Among the smarter center-left pundits, we are seeing signs of what might be called a revival of neoliberalism. Here I’m thinking of people like Matt Yglesias, Ezra Klein, Derek Thompson and Noah Smith. (They might not like that label, but I’m more concerned with content than terminology.)
Noah Smith recently provided a good explanation of this position, which reflects his frustration with both the authoritarian/populist right and the statist left. Interestingly, he provides Latin American examples for both of his critiques. Let’s start with populist nationalism:
The size and breadth of Trump’s tariffs came as a shock to me. I never imagined that a U.S. leader would have such a deeply broken view of how trade works, or would willfully inflict such harm on the American people. But I should have known it was possible. I should have studied the historical example of Juan Peron, whose Trump-style policies of protectionism and fiscal profligacy combined to knock Argentina out of the ranks of the rich nations. I should have studied the failure of “import substitution” policies in the 1950s and 1960s. I should have known more about the political context that produced Smoot-Hawley in the U.S.
In the past, left-of-center pundits have often lumped together various forms of right-wing ideology. Smith sees important distinctions:
Over the past eight years, I’ve often thought of Reaganite conservatism as the Lord Ruler, keeping a lid on the spirit of right-wing Ruin that was Patrick Buchanan and the John Birch Society. But it also seems likely that free-market ideology, for all its flaws, was keeping a lid on the right’s natural impulse toward Peronism.
To be sure, libertarianism proved inadequate to a number of important 21st-century tasks — preserving U.S. defense manufacturing capacity in the face of Chinese competition, speeding the adoption of green technologies, redistributing the gains from trade and technology, and driving forward technological progress in an age of exploding research costs. And yet who, at this moment, wouldn’t trade Trump’s tariff regime for the libertarian policies of Argentina’s Javier Milei, who has reduced his country’s inflation to manageable levels, while reducing poverty as well?
[Verlan Lewis makes some similar points in contrasting Donald Trump and Charles Koch.]
Back in 2016, I also made a comparison between Trumpism and Peronism, albeit perhaps prematurely:
A fan of the working class would be promoting free market policies, not protectionism and higher minimum wages and massive government spending increases. How’d Argentina’s working class do under Peron?
In his first term, President Trump put the budget on an unsustainable path and put substantial tariffs on Chinese imports. But neither of these measures were anywhere near significant enough to turn the US into Argentina. Since then, both the fiscal situation and the trade situation have deteriorated even further. Fortunately, investors still have trust in US Treasury securities; although that trust was briefly shaken a few weeks back, before Trump backed off on his more extreme tariff proposals. We are still a long way from Peron’s Argentina, but edging a bit in that direction.
Smith is equally critical of left-wing economics, again citing a Latin American example:
I’ve seen respected progressives like Joe Stiglitz rush to praise the economic policies of Hugo Chavez, and then fail to apologize after those policies drove Venezuela’s economy into one of the worst catastrophes in modern history.
An article from 2007 gives you an idea of what Smith is referring to:
Despite the high rate of growth, high public spending and increased consumer demand have contributed to inflationary pressures, pushing inflation up to 15.3%, also the highest in Latin America. However, Stiglitz, who won the Nobel Prize for economics in 2001, argued that relatively high inflation isn’t necessarily harmful to the economy.
He added that while Venezuela’s economic growth has largely been driven by high oil prices, unlike other oil producing countries, Venezuela has taken advantage of the boom in world oil prices to implement policies that benefit its citizens and promote economic development. . . .
In his latest book “Making Globalization Work,” Stiglitz argues that left governments such as in Venezuela, “have frequently been castigated and called ‘populist’ because they promote the distribution of benefits of education and health to the poor.” . . .
In terms of economic development Stiglitz argued it was not good for the Central Bank to have “excessive” autonomy. Chavez’s proposed constitutional reforms, if approved in December, will remove the autonomy of the country’s Central Bank. . . .
Stiglitz also criticized the “Washington Consensus” of implementing neo-liberal policies in Latin America, in particular the US free trade agreements with Colombia and other countries, saying they failed to bring benefits to the peoples of those countries.
How does that advice seem today? Check out this tweet:
Those figures do not adjust for changes in the value of the US dollar over time. The US price level is up almost fourfold since 1980, which means that in inflation-adjusted terms, Venezuela’s GDP per capita has fallen from roughly $30,000 to $8,000, whereas South Korea’s has risen from roughly $7500 to $56,000. (Those figures are not exact.)
Today, both the Democrats and the Republicans have market-friendly factions. But the two parties differ in one important respect. No single individual dominates the Democrats in anything like the way that Donald Trump dominates the GOP. This means the Democratic Party is somewhat up for grabs, whereas the battle for the soul of the GOP will have to wait until Trump is no longer the head of the party.
