The Debate That Will Determine How Democrats Govern Next Time
Following the 2016 election, a large share of the American left-of-center concluded that Trump's victory could be blamed, at least in part, on half a century of 'neoliberal' economic policy that was too deferential to free markets. When Joe Biden took office in 2021, his administration adopted a new, more populist approach, sometimes called 'post-neoliberalism' or simply 'Bidenomics,' centered on a much more active role for government in the economy. Its supporters believed that the new approach would not only help achieve key national goals but also help Democrats win back the working class.
Then, in 2024, working-class voters abandoned Democrats even more thoroughly than they had eight years prior. For many economists, pundits, and party insiders, the obvious upshot was that Biden's economic populism had failed. Headlines such as 'The Architects of Bidenomics Are in Denial' (The Wall Street Journal), 'How Bidenomics Boosted Growth but Failed Americans' (The Financial Times), and 'Why Bidenomics Was Such a Bust' (The Nation) proliferated in the weeks and months following the election. Perhaps the most comprehensive critique came from Jason Furman, who chaired Barack Obama's Council of Economic Advisers and is now a sort of unofficial spokesperson of center-left economics. In a February Foreign Affairs essay titled 'The Post-Neoliberal Delusion,' Furman argued that Biden's economic policies had caused inflation to spike, failed to help the working class, and ultimately generated a backlash that Trump rode right back to the White House. 'Policymakers should never again ignore the basics in pursuit of fanciful heterodox solutions,' Furman concluded.
The backlash to Bidenomics has set off a heated debate among the economics intelligentsia, including lengthy rebuttals from several of Biden's former senior advisers. The outcome of that debate will go a long way toward shaping the agenda that Democrats adopt to try to win back working-class support—and, ultimately, power—from the Trump coalition. Did Democrats lose in 2024 despite Biden's embrace of post-neoliberalism, or because of it?
The term neoliberalism is infamously hard to define—and, on both the left and the populist right, often devolves into a catchall meme for everything bad in the world—but the long-standing bipartisan consensus that it describes is real and meaningful. Starting in the late 1970s, leaders in both parties embraced free trade, disavowed large-scale public investment (sometimes called 'industrial policy'), favored market-friendly solutions to big social problems, and backed away from antitrust enforcement. Underlying those choices was a belief that free markets should largely be left to their own devices to maximize economic growth. The central economic disagreement between the parties was over tax rates and the size of the social safety net.
The fallout of the 2008 financial crisis, and the growing gap between the country's haves and have-nots, convinced much of the American left that neoliberalism had been a failure. That view caught on even more widely after 2016, when working-class voters—especially in the places that had fallen behind during the era of neoliberalism and globalization—flocked to Trump.
[Rogé Karma: The impossible plight of the pro-tariff liberals]
Some on the left first responded to this failure by flirting with Bernie Sanders–style democratic socialism. But the set of ideas that eventually won out, associated more with Elizabeth Warren and her acolytes, argued that capitalism needs to be reformed, not rejected. First, the government should be more willing to intervene to pursue important goals that free markets won't address on their own, such as slashing carbon emissions and building domestic supply chains. Second, instead of just redistributing existing resources, government should make the distribution of resources more equal to begin with, namely by creating well-paying, unionized jobs for middle-class workers. Third, and perhaps most important, policies should be designed not only to maximize economic efficiency but also to generate positive political outcomes.
The Biden administration, which was packed with Warren disciples, embraced this approach. Its economic agenda centered on three laws—the Inflation Reduction Act, the CHIPS and Science Act, and the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act—designed to encourage private investment in important sectors and create a blue-collar-jobs boom. (Biden also followed a post-neoliberal path on trade and antitrust, but the effects of those shifts are not as immediate or measurable, so they've featured less in the current debate.)
