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Tucker Carlson's Broadside Against Austrian Economics
The Mises Institute ^ | 06/07/2019 | Jeff Deist

Posted on 06/07/2019 11:52:11 AM PDT by SeekAndFind

Fox News host Tucker Carlson took to the airwaves of this popular show last night to lambaste Austrian economics and libertarianism, which he views as twin pillars of a failed ideology that doesn't protect American workers and their interests.

The GOP, he argues, is in thrall...

Fox News host Tucker Carlson took to the airwaves of this popular show last night to lambaste Austrian economics and libertarianism, which he views as twin pillars of a failed ideology that doesn't protect American workers and their interests.

The GOP, he argues, is in thrall to free-market corporate interests and esoteric economic theories from dusty textbooks. Republicans remain wedded to unbridled libertarian political philosophy, tax cuts, deregulation, and unilateral free trade, all of which enrich elites but hurt average people. Meanwhile, presidential aspirants like Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders offer the American electorate real-world solutions to economic insecurity, jobs, and healthcare.

It's a compelling story, but untrue. Does Carlson honestly think Republican members of Congress are overly theoretical and ideological? And here we thought they were a bunch of unprincipled and poorly-read hacks!1

Does he honestly think the budget-busting GOP of recent political memory, from Bush II (Iraq War, Medicare Part D, Department of Homeland Security, Patriot Act), John McCain, Mitt Romney are ideological libertarians? Why did Ron Paul and Rand Paul fare poorly among Republican primary voters, if in fact free-market ideology and its donor class dominate the party? And hasn't the party been overtaken by Trumpist protectionists?

Of course we're pleased when Right populists recognize the influence of the Austrian school, just as we're pleased when Left-liberals at the New Republic convince themselves that Misesean "neoliberalism" has taken over the world. We note that Mises and Rothbard continue to receive criticism decades after their respective deaths, a testament to their deep (and apparently nefarious!) influence and an honor given to few economists.

Carlson, a onetime Cato Institute staffer and Weekly Standard writer, understands both Republican politics and the DC world of think tanks and punditry. When he references the Austrian school or libertarianism, it's shorthand for "Koch money and influence" rather than any real ideology. It's his shorthand for the "self-interests of rich guys," interests given an intellectual veneer by academics and writers who are happy to accept billionaire crumbs in exchange for cozy non-profit sinecures. "Conservatism, Inc." (or "Libertarianism, Inc.") has become an self-serving industry unto itself, sclerotic and ripe for criticism.

There is truth to this. But it's not an ideological truth. Tucker Carlson knows better, He knows full well how tariffs make society overall worse off, how markets make poor Americans far better off than the poor in many countries, why government medicine doesn't work, and how minimum wage laws hurt the least-skilled workers. His argument is about priorities and strategy (and TV ratings), not ideology. And it accepts a fundamental tenet of the Left: self-interest for me is noble and warranted, self-interest for others (especially the rich) is suspicious if not sinister.

In other words, Carlson presents a fundamentally zero-sum perspective, which is to say a fundamentally political perspective.

That said, his populism—particularly his antiwar stance—should not be dismissed. Populism per se is not an ideology, but rather a strategy. It can be imbued with any political philosophy, and thus can be equally dangerous or beneficial. At its core populism questions not only the competence of elites, but also their worthiness. It asks whether elite interests comport with those of average people, and in most cases correctly concludes that political elites have interests at odds with those people.

When elites are state-connected or state-protected, i.e. when they maintain or even derive their wealth and influence through their relationship with the state, libertarians have every obligation to object. Elites in the West—from politicians and bureaucrats to central bankers and media figures to defense contractors and patent-coddled pharmaceutical execs—richly deserve our ire. They screwed things up, and ought to be held accountable.

Tucker Carlson is right about that.



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Society
KEYWORDS: austrianschool; economics; libertarianism; tuckercarlson
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To: Sheapdog
Bad tariffs.. evil tariffs! bad tariffs! no tariffs, tariffs bad, tariffs evil!!

You'll never hear that chant in an EU, Japanese or Chinese business school.

61 posted on 06/09/2019 8:18:13 PM PDT by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn.)
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To: impimp

Justifying the world’s mercantilism should be punishable by death.


62 posted on 06/09/2019 8:20:08 PM PDT by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn.)
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To: Mariner

Hamitic trained economists are not historians. Actually I think b-schools frown upon learning history.


63 posted on 06/09/2019 8:23:08 PM PDT by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn.)
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To: impimp

You are full of curry. The USA funded the Federal Government with tariffs from 1789 until 1913. The USA was indeed a text book merchantilist nation during that time. Those are facts not in dispute. So stuff your Free Traitor™ lies.


64 posted on 06/09/2019 8:27:42 PM PDT by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn.)
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Comment #65 Removed by Moderator

To: central_va

Wow, you are prime example of the stupid American. You have no concept that economics, borders and politics are all rolled up into one thing as such THEY CANNOT BE SEPARATED.
Long term strategic economic planning is a foreign concept to myopic fools like you.
+++++
Wow! I suppose I should go back and read what I wrote. But I think I will clarify instead.

1. I listened to the Tucker Carson comments live on Fox. You should look it up and watch it yourself. It was not a pitch for using tariffs. It was a pitch for government intervention in many ways. More ways than I could support.

2, I support the Trump tariff policy with China. I am nervous that the Chinese, being Chinese, will just sit back and wait for another election cycle.

3. I support the Trump Mexico Tariff policy. I did right from the get-go. I do hope the Mexicans actually do something. I think they will but I wouldn’t bet my life on it.

4. I recognize that there are industries that need to be supported for many reasons including national defense and agriculture for example.

5. I also recognize that you can’t just set back and let the world steal your technology and raise tariffs on American goods without a response. Correct me if I’m wrong but I believe that is the Trump policy which I support.

6. Given all of that what really counts is that we have close to full employment and the people working at the highest skill level possible. The jobs and industries will evolve over time. You have seen that in spades in your lifetime. I expect that to continue.

7. What this leads to is a policy that, when necessary, sets tariffs to counter the actions of all trading partners and protects our farmers and key industries. That is the world we live in.

8. A better world would be one where tariffs fall by mutual agreement while maintaining trade balance. Better deal for consumers. Worse for the Treasury.


66 posted on 06/09/2019 8:57:39 PM PDT by InterceptPoint (Ted, you finally endorsed. A)
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To: SeekAndFind
Give me one prominent and persuasive (Key point) politician in the last 80 years that pimped Austrian economics. Everyone is a “spend, inflate, produce debt, and die before the bill comes due for thee” short-sighted pragmatists.

Carlson is swallowing populism poison again to the tune of $22 trillion in debt with mass amounts of spending yet to come. This is not surprising since he is a big Andrew Yang democrat pimp.

67 posted on 06/10/2019 9:46:11 PM PDT by rollo tomasi (Working hard to pay for deadbeats and corrupt politicians)
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