logo
The US marches toward state capitalism with American characteristics

The US marches toward state capitalism with American characteristics

Mint2 days ago
A generation ago conventional wisdom held that as China liberalized, its economy would come to resemble America's. Instead, capitalism in America is starting to look like China.
Recent examples include President Trump's demand that Intel's CEO resign; the 'golden share" Washington will get in U.S. Steel as a condition of Nippon Steel's takeover; and the $1.5 trillion of promised investment from trading partners Trump plans to personally direct.
This isn't socialism, in which the state owns the means of production. It is more like state capitalism, a hybrid between socialism and capitalism in which the state guides the decisions of nominally private enterprises.
China calls its hybrid 'socialism with Chinese characteristics." The U.S. hasn't gone as far as China or even milder practitioners of state capitalism such as Russia, Brazil and, at times, France. So call this variant 'state capitalism with American characteristics." It is still a sea change from the free market ethos the U.S. once embodied.
We wouldn't be dabbling with state capitalism if not for the public's and both parties' belief that free-market capitalism wasn't working. That system encouraged profit-maximizing chief executives to move production abroad. The result was a shrunken manufacturing workforce, dependence on China for vital products such as critical minerals, and underinvestment in the industries of the future such as clean energy and semiconductors.
The federal government has often waded into the corporate world. It commandeered production during World War II and, under the Defense Production Act, emergencies such as the Covid pandemic. It bailed out banks and car companies during the 2007-09 financial crisis. Those were temporary expedients.
Former president Joe Biden went further, seeking to shape the actual structure of industry. His Inflation Reduction Act authorized $400 billion in clean energy loans. The Chips and Science Act earmarked $39 billion in subsidies for domestic semiconductor manufacturing. Of that, $8.5 billion went to Intel, giving Trump leverage to demand the removal of its chief executive over past ties to China. (Intel so far has refused.)
Biden overrode U.S. Steel's management and shareholders to block Nippon Steel's takeover, though his staff saw no national security risk. Trump reversed that veto while extracting the 'golden share" that he can use to influence the company's decisions. In design and name it mimics the golden shares that private Chinese companies must issue to the CCP.
Biden officials had mulled a sovereign-wealth fund to finance strategically important but commercially risky projects such as in critical minerals, which China dominates. Last month Trump's Department of Defense announced that it would take a 15% stake in MP Materials, a miner of critical minerals.
Many in the West admire China for its ability to turbo charge growth through massive feats of infrastructure building, scientific advance, and promotion of favored industries. American efforts are often bogged down amid the checks, balances and compromises of pluralistic democracy.
In his forthcoming book, 'Breakneck: China's Quest to Engineer the Future," author Dan Wang writes: 'China is an engineering state, building big at breakneck speed, in contrast to the United States' lawyerly society, blocking everything it can, good and bad."
To admirers, Trump's appeal is his willingness to bulldoze those lawyerly obstacles. He has imposed tariffs on a broad array of countries and sectors, seizing authority that is supposed to belong to Congress. He extracted $1.5 trillion in investment pledges from Japan, the European Union and South Korea that he claims he will personally direct, though no legal mechanism for doing so appears to exist. (Those pledges are already in dispute.)
There are reasons state capitalism never caught on before. The state cannot allocate capital more efficiently than private markets. Distortions, waste and cronyism typically follow. Russia, Brazil and France have grown much more slowly than the U.S.
Chinese state capitalism isn't the success story it seems. Barry Naughton of the University of California, San Diego has documented how China's rapid growth since 1979 has come from market sources not the state. As President Xi Jinping has reimposed state control, growth has slowed. China is awash with savings, but the state wastes much of it. From steel to vehicles, excess capacity leads to plummeting prices and profits.
The U.S. hasn't fared any better. Interventions made in the name of national security or kick-starting infant industries lead to boondoggles like Foxconn's promised factory in Wisconsin or Tesla's solar panel factory in Buffalo, N.Y.
State capitalism is an all-of-society affair in China, directed from Beijing via millions of cadres in local governments and company boardrooms. In the U.S., it consists largely of Oval Office announcements lacking any policy or institutional framework. 'The core characteristic of China's state capitalism is discipline, and Trump is the complete opposite of that," Wang said in an interview.
State capitalism is a means of political, not just economic, control. Xi ruthlessly deploys economic levers to crush any challenge to party primacy. In 2020 Alibaba co-founder Jack Ma, arguably the country' most famous business leader, criticized Chinese regulators for stifling financial innovation. Retaliation was swift. Regulators canceled the initial public offering of Ma's financial company, Ant Group, and eventually fined it $2.8 billion for anticompetitive behavior. Ma briefly disappeared from public view.
Trump has similarly deployed executive orders and regulatory powers against media companies, banks, law firms and other companies he believes oppose him, while rewarding executives who align themselves with his priorities.
In Trump's first term, CEOs routinely spoke out when they disagreed with his policies such as on immigration and trade. Now, they shower him with donations and praise, or are mostly silent.
Trump is also seeking political control over agencies that have long operated at arm's length from the White House, such as the Bureau of Labor Statistics and the Federal Reserve. That, too, has echoes of China where the bureaucracy is fully subordinate to the ruling party.
Trump has long admired the control Xi exercises over his country, but there are, in theory, limits to how far he can emulate him.
American democracy constrains the state through an independent judiciary, free speech, due process and the diffusion of power among multiple levels and branches of government. How far state capitalism ultimately displaces free-market capitalism in the U.S. depends on how well those checks and balances hold up.
Write to Greg Ip at greg.ip@wsj.com
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Russia makes biggest 24-hour Ukraine advance in over a year
Russia makes biggest 24-hour Ukraine advance in over a year