On the investment front, the administration's efforts worked wonders. In 2024 alone, private companies invested more in building factories for computer and electronics manufacturing in the U.S. than they had in the 20 years before CHIPS was passed. The world's leading semiconductor manufacturer, TSMC, is spending $165 billion to expand its sprawling megafactory in Arizona. Investment in clean-energy technology and infrastructure increased by 71 percent in the years following the passage of the IRA, and the law is projected to more than double the yearly pace at which the U.S. lowers emissions, according to estimates from Princeton University's REPEAT Project. About a year into the law's implementation, three-quarters of announced investment was slated for counties with a median income below the national average.
The promised manufacturing-jobs boom, however, has not yet materialized. In fact, on Biden's watch, the share of American workers in manufacturing continued its long-term decline. But it is perhaps too early to declare Biden's efforts there an outright failure: During his presidency, investment in building new factories more than tripled, to its highest level on record. All of those factories need to be built before they can employ workers. In the meantime, there has been strong job growth—just in the construction sector, not in manufacturing.
Perhaps most crucially, the Biden agenda was designed to be politically resilient. For decades, Democrats' go-to policy to fight climate change was imposing a price or tax on carbon. Economists argued that this would be the most efficient way to lower emissions. But carbon taxes are deeply unpopular among voters—they are, after all, taxes—and climate policies that raise prices tend to inspire political backlash. No carbon tax had any chance of getting through Congress during Biden's tenure, and even if it had somehow become law, it would probably have been repealed by a subsequent Republican majority. So the Biden administration tried a completely different strategy. Rather than making dirty energy more expensive, the IRA aimed to make clean energy cheaper—so much cheaper that consumers would switch over to it voluntarily.
The approach proved to be a political winner. Most major policies tend to mobilize voters against the party that passed them. (Think of the Affordable Care Act or the 2017 tax cut.) Not the Inflation Reduction Act. Republican politicians barely mentioned the law on the campaign trail in 2022 or 2024, apart from occasionally trying to take credit for it themselves.
The ultimate test is whether the law can now survive a Republican trifecta that is desperate to offset the fiscally dangerous effects of extending the 2017 tax cuts. Yesterday, the House Ways and Means Committee released an initial proposal that would obliterate most of the IRA's clean-energy tax credits and, according to Heatmap News, 'appears to amount to a back-door full repeal of the climate law.' The final shape of the GOP's must-pass tax bill is yet to be determined, however, and the fact that roughly 80 percent of IRA investments so far have gone to red congressional districts makes the politics of repeal complex. According to E&E News by Politico, Capitol Hill 'has been flooded lately with clean energy lobbyists and companies' begging lawmakers to preserve the IRA, and, in mid-March, 21 House Republicans wrote an open letter to congressional leadership asking them to preserve the legislation's central tax credits. A functional repeal of the IRA would be a crushing defeat for Biden's economic experiment. If, however, core portions of the law survive, one of post-neoliberalism's central conceits will be validated: that policy should be designed to be politically durable, even if it means that economists consider it 'inefficient.'
The critics of post-neoliberalism acknowledge most of its successes. For them, however, the Biden administration's wins were merely the subplot of a story that ended in complete, avoidable disaster.
The first critique is that, despite all of the investment, very little stuff was actually built. The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, for instance, included funding for half a million electric-vehicle charging stations; three years after its passage, just 58 charging stations were up and running. The same law's $42 billion investment to expand rural broadband had yet to connect a single household by the end of Biden's term. According to a Financial Times investigation from August, 40 percent of the large manufacturing projects announced in the year following the passage of the IRA and CHIPS were either delayed significantly or paused indefinitely. Many were set back by, among other things, the complex thicket of rules and requirements that apply to any large project in the United States.
[Marc J. Dunkelman: How progressives broke the government]
This helps explain why post-neoliberal policies failed to pay off politically for Democrats last year. Publicly funded broadband or charging stations or factories mean little to voters until they've actually been built and can be experienced firsthand. 'The Biden administration believed in the politics of delivery,' Ezra Klein wrote in The New York Times last month. 'But the bills it passed will complete projects so slowly that it will be Trump, or even his successor, who benefits politically.'
