From tariffs to student debt “forgiveness,” from corporate welfare to border chaos, America’s political class — right and left — has lost its economic compass. What’s missing? Econ 101.
Progressives promise government programs to create “equity.” Conservatives now support tariffs and special favors for certain businesses. Both are forms of economic socialism — central planning that shifts control from the people to politicians. That’s why the US economy feels stuck: a $37 trillion national debt, a bloated Federal Reserve balance sheet, and growing doubts about the American Dream.
It doesn’t have to be this way. We need a return to the basics of economic freedom. That’s why I launched an Econ 101 series — to explain simple, timeless principles about how people make choices, work together, and meet their needs in a world with limited resources.
If every policymaker — and voter — understood these 20 simple ideas, the whole nation could be freed to be its best self.
People act with purpose
Whether it’s a parent budgeting for groceries or a business hiring workers, people make choices based on incentives, constraints, and values. Policies that ignore this, like assuming people won’t adjust their behavior when welfare expands, always backfire.
Trade always benefits both sides
Trade isn’t about countries — it’s about people. When Americans buy clothes from Bangladesh or semiconductors from Taiwan, both sides benefit. Blocking trade with tariffs is like trying to grow prosperity by taxing yourself.
People dislike uncertainty
Small business owners delay hiring. Families delay big purchases. Entrepreneurs sit on the sidelines. And why? Because Washington keeps creating policy chaos — from Biden’s inflationary spending to Trump’s tariffs. Clarity is key.
Entrepreneurship drives growth
It’s not government spending or stimulus checks that create jobs — it’s innovation. From Henry Ford to Elon Musk, it’s entrepreneurs who take risks to solve problems. Washington should stop crowding them out with red tape and cronyism.
Nothing is free
From “free” college to “free” COVID tests, the truth remains: every dollar must come from somewhere. Usually, it’s from taxpayers — or worse, borrowed from future generations. Opportunity costs are real, and they’re often ignored in DC.
Free markets create prosperity
Look around the world. Free economies prosper. Controlled ones collapse. See Venezuela, Cuba, and North Korea versus Singapore, Switzerland, and Texas. Markets deliver what bureaucracies only promise.
Voluntary exchange works best
When people can freely trade, they innovate, cooperate, and thrive. When politicians impose price controls — like on credit card interchange fees or energy — they distort behavior and punish both consumers and producers.
Price signals matter
Prices aren’t arbitrary — they communicate supply and demand. When the government distorts them, like through drug price controls or green energy subsidies, it creates shortages, surpluses, and dysfunction.
Every choice has opportunity costs
Every decision has a tradeoff. A dollar spent on bureaucratic boosterism is a dollar not spent on defense, or — better yet — not taxed in the first place.
Government power reduces liberty
Each regulation, each subsidy, and each tax is a restriction on what people can do with their own lives. As Ronald Reagan said, “The most terrifying words in the English language are: ‘I’m from the government, and I’m here to help.’”
Inflation comes from money creation
Deficits fuel it, and the Federal Reserve enables it. As Milton Friedman reminded us, “Inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon.” CPI rose 2.7 percent in July over the last year, and the 3.1 percent core inflation remains above target. Until spending is restrained and the Fed shrinks its balance sheet, inflation will persist.
Destruction is not growth
The economy doesn’t improve when a riot breaks a window or the government rebuilds after a hurricane or war. That’s not growth — it’s replacement and lost resources for other things. Destruction does not drive prosperity.
Trade fosters peace
Sanctions, embargoes, and trade wars escalate tensions. Trade fosters peace. China’s rise comes with real challenges — but the answer is not less economic freedom, but more. Tariffs harm Americans more than Beijing.
Institutions make markets work
From strong property rights to a reliable legal system, good institutions enable markets to function effectively. That’s why we must resist the weaponization of agencies or the rewriting of laws to favor one group over another.
Socialism always fails
Because it tries to make us care about everyone else’s welfare as much as our own, socialism always ends in tyranny and poverty. Today’s policymakers want to rebrand it as “equity” or “industrial planning,” but it’s the same road that led to Venezuela’s collapse, the Berlin Wall, and Cambodia’s killing fields.
Profits and losses guide progress
Profits signal value creation. Losses signal failure, freeing up resources for the next experiment. Government bailouts and subsidies break this feedback loop, rewarding inefficiency. Investing in progress should always pay better than buying political favors.
Prosperity comes from freedom
When the government steps back, families, workers, and entrepreneurs build thriving communities. School choice and right-to-work laws show how freedom creates opportunity. “Let people prosper” is not just a slogan — it’s a strategy for conquering poverty by unleashing humanity.
Markets solve problems
One-size-fits-all systems, like those the US government created in healthcare and education, become costly debacles that serve special interests but leave ordinary people out. Problems are solved and inventions emerge when lots of individuals make their own choices, and share information about what works (prices).
People deserve dignity
People aren’t widgets in a spreadsheet. They have hopes, beliefs, and talents. Trusting them to make their own decisions, based on the real circumstances of their own lives, creates better outcomes than distant ‘experts’ making decisions for them.
Government spending can’t add to the economy
Government spending only redistributes existing resources. Printing money and handing out checks doesn’t “stimulate” the economy (Keynesian Multiplier), it just makes goods expensive and harder to get.
America didn’t become the most prosperous nation in the world through central planning. What distinguished the American model was offering choices to individuals, protecting their private property, making free enterprise appealing and profitable, encouraging personal responsibility, and respecting people’s rights to cooperate on whatever voluntary projects they chose.
That model still works — if we have the courage to return to it.
Advocates of free markets must do more than critique failed ideas. We must lay out practical, principled alternatives — and push those in power to adopt them, even when it’s politically inconvenient.
Politicians often do what benefits them, not what benefits us. The solution isn’t found in Washington. It’s found in communities, in businesses, in homes, and hearts and minds. If we want Americans to prosper, we must return to the basics of economics.