The Hindu

time20 minutes ago

  • The Hindu

Russia makes biggest 24-hour Ukraine advance in over a year

The Russian Army made its biggest 24-hour advance into Ukraine in over a year on Tuesday (August 12, 2025) just ahead of the Trump-Putin summit, according to an AFP analysis of data from the U.S.-based Institute for the Study of War. The Russian Army took or claimed 110 square kilometres (42.5 square miles) on August 12 compared to the previous day. It was the most since late May 2024. In recent months, Moscow has typically taken five or six days to progress at such a pace, although Russian advances have accelerated in recent weeks. The U.S. and Russian presidents, Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin, are to meet in Alaska on Friday. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky acknowledged Tuesday that Russian troops had advanced by up to 10 kilometres (six miles) near the eastern coal mining town of Dobropillia, but that Kyiv would soon "destroy them." Russia said Wednesday that it had taken two villages close to Dobropillia. About 70% of Russia's advances in Ukraine so far this year are in the Donetsk region in eastern Ukraine, which the Kremlin claimed to have annexed in September 2022. As of August 12, Moscow controlled or claimed to control 79 percent of the region, up from 62 percent a year ago. The Russian Army has also been attempting to seize the mining town of Pokrovsk for more than 18 months, following its capture of Bakhmut in May 2023. The last two major cities held by Kyiv in the region are also at risk. They are Sloviansk and Kramatorsk, which is an important logistical hub for the front. Russian progress in Ukraine has accelerated every month since April. Between August 12, 2024 and August 12, 2025, the Russian army captured more than 6,100 square kilometres, four times more than the previous year, according to the AFP analysis of the institute's data. However, these Russian advances account for less than 1 percent of pre-war Ukraine's territory, including Crimea and Donbass. Russia currently has full or partial control over 19 percent of Ukrainian territory.

U.S. to probe Smithsonian museums to remove 'partisan narratives'
U.S. to probe Smithsonian museums to remove 'partisan narratives'

The Hindu

time20 minutes ago

  • The Hindu

U.S. to probe Smithsonian museums to remove 'partisan narratives'

U.S. President Donald Trump's administration said on Tuesday (August 12, 2025) it had ordered a sweeping review of some Smithsonian museums to ensure their exhibitions laud American exceptionalism and "remove divisive or partisan narratives." Mr. Trump has moved to assert control over major American cultural institutions since starting his second term in January, while also slashing arts and humanities funding. The Smithsonian is one of America's most hallowed institutions, with its vast network of museums boasting tens of millions of artifacts for public display. A letter to the institution's secretary Lonnie Bunch, published on the White House website on Tuesday, said the administration would carry out a "comprehensive internal review of selected Smithsonian museums and exhibitions." "This initiative aims to ensure alignment with the President's directive to celebrate American exceptionalism, remove divisive or partisan narratives, and restore confidence in our shared cultural institutions," said the letter, signed by three senior White House officials. It will target eight major museums, including the National Museum of American History, the National Museum of African American History and Culture, and the National Museum of the American Indian, the letter said. The review aims to assess "tone, historical framing, and alignment with American ideals" across exhibitions, educational materials and digital content ahead of the 250th anniversary of the nation's founding next year. The Smithsonian's National Museum of American History removed last month a label referring to Trump's two impeachments, a move its parent institution later denied came under White House pressure. The review requires that the museums submit extensive documentation -- including exhibition plans, wall text, educational materials, grant information and internal guidelines -- within 30 days. The Smithsonian did not respond immediately to AFP's request for comment. It said in a statement to The New York Times that its "work is grounded in a deep commitment to scholarly excellence, rigorous research and the accurate, factual presentation of history." "We are reviewing the letter with this commitment in mind... and will continue to collaborate constructively with the White House, Congress and our governing Board of Regents," it said.

