Trump vs. Free Markets
Much separates populist Republicans from progressive Democrats, but they all favor state control.
Whatever debilitating brain parasite burrowed into the gray matter of American politics over the last decade-plus has resulted in some astonishing transformations. One of the biggest has been the reshaping of the once nominally pro-capitalist Republican party into a populist party hostile to free markets. Under President Donald Trump, the GOP increasingly favors the whims of the president and his cronies over the results of voluntary interactions among millions of buyers, producers, and sellers. Most recently, we see this in the form of Trump's announced intentions to ban some real estate investors from purchasing single-family homes and his proposed cap on credit card interest rates.
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Trump Finds Common Economic Ground With Progressives
"I am immediately taking steps to ban large institutional investors from buying more single-family homes, and I will be calling on Congress to codify it," the president posted last week on Truth Social.
Two days later, he announced that "effective January 20, 2026, I, as President of the United States, am calling for a one year cap on Credit Card Interest Rates of 10%."
It's unlikely even at this late stage in the erosion of the legislative branch that the White House can enact either policy on its own. But the president can expect congressional support not just from loyalists, but from Democratic lawmakers. Like his supposed opponents, Trump defends planned interventions in the economy in the name of "affordability." For those of us who favor being left alone to make our own decisions in our personal and economic lives, there's nowhere near as much as we'd like to distinguish the current Republican administration from its progressive Democratic predecessor.
"I told him that Congress can pass legislation to cap credit card rates if he will actually fight for it," Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D–Mass.) commented after Trump called her to discuss the issue. "I said, great—I had been proposing that for years. Let's do it!"
Likewise, Trump's dislike for investor-owned housing resonates with similar sentiments among his nominal political opposition, reflected in the HOPE (Humans over Private Equity) for Homeownership Act introduced last year in the Senate by three Democrats and two independents, including socialist Bernie Sanders (I–Vt.). That bill would impose excise taxes on "hedge funds owning excess single-family residences."
As you'd expect of any economic proposal that unites progressive Democrats and populist Republicans, these ideas aren't just interventionist, they're potentially very harmful.
Making Life More Affordable—or Not
While about a third of home sales in the second quarter of 2025 were to investors, "owners of just one to five properties account for 87% of all investor-owned homes," National Mortgage Professional reported last September. "Another 4% belong to those with six to ten properties. By contrast, large institutional players with portfolios exceeding 1,000 homes control only 2% of the market."
In other words, investment in single-family homes is mostly a mom-and-pop business activity by people who make money by renting out just a few homes. And even the small-scale investment by big players makes housing for renters more affordable.
A September 2025 paper examined the welfare consequences of institutional ownership of single-family housing. "Overall, we find that institutional acquisitions decrease rents and increase rental transactions, leading to large welfare gains for renters," wrote the authors, Felix Barbieri, of the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth, and Gregory Dobbels, a U.S. Department of Justice economist. "While higher concentration raises rents, higher rental supply lowers rents enough to more than offset the effect of concentration, pushing rents down overall. These renter gains come at the expense of homebuyers, whose welfare falls."
So, the simplistic argument that investor ownership of homes hurts affordability strongly depends on who you're talking about. Banning investors wouldn't improve affordability; it would, at best, change who benefits from renters to buyers (if it didn't just screw everybody, as market interventions often do).
On the same note, capping credit card interest rates by government decree might be popular with people contemplating hefty monthly bills, but it's likely to have unforeseen consequences.
"Consider what happens if the government caps rates," warned economic historian Phillip W. Magness. "Higher risk/lower credit individuals will no longer face 20% interest rates for failing to pay their credit card balances. They won't even qualify for a credit card anymore, because no credit card provider will even accept them. So what do they do instead if they need money to cover a purchase? They take out payday loans and similar risky short term instruments with even higher interest rates and penalties."
Government officials could also restrict or even ban (as is the case in some states) payday lenders to further their crusade for "affordability." But if people want credit they'll find it, even if that means going to loan sharks. Those underground lenders are more expensive than credit cards or payday loans and their collection tactics can be much less pleasant.
Socialism by Whatever Name
Trump's latest policy balloons aren't the first time he's proposed interference in voluntary transactions. Since beginning his second term, he's imposed high tariffs to (among other things) encourage domestic manufacturing, extracted government stakes in private businesses, and meddled in corporate executive compensation. Repeatedly, he has elevated government preferences over private decisions.
"Our electoral choices are coalescing into right-wing socialism vs. left-wing socialism," Jared Dillian cautioned in Reason earlier this month. "Unless Zombie Calvin Coolidge gets elected in 2028, the United States is headed toward financial ruin."
That convergence was explicitly expressed when Trump palled around at the White House with New York's new socialist Mayor Zohran Mamdani in November.
"Trump and Mamdani answered questions from reporters, both striking a remarkably cordial tone, with the president indicating he agreed with many of the mayor-elect's ideas," The Hill reported at the time.
As vitriolic as Americans politics are, and as many points of disagreement spark fiery clashes, economics isn't really a point of contention between the dominant factions of the two main parties. Trump's Republicans agree with the "opposition" progressive Democrats that the government should be running the economy. May we all successfully weather the consequences.
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New York Democrat gonna Democrat New Yorkly. Really, though, MAGA-style cognitive dissonance is nothing new for the GOP.
Ronald Reagan talked a good game, and Uncle Sam grew under his watch. That didn't stop a generation of Republicans from insisting he was a champion of limited government.
Richard Nixon campaigned on decentralization of power (because he was running against Barry Goldwater). But once he attained office, he created the EPA and OSHA, expanded Johnson's "Great Society" programs, ended Bretton Woods, and instituted price and wage freezes. Yet Nixon's legacy is somehow that of an arch-conservative.
Cling tightly to abortion and immigration, Republicans, because your economics is as pink as a Frenchman's.
Reagan also had market regulations whether trade or other policies dumdum.
This mythical free market has never existed. It is about who has been least bad.
Reagan didnt end banking regulations. He reduced some regulations, added some. Such as the S&L crisis. Glass Steagal wasn't repealed until 1999.
Reagan had trade deals and tariffs.
Reagan had the grace commission to find ways to cut spending, but very little eas wver cut. Sounds like DOGE doesnt it.
I feel too many libertarians argue from narratives and ignorance. They misremember reality to push talking points. Just like they claim free trade bills are actually free trade and not just large negotiated fees, tariffs, caps, etc.
Agreed that the Republicans have always been free market frauds. I'm just currently unsure if I'm going to miss the lip service or not.
I grew up at least hearing prominent Republicans tell the nation that free markets were good, and even if I disagreed with the actions they took, I could at least go, "that guy has some good ideas!"
If you are a free market supporter now, you are kinda screwed. Trump attacks the free market at every opportunity, and clearly just wants full control. And the people that just hate Trump out of a sense of duty have pretended to find free markets, but I don't trust them as far as I can throw em. Being a free market guy seems lonelier than ever.
Yeah, I always find it pretty stifling to free markets when I have to deal with the other 99.5% of the political spectrum too.
Cling tightly to abortion and immigration, Republicans, because your economics is as pink as a Frenchman's.
Damn those Republicans for going full socialist on the turn of human lives and property rights! Don't they know that the only true reasons to go full socialist are straight up baby murder, child castration, or the explicit and forcible redistribution of wealth to those who have and hold the least capital? Everything else is just a dishonest pretense that people are or should be largely free *except* to murder, mutilate, and steal from each other. Poseurs!
People seem to forget that Trump was a Democrat for much of his life.