The GOP's 'Capitalism' is Central Planning with MAGA Branding
Socialism is government control of the means of production. When the government becomes your largest shareholder, that's a strong first step.
When House Speaker Mike Johnson (R–La.) lashed out at last weekend's "No Kings" rallies soon to arrive on Washington's National Mall, he reached for an old conservative refrain: "They hate capitalism. They hate our free enterprise system."
I am sure he's correct about some of the protesters. But the message rings hollow coming from a party leader that stands by as President Donald Trump does precisely what Johnson rightly decries: substituting political control for market choice and ruling by executive order.
Indeed, what began as a populist revolt against so-called elites has become a program of state ownership, price fixing and top-down industrial control. Take a look.
Recently, the Trump administration quietly converted CHIPS Act subsidies into an $8.9 billion equity purchase in Intel, making Washington a 10 percent owner of one of America's largest technology companies. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick insists "this is not socialism." That's semantics.
Socialism is government control of the means of production. When the government becomes your largest shareholder, that's a strong first step.
The Intel case offends two basic economic truths. First, no group of officials can ever know enough to guide a complex industry better than millions of private investors, engineers, and consumers spending their own money. Second, the power to "partner" with business is the power to control it.
The more political capital the government invests, the more it demands in return. It's only a matter of time until politically favored locations, suppliers, or hiring quotas shape Intel's decisions. That isn't capitalism.
The administration has taken shares in companies before, and it likely will again. In July, the Pentagon became the largest shareholder in MP Materials, considered the only fully operating rare-earth mine of scale in the U.S. The deal guarantees a 10-year price floor for MP output at nearly double the current market rate. MP competitors were rightly shocked.
Yet Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent recently told CNBC that Washington will continue to "set price floors" and "forward-buy" commodities "across a range of industries" to encourage more investments into U.S. production and away from China.
While this may encourage more U.S. investments in the short term, guaranteeing an unfair advantage over competitors by setting a minimum price reduces American companies' long-run incentives to innovate and produce better output. Economists have understood for more than a century what happens when the government fixes prices above their market level: Buyers purchase less, sellers produce more, surpluses pile up and waste follows. It's the logic of failed farm-price support in the 1930s.
There are far better options than schemes like these. As for those rare-earth minerals, the U.S. sits on billions of dollars' worth, yet MP is almost alone in extracting them. That's in part because excessive regulation keeps the potential locked underground, deterring investment in innovative mining solutions, processing plants, magnet factories, and the skilled workforce needed to turn our geological abundance into economic value. Deregulation is the free-market way. Mimicking the Chinese model isn't.
If that's not enough, the administration has nationalized all but in name the company called U.S. Steel. To approve its market-driven purchase by Nippon Steel, Trump required a "golden share," giving him veto power over plant closures, production levels, investments, even pricing. The White House effectively dictates how U.S. Steel can operate inside the United States.
In the name of economic patriotism, we have recreated the structure of the state-owned enterprises that American trade negotiators once fought against in China and Europe. The same government that lectures Beijing about state capitalism and non-market behaviors now practices it at home.
Future presidents of either party will inherit this precedent and run with it. If the White House can seize control of a steel company today, it can do the same to an automaker, chip designer, or energy producer tomorrow in the name of whatever is deemed an emergency at the time.
Republicans once warned that socialism begins with good intentions and ends with bureaucratic command. They were right. If we ever see a Sovietization of American capitalism, it probably won't come through a Workers' Party or a proletarian revolution. It will more likely come through populists managing markets.
The U.S. became prosperous because the government did not own or direct industry. Entrepreneurs built the modern economy precisely because they were free to invest, trade, and fail when something doesn't offer enough to consumers. Interventionist industrial policy betrays that legacy.
So, Mr. Johnson, while many of the protesters don't share my free-market beliefs, it's not obvious to me how an administration that sets prices, owns companies, and dictates production loves capitalism or free enterprise either.
COPYRIGHT 2025 CREATORS.COM
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please to post comments
If you oppose Trump's socialist policies then you're the socialist! Nya nya nya! Neener neener neener! You're a poopy head too!
The economic policies of both teams have pretty much merged at this point. There's still a few differences, but they both agree on the basics.
They both agree with having a welfare state that is paid for by debt (i.e., taxes on future generations). They disagree a little bit on what the tax rate ought to be now, and on whom. But they all agree that going into massive debt to pay for the difference is just fine.