Why Trump's tariffs on India are a colossal mistake
Why Trump's tariffs on India are a colossal mistake

First Post

time20 minutes ago

  • First Post

Why Trump's tariffs on India are a colossal mistake

As a long-term Donald Trump supporter, it pains me to see the mistakes he is making regarding his treatment of India. Slapping India with 50 per cent tariffs is total madness! Starting August 7, a 25 per cent levy, then another 25 per cent penalty for buying Russian oil—framed as 'secondary tariffs' to squeeze Moscow over Ukraine. But this isn't smart. It's a blunder that alienates a powerhouse ally, hurts America's wallet, and weakens its global clout. In short, it is a colossal mistake, and I fail to understand why he is being so hostile. India, the world's fastest-growing major economy, deserves respect—not bully tactics. Here's why Trump is wrong! STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Strategically, this is a foolish decision. India is America's indispensable shield against China's aggression in the Indo-Pacific. The Quad—US, India, Japan, Australia—hinges on this bond to keep sea lanes free and Beijing in check. Trump risks shattering it. Wiser heads have called it an 'enormous mistake,' warning it will push New Delhi toward Moscow and Beijing after decades of US courtship. Prime Minister Narendra Modi? He's unbowed! He's prioritising India's energy security for 1.4 billion people and refusing to halt Russian imports that stabilise global prices. Back in 2022, America encouraged India to buy Russian crude oil to cool markets post-invasion. Now? Flip-flop betrayal! This idiocy accelerates India's BRICS pivot, ditching dollar dominance and eroding US leverage. India, with its booming tech hubs and military might, won't kneel. Trump's short-sightedness empowers adversaries, turning a vital partner into a reluctant rival. Economically, it is a disaster! China guzzles more Russian oil than anyone—yet no tariffs there? Trump spares Beijing while hammering India, exposing his selective rage. America itself trades $3.5 billion with Russia yearly, despite sanctions. India's 36 per cent reliance on Russian crude? Pure necessity—cheap fuel for growth, averting global spikes above $80/barrel that would slam U.S. consumers too. These tariffs crush India's exports: textiles, gems, autos—sectors employing millions. US supply chains? Disrupted! India powers America's pharma and IT—think life-saving drugs and software. Exports could plummet 40-50 per cent, shaving India's GDP by 0.3 per cent—but the ripple effects hit US jobs in linked industries. Trump killed a potential deal, branding India a 'bad partner'. Yet India's offers—cutting tariffs on US goods, boosting defence buys—were rebuffed. India is not exploiting anyone. It's fuelling about 7 per cent growth, lifting millions from poverty, creating markets for US firms like Apple and Ford. Diplomatically? Trump is isolating America, not Russia. The EU still imports 19 per cent of its LNG from Moscow. Turkey? Same deal. But India, a strategic gem, gets slammed. New Delhi rightly responds by saying: 'Unfair, unjustified!' and vows to safeguard its interests after US hypocrisy on Venezuela sanctions that burned India before. Trump's threats of broader 'secondary sanctions' also ring hollow. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD What is impressive is India's diplomatic response—no knee-jerk retaliation, but a focus on talks. Trump is prioritising short-term Russia pressure over long-game alliances. But India won't flinch—the economy is resilient, stocks are steady despite threats. Alienating India empowers China. To whose advantage is this? Trump's error here will cost jobs, security, and influence. India will continue to rise regardless—vibrant, innovative, visionary. I hope Trump listens to better voices and changes his antagonistic approach. Making America Great means working with India to make it great too! Trump must now reverse course and work with PM Modi, as this is in the best interests of the world. David Vance is a political commentator and author. Views expressed in the above piece are personal and solely those of the author. They do not necessarily reflect Firstpost's views.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store