In the 1990s, neoliberals dominated both the Democratic and Republican parties. By the late 2010s, they’d been pushed aside in both parties. Can neoliberals make a comeback in either party, or will they remain on the fringes for the foreseeable future?
READER COMMENTS
Richard A.
May 8 2025 at 6:01pm
In Washington, the present debate is not between free traders and protectionists–it’s between moderate protectionists and heavy handed protectionists.
One country that has an economy that can be praised is Singapore. It has one of the most open economies in the world when it comes to trade. I think this can be traced to the fact that Singapore has a near top ranking IQ among countries.
One casualty from protectionism is the speedy introduction of would be ever cheaper green technology.
Scott Sumner
May 8 2025 at 8:44pm
Good points. Most of the world’s successful economies have low trade barriers. (Singapore, Hong Kong, Switzerland, northern Europe, etc.
Matthias
May 10 2025 at 5:31am
Singapore’s government is also in the unique position of being fairly insulated from electoral pressures. (The electoral system is a bit weird. Though not really weirder in magnitude than Gerrymandering.) Whilst being very exposed to pressures from reality, because Singapore is such a small and open economy and people can vote with their feet and with their wallets (ie capital).
The relative success of Singapore has made voting with your feet even easier for Singaporeans: it’s easy to for the city state’s passport holders to get a visa to work eg in the US; and on the incoming side Singaporean leaders are very aware of the tides in the flow of highly skilled and high net worth people into the country.
Humble brag disclosure: Singapore is my chosen home.
Pierre Lemieux
May 8 2025 at 6:31pm
Scott: Good analysis and good questions!
You write:
Is it impossible that Vance will be to Trump what Maduro has been to Chavez?
Scott Sumner
May 8 2025 at 8:41pm
It is very possible.
Mactoul
May 9 2025 at 2:05am
And yet how sustainable is Korean prosperity, not to mention Korea itself with its birthrate of less than 1.0? The costs that liberalism imposes on a people may not be amenable to exact calculation but that does not make the costs go away All Western countries have unsustainable birth rates, all Western countries host ever-increasing numbers of aliens, not all of whom are keen on liberalism.
Jeff
May 9 2025 at 4:27am
And yet Korea is simply ahead of the curve with their housing situation and the amount of pressure put on children to “succeed” in the marketplace, a task set to go from futile to laughable under AGI. To market lemmings I suppose that means we all must accept this verdict as gospel and dutifully march ourselves off the cliff. What an inspiring belief system!
steve
May 9 2025 at 12:46pm
Why is liberalism causal for low birth rates. Looking at the map of which countries have sustainable birth rates and which dont it looks like its more determined by wealth rather than economic philosophy. I am not thrilled with the idea of emulating Chad to achieve higher birth rates.
https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/which-countries-have-fertility-rates-above-or-below-the-replacement-level
Scott Sumner
May 9 2025 at 2:08pm
China has a far lower birth rate than America–it that a product of market fundamentalism?
Mactoul
May 9 2025 at 9:16pm
Communism is just another offspring of Enlightenment. The philosopher David Stove remarks on child-unfriendiness of Enlightenment in his book On Enlightenment, noting that great Enlightenment figures Adam Smith, Hume, Bentham, Mills, Macaulay and certain others had not a single child between them.
Warren Platts
May 10 2025 at 5:49am
I think Ricardo’s theory of wages explains it all. According to Ricardo, there is a natural wage and a money wage. The natural wage is the wage that, by definition, the working population maintains a steady state, neither growing or shrinking. (This would be a fertility rate of 2.1) If the money wage exceeds the natural wage, the population increases, and vice versa. Of course, everyone has their own personal natural wage. American women who are high school dropouts tend to have a relatively high fertility. If you’re used to living in extreme poverty, then even modest government transfer payments result in a big increase in your standard of living. Thus, you can afford to have more children. What is more interesting is the pattern among American women who have at least some college. Here it turns out, perhaps surprisingly, that women with professional or advanced degrees have the highest fertility. These women tend to have roughly the same natural wage. That is to say, they all can see what the American Dream could be like. But to live that dream is supremely expensive, what with home ownership, day care through the toddler years, a private Montessori school for the younger years, maybe a fancy boarding school for high school like the one Matty Yglesias attended, then college at an expensive university. Hence for a single mom with a BA who’s got a decent office job with benefits, she’s going to find it very difficult to do that with one kid, let alone three kids. But for a good female lawyer (who will likely be married to a good male lawyer) it’s no problem to afford three or more kids!
Paul A Sand
May 9 2025 at 10:39am
I noticed that Noah isn’t shy about criticizing at least one sacred cow: https://x.com/Noahpinion/status/1920163380020777093
Matthias
May 10 2025 at 5:25am
Just call them Ordoliberals.
That used to be almost a synonym for neoliberal, but hasn’t acquired all the same crazy political connotations.