Markets thrive on predictable rules
Markets and climates, eh? If only Reason Magazine and their wing of the libertarian party could get control of both, everything would be hunky dory.
could get control of both
You're projecting again. The whole point of libertarianism is not to try to control everything, especially the market.
I'm not the one telling people how the market should behave.
Now take a minute and note the paradox of a "Free Minds and Free Markets" calling for predictable rules to dictate market behavior. That's not how markets work nor how a libertarian would assert they do. The core of the classic Keynes vs. Hayek dispute is that, in fact, markets thrive on predictable rules but that free markets fare better under or due to unpredictable circumstances.
Dumbass.
IIRC, the TikTok deal also gives Daddy Sam a slice of the American TikTok business, so add that to the pile of market interventions.
It is "erratic, transactional, and short-sighted" and a rejection of the "quietly overbearing 'Nanny State'…in favor of a commanding, patriarchal 'Daddy State.'"
Y'know, that's actually a fair way to describe it.
Apply it to actual mothers and fathers. Mom is always the weak one in the parenting game (it's why we don't want kids raised exclusively by them). She's good (hopefully) at nurture and care, but naturally sucks at literally everything else - everything that will teach the kid how to operate in reality. Which is where dad comes in.
Dad is the one who cuts through the BS. Dad is the one who gets things done. Dad is the one who picks up the Gordian Knot and cleaves it in twain. May not be the prettiest solution, call it "erratic, transactional, and short-sighted" if you want, but it does PROVIDE the solution. It moves you from A to B, instead of vacillating in perpetuity stuck in A.
Gender roles. Gosh, why do those pesky things keep asserting themselves. And, like families, it's best when mom and dad are both there to assert their respective influences. But if you have to pick only one - pick dad.
And that's one of the reasons we can SEE that this orange guy is getting things done. 2M illegals are GONE. International trade partners brought to heel. We're out of the wars. Literal boots on the literal ground in order to deal with high-crime areas. The LGBT Pedos backhanded from their continued efforts at preying on school kids. The wins just keep on coming.
We might not like seeing the way the sausage is made, but the sausage IS getting made for a change. Is a Daddy State preferable to America? No. Is it preferable to the Mommy State that Biden, Clinton, and "life of Julia" Obama wanted? Hell yes it is.
You seem very happy that Daddy is taking the sausage and moving it from your A to your B. I see now why girls don't like you.
We had a construction boom under Biden…that always leads to higher levels of illegal immigration. Oh, and the construction boom started in 2019 when the high levels of illegal immigration started.
Let's not mince words. Trump isn't a "daddy capitalist" or a "state capitalist." He's a socialist, pure and simple. His views on the government's role in the economy differ little from Vladimir Lenin's. He's only managed to trick conservatives for voting for him by going to the right on culture war issues.