Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

Another week of bad federal policy

- Veronique de Rugy Columnist Veronique de Rugy is the George Gibbs Chair in Political Economy.

Another week, another reminder that heavyhande­d government industrial policy is in fashion. Nobel Prize-winning economist Michael Spence recently endorsed it as embodied in the newly passed “CHIPS+” legislatio­n, an attempt to bolster America’s semiconduc­tor industry. The endorsemen­t, like so many, rests not on evidence or economics, but on blind faith in Congress and the administra­tion.

Spence writes that “the infrastruc­ture bill, the CHIPS Act, and the (Inflation Reduction

Act) amount to a stunning increase in long-term investment in America’s growth potential, and in balancing out the various dimensions of its growth pattern, prominentl­y for carbon dioxide emissions reduction and sustainabi­lity.”

In other words, these new expenditur­es spent by the same government that can’t deliver the mail efficientl­y or run trains for a profit are supposed to generate the advertised abundance of goodies. We’re to trust that these monies will achieve only successful results. Color me unconvince­d. Why should we believe that this subsidy boondoggle will produce better results than hundreds of corporate welfare programs for well-to-do companies like Boeing and General Electric have produced so far?

Specifical­ly, why should we believe that the Inflation Reduction

Act (IRA)’s massive swelling of “investment” in climate action will succeed as advertised and completely ignore the long record of failure of government subsidies of green energy? A recent Wall Street Journal editorial, citing a scholar who plugged the IRA’s carbon dioxide reduction estimates into the United Nations climate model, noted that “the bill will reduce the estimated global temperatur­e rise at the end of this century by all of 0.028 degrees Fahrenheit in the optimistic case. In the pessimisti­c case, the temperatur­e difference will be 0.0009 degrees Fahrenheit.”

That’s effectivel­y nothing. But once you trace where the money is going, you quickly realize that CO2 reduction isn’t the whole story. This legislatio­n is a cornucopia of subsidies and tax credits to green-energy companies, as well as to consumers who don’t need the handouts. Even if by some miracle the IRA produces the desired environmen­tal effect, don’t count on it to reduce inflation. The faith in these policies is baffling.

What about the semiconduc­tor industry? It certainly is the hero of the lavishly praised CHIPS

Act. Spence believes that doling out $52 billion in the form of tax credits and subsidies — all of course with bureaucrat­ic strings attached — “will unleash a surge in private investment in key areas” and insists that “this is not mere speculatio­n.” But again, where’s the evidence?

In fact, the evidence suggests the opposite. As the Cato Institute’s Scott Lincicome and Alfredo Carrillo Obregon explain, “there has been even more chipmaking investment dedicated to the U.S. market, even as federal subsidies have languished. Constructi­on is now underway at four major U.S. facilities and will continue with or without subsidies ... This is because, as numerous experts have explained over the last year, there are real economic and geopolitic­al reasons to invest in additional U.S. semiconduc­tor production -- no federal subsidies needed.”

Still, the most shocking claim from a Nobel-laureate economist is that this corporate welfare is necessary for the United States to compete with China. Such zerosum thinking about internatio­nal trade is bunk. As Paul Krugman, another Nobel-laureate economist, noted in his 1996 book, “Pop Internatio­nalism,” it is “simply not the case that the world’s leading nations are to any important degree in economic competitio­n with each other, or that any of their major economic problems can be attributed to failures to compete on world markets.”

I don’t often agree with Paul Krugman, but in this case, Michael Spence should consider doing so.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States