They both agree with taxing big corporations. Team Blue calls it "corporate taxes". Team Red agrees, they just do it in a more roundabout way: they call them "tariffs", but insist that American consumers don't pay the tariffs, therefore, it's the corporation paying the tariff that has to absorb the cost. Ergo, higher taxes on the corporation.
They both agree with manipulating tax policy to favor their preferred voting base. Team Blue wants to shift the tax burden away from poor people generally and tax "millionaires and billionaires". Team Red wants targeted tax manipulations, i.e., no tax on overtime, no taxes on tips, etc. Oh wait - Team Blue also favors those things. So they agree even more!
They both agree with handing out welfare to favor their preferred voting base. Team Blue just calls it "welfare". Team Red calls it "emergency tariff relief payments" to farmers & miners.
I guess the only real difference is the "vibe" that each team exudes. Team Blue has a "vibe" of just handing out money without much consideration about where it's going. Team Red has a "vibe" of wanting you to feel very very bad about it if you take government money.
Oh yeah, they even now agree on literal government ownership of corporations.
What makes this so cult-like is that many of the very same people who defend Trump's economic policies knew, up until he came along, that corporations don't pay taxes. They collect taxes. They collect taxes for the government and those taxes are taken out of shareholder profits, workers' pay, and factored into prices. But the corporation doesn't pay a dime. These Trump defenders knew this and defended this. Now they've completely suspended all the economic sense that they once had in favor of words and policies from a cult leader. That's one of the warning signs that someone is in a cult. When they stop believing in things they know to be true and replace it with nonsense.
You are completely detached from reality.
Really good post, I think you nailed it.
Maybe the most concerning part is how willing people who claim to be principled will just go along with the vibes when given the opportunity. They’ll endlessly criticize the other side for it and then once their side gets in power and does the same thing but with different vibes they’ll suddenly love it.
You advocated for forced vaccination and mutilation of children. Your entire screed is utter nonsense. Piss off and stay away from kids you fat pedo.
But bears could have escaped from trunks!
The protesters weren’t asking for more free market.
But I agree, get DC out of private companies as well as sunset social security, medicare, and medicaid. Immediately.
Let's agree to disagree, and strategically and reluctantly vote for Mao.
I believe he is deceased, so I don’t think we can vote for him. But he potentially is still voting for team D.
I believe he is deceased, so I don’t think we can vote for him.
OK, what's that got to do with the DNC?
I sure hope he didn’t die on an NYC subway.
Let's put ordinary free market capitalism at the midpoint of the political economy spectrum, shall we? We've known for a long time what happens when a nation-state moves farther and farther to the left end, towards Stalinism, Maoism, communism in general. We know less about what happens if we move farther and farther towards the right, because anyone speaking about it is immediately accused of promoting class warfare. But we all know, don't we, what lies at the right end of the spectrum.
We do.
But we are forced to pretend that somehow, it's the thing that lies leftward, just to the right of international socialism, communism's competitor for being the champion of the proletariat, national socialism.
Who is we? Have a mouse in your pocket? You putzes are pushing the same old talking points that have been around for ever.
You're more retarded than either of them.
If we put capitalism in the middle and "Everyone is the state." socialism at the left then, assuming the axis is one-dimensional and 'non-imaginary', "Only one person is the state." monarchy would be on the right. And we have tons of conservative experience with tribal elders, chieftans, small groups of kings and royal courts.
Just because you want to play retarded and pretend that people shouldn't know what Daddyhill was driving at *and* the same old talking points that are same and old because they've literally been around since the start of human civilization doesn't mean everyone should be compelled to indulge you and Daddyhill's self-clowning buffoonery.
Free market capitalism is the only ism that is not government management. Capitalism is naturally occurring in any developing civilization. Everything else, from fascism to socialism to communism, is strong central government control of that civilization. They are distinctions without a difference. All of you stop playing this stupid shell game.
Free market capitalism is the only ism that is not government management. Capitalism is naturally occurring in any developing civilization.
False. For all your 'mouse in your pocket' bluster above, barter is the only 'ism' that is not government management. Everything else requires a backed/enforced currency and/or third-party arbitration (which is the real motivator for currency). Even if the banks/mints, legislative, and enforcement bodies are separate, either the government effectively owns/controls the banks/mints through protection or the banks are self-enforcing as de facto fiscal governance. Even wampum was created by elders and handed down and distributed by and to chieftans.