Many former Biden officials accept the core of that analysis. 'It's clear we didn't do enough to make it easier to build,' Brian Deese, the head of Biden's National Economic Council, told me. He points out that the administration issued several executive orders to fast-track projects and supported multiple (failed) legislative attempts to reform the onerous federal permitting process. But those efforts proved to be too little and too late. Perhaps if the post-neoliberals had been more attentive from the beginning to the ways in which government can get in the way of its own goals, they might have had more success.
Some critics go beyond saying that post-neoliberalism didn't deliver—they argue that Bidenomics was politically harmful. The story goes something like this: In the spring of 2021, the Biden administration, influenced by post-neoliberal ideas, passed a $1.9 trillion stimulus package known as the American Rescue Plan (ARP). The stimulus payments provided consumers with record amounts of savings, and when the economy reopened, they spent like never before. With too much money chasing too few goods, inflation spiked. Consumer sentiment cratered, and Trump rode a wave of mass frustration back to the White House. This, Furman told me, is the 'tragedy of Bidenomics': The economic philosophy that was supposed to counter Trump triggered the inflationary crisis that brought him back to power.
Biden's defenders dispute just about every part of that story. They point out that rich countries around the world experienced high inflation despite the fact that none passed stimulus bills remotely as big as the U.S. did, and that voters nearly everywhere responded to this inflationary malaise by throwing out incumbent leaders. A global trend, Biden's defenders argue, must have a global explanation: not the stimulus, but the coronavirus pandemic.
From there, the debate devolves into more technical points. When you dig into the specifics, however, it turns out that there isn't as much disagreement as first appears. Jared Bernstein, who chaired Biden's Council of Economic Advisers, told me that the ARP probably contributed 0.5 to two points to inflation; Furman argues that it was closer to three points. That difference is significant, but it probably would not have radically changed what Americans thought about the economy.
A separate question is whether the size of the pandemic stimulus was actually inspired by post-neoliberal economics in the first place. According to Biden officials, the question of whether the Rescue Plan should have been $2 trillion, $1 trillion, or $500 billion had much more to do with risk management than with ideology. 'The idea that the Rescue Plan's size reflected an embrace of some brand-new economic theory is ridiculous,' Bernstein told me. The administration ultimately concluded that in the face of uncertainty, it was better to err on the side of doing too much stimulus, and risking some inflation, as opposed to doing too little, and risking high unemployment. That belief was by no means exclusive to post-neoliberal progressives. In late 2020, the Trump-appointed Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell warned that 'too little support' from policy makers 'would lead to a weak recovery, creating unnecessary hardship for households and businesses,' whereas 'the risks of overdoing it seem, for now, to be smaller.'
[Annie Lowrey: The cost-of-living crisis explains everything]
Both its critics and defenders tend to treat the Biden presidency as a natural experiment in the effectiveness of post-neoliberal ideas. But the sources of political success and failure don't always map neatly onto ideology. Perhaps the Biden administration's gravest political mistake was to preside over what appears to have been the largest surge of migration in American history. And open borders, which are a form of eliminating barriers to free markets for the sake of maximizing economic growth, are a longtime fantasy of some free-market economists. In that sense, one might argue that the administration's error here was being too neoliberal.
The post-neoliberals interpreted Trump's 2016 victory as the product of a failed economic paradigm and convinced themselves that by correcting those failures, they could completely shift American politics. They were wrong. Today, however, it is their critics who are at risk of making the same mistake. For all of its flaws, post-neoliberalism was a healthy correction to an economic system that was often too deferential to markets and too inattentive to the realities of politics. Abandoning it over its failures would be easy; the challenge is to find a way to build on its successes.