Capitalism is by far the most flexible and individually empowering of the most people of all the '-ism', but it's not naturally occurring and/or self-sustaining without governance and law in civilized societies.
Free market capitalism is simply what naturally emerges when the government enforces contracts and property rights, and otherwise leaves the economy alone. It's all spontaneous order. No one designs it or directs it. As Hayek said, it's a product of human action, not human design. And yes I know perfect free market capitalism has never happened, because people in government are assholes. But that doesn't mean it can't be an ideal to strive for.
As far as the other ism's go, there is no left or right. Only control. People in power only argue over what they want to control and who they want to control it. You'll never see them arguing about liberty. Never. So when they win, we lose. Doesn't matter if they're left, right, center, or whatever. When they win, we lose. And right now they're winning. Boy oh boy are they winning. Unfortunately people who support politicians feel that when their politicians win, somehow they win too. But they're wrong. They lose.
But we all know, don't we, what lies at the right end of the spectrum.
11
The Scottish free banking era, where banks were allowed to create their own money. It led to massive stability and growth. The English then shut it down
Reason contributor, Brendan O'Neill:
How Trump wrongfooted his critics, with Daniel McCarthy | The Brendan O’Neill Show
Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick insists "this is not socialism.
And it still isn't unless you are of the opinion that public trading doesn't actually include anyone.
To be more specific, who among corporate America was going to reject an offer to buy shares?
The correct answer is no one.
All of them could do what EA did (go private), but no, so they cannot complain.
The irony of this article is that it is written by a writer at an outfit who pushes centralized free trade agreements that include these very concerns as free market without blinking.
We've never had a free market.
What reason is really doing is arguing the prior globalist/keyenesian planned markets are better than Trump's. But they wont admit to their preference being a planned market to avoid the cost benefit analysis.
I'll also point out how barely a word was said about pension board managers or blackrock managing 401k balances as voting pressure for companies. I believe reason has even defended these actions for boycott Israel actions.
Or do investments with pensions not count as government buying stock?
I will also add, due to the dishonest retards here that dont understand reality...
My preference is zero funding for any company.
Given that's not an option...
Between free taxpayer money vs free taxpayer money for equity stock, the latter is preferable so at least taxpayers can recoup losses, see failure like solyndra, the recent electric busses, etc.
I know some of you still dont understand what non voting stock is as you claim this is socialism, but that's a you fucking problem. How many times do I have to see someone post golden shares veto to push a lie.
And one final point to make this argument that this is socialism...
The entire federal and state regulatory framework controls production fat more than an equity buy like has been issued could ever dream of. Biden added 5T to the costs to companies for these controls. When was the last article demanding deregulation or noting it is now happening?
Reason seems to ignore the primary drivers of what they pretend to hate.
How many shares of how many stocks of how many companies do you think Trump would have to buy to shut down even half the bars, Churches, hospitals, restaurants, malls, playgrounds, and gyms in the country?
I honestly think the idea itself breaks the money printer. The government can't buy majority shares of every company, business, franchise, etc. The lockdown didn't work because Trump bought and closed down businesses and even the "bailouts" didn't come close to ironing out the wrinkles. It worked because of "6 ft. of separation"/"We're all in this together." chickenshits and their "Which attic are the unvaccinated Jews hiding in?" goose-stepping leadership made it happen.
Nah bro. French wines were quite literally unsullied by government intervention until Trump fucked it all up.
The idiot is seeing Reason rail against central planning and claiming that means they really support central planning but won't admit it?
Wow. Thanks for reminding me why I keep the idiot on mute. I mean, wow. That's so stupid I need to go take an Advil for a headache I didn't have thirty seconds ago. Just.. wow. I'm at a loss for words.
It's amusing to find oneself on the right of the cultists. Also amusing to note how few have posted on this thread.
The Trumpbots tend to avoid stories that make logical coherent arguments against Dear Leader's
temper tantrumspolicies.Exactly!
Obama II, Rise of the Machines!
Socialism is government control of the means of production.
What is taking (or borrowing) American tax dollars and redistributing them to people other than those who earned them (and not necessarily even American citizens!), each according to their ability, each according to their need?