Article originally published at The Atlantic
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
5 minutes ago
- Yahoo
ReElement Technologies Corporation and The American Samoa Economic Development Authority Launch Deep Sea Nodule Refining Collaboration
Joint effort aims to create a sustainable, domestic supply chain for rare earth and critical minerals from deep sea nodules ReElement is commercially producing magnet-, specialty- and defense-grade, separated critical minerals and rare earth oxides in the United States Agreement comes within two weeks of MOU signed with Impossible Metals on toll processing of deep sea nodules FISHERS, IN / / July 30, 2025 / American Resources Corporation (NASDAQ:AREC) ("American Resources" or the "Company"), along with its holding in ReElement Technologies Corporation ("ReElement"), a leading U.S. innovator in rare earth element (REE) and critical mineral refining, is pleased to announce the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with the American Samoa Economic Development Authority ("ASEDA"), a leading force in community-based economic collaboration and development to create opportunities in the Territory for new infrastructure, industrial, commercial and residential development. The MOU outlines strategic goals of jointly investigating the development and deployment of a critical mineral refinery with a focus on deep sea nodules found in the American Samoa region. The initiative will be consistent with the U.S. Department of the Interior's process for managing the environmentally-sustainable development of this region. The major outcome is focusing on unlocking a vertically integrated critical mineral supply chain solution, combining ReElement's initial relationship with Impossible Metals' proprietary nodule collection technology with ReElement's innovative and industry-leading critical mineral refining platform to create a globally competitive, sustainable, and independent rare earth supply chain in the United States. Key highlights of the MOU include: Focus on essential elements: Copper, cobalt, nickel, manganese, and rare earth elements which are prevalent in the local nodules. Joint commitment to explore a sustainable, non-China critical mineral supply chain to meet growing global demand. Military base installation: Explore options to leverage existing Defense Department infrastructure. Strategic collaboration to enhance and secure the global critical mineral value chain and identify further joint opportunities. Integration of ReElement's platform, delivering high-throughput, low-waste, cost-effective refining of ultra-pure critical minerals. End-to-end U.S. supply chain: From seabed mining in federal waters near American Samoa and refine locally. The MOU follows President Trump's April 2025 Executive Order, Unleashing America's Offshore Critical Minerals and Resources, which underscores the urgency of domestic collaboration across the exploration, harvesting, processing, and environmental stewardship of seabed mineral resources. Additionally, as outlined in President Trump's March 2025 Executive Order, Immediate Measures to Increase American Mineral Production, which promotes the placement of critical mineral refineries on federal military installations. This uniquely allow for ReElement's modular refining systems to operate and leverage government facilities on site. Impossible Metals has played a direct role in shaping global policy on responsible seabed mining. At the regulatory level, Impossible Metals successfully requested the Department of the Interior to initiate permitting for deep sea minerals in U.S. federal waters and has personally updated members of the U.S. Congress on the importance of this unique feedstock. Mark Jensen, CEO and Chairman of ReElement, commented, "Our team is excited to bring ReElement's advanced refining capabilities to this important mission and community. Plus working directly with a fellow Hoosier who is a true visionary will be very fulfilling and a full circle moment." John Wasko, Executive Director of ASEDC, added, "The community members of American Samoa are tremendously skilled, industrious and good natured. We feel that the technology platform ReElement can bring will unlock not only economic benefits but help secure critical mineral dominance as ordered by President Trump." The agreement marks another key milestone in the journey to deliver U.S.-processed, high-purity rare earth products to the global value chain and reinforces both companies' commitment to building a resilient, environmentally sound and sustainable supply network. About American Samoa Economic Development Authority The American Samoa Economic Development Authority strives to promote economic development in the territory through collaborative efforts with our private sector, business community, our people and government. The ASEDC creates government diversification of our economic pillars and places for the community to live, learn, play, work and do business. About American Resources Corporation (NASDAQ:AREC) American Resources Corporation is a leader in the critical mineral supply chain, developing innovative solutions both upstream and downstream of the refining process. The company and its affiliates focus on the extraction and processing of metallurgical carbon and iron ore, essential ingredients in steelmaking, as well as critical and rare earth minerals for the electrification market and recycled metals. Leveraging its affiliation and former parent status of ReElement Technologies Corporation, a leading provider of high-performance refining capacity for rare earth and critical battery elements, American Resources is investing in and developing efficient upstream and downstream critical mineral operations. These operations include mining interests in conventional and unconventional sources, recycling, and manufacturing. American Resources has established a nimble, low-cost business model centered on growth, which provides a significant opportunity to scale its portfolio of assets to meet the growing global infrastructure and electrification markets while also continuing to acquire operations and significantly reduce their legacy industry risks. Its streamlined and efficient operations are able to maximize margins while reducing costs. For more information visit or connect with the Company on Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn. About ReElement Technologies Corporation ReElement Technologies Corporation, a portfolio company of American Resources Corporation (NASDAQ:AREC), is a leading provider of high-performance refining capacity for rare earth and critical battery elements. Its multi-mineral, multi-feedstock platform technology focuses on the refining of recycled material from rare earth permanent magnets and lithium-ion batteries, concentrated ores and brines, as well as coal-based waste streams and byproducts to create a cost effective and environmentally-safe, circular supply chain. ReElement has developed its innovative and scalable "Powered by ReElement" process which collaboratively utilizes its exclusively licensed intellectual property within its partners' material processing flow sheets to more efficiently support the global supply chain's growing demand for magnet and battery-grade products. For more information visit or connect with the Company on Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn. Learn more about ReElement Technologies' process and technology here - Video. Special Note Regarding Forward-Looking Statements This press release contains "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties, and other important factors that could cause the Company's actual results, performance, or achievements or industry results to differ materially from any future results, performance, or achievements expressed or implied by these forward-looking statements. These statements are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties, many of which are beyond American Resources Corporation's control. The words "believes", "may", "will", "should", "would", "could", "continue", "seeks", "anticipates", "plans", "expects", "intends", "estimates", or similar expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements, although not all forward-looking statements contain such identifying words. Any forward-looking statements included in this press release are made only as of the date of this release. The Company does not undertake any obligation to update or supplement any forward-looking statements to reflect subsequent events or circumstances. The Company cannot assure you that the projected results or events will be achieved. Investor Contact: JTC Team, LLCJenene Thomas(908) 824 - 0775arec@ Media Inquiries: Marjorie Weisskohl703-587-1532mweisskohl@ Company Contact: Mark LaVerghetta317-855-9926 ext. 0investor@ SOURCE: American Resources Corporation View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire Sign in to access your portfolio


Newsweek
5 minutes ago
- Newsweek
China Is Winning the Trade Talks With Trump
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. The U.S.'s latest round of trade talks with China concluded in Stockholm on Monday without much headway in the trade war between the world's two largest economies. While U.S. negotiators continue to use tough rhetoric, including the threat of secondary sanctions to discourage China from fueling Russia's war against Ukraine, geopolitical analysts say President Donald Trump's administration is at a disadvantage in the negotiations. Newsweek has contacted the White House for comment via email. Why It Matters Trump dramatically escalated economic tensions in April. Citing unfair Chinese trade practices and promising to revitalize U.S. manufacturing, he announced heavy tariffs on Chinese goods. The move rattled global supply chains and prompted swift retaliation from Beijing, which introduced its own tariffs and a suite of other tit-for-tat measures. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, who led the U.S.'s negotiating team in Stockholm, called the talks productive but said it was up to the president to extend the 90-day pause agreed to in May on the most severe tariffs. A trade truce between the countries is set to expire on August 12. What To Know Trump has already surrendered too much negotiating power in his pursuit of a sweeping deal with China, critics say. This includes the administration's recent decision to reverse restrictions on exports of Nvidia's H20 chips. The H20 is one of many chips to be restricted in a bid to slow China's progress in artificial intelligence—viewed by Washington as a national security threat given Beijing's policy of military-civil fusion. Additionally, the U.S. Commerce Department has been instructed to hold off on imposing new export controls on China, in what officials describe as an effort to keep trade talks on track, the Financial Times reported on Tuesday, citing both former and current U.S. officials. Chinese President Xi Jinping, left, and U.S. President Donald Trump during a welcome ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on November 9, 2017. Chinese President Xi Jinping, left, and U.S. President Donald Trump during a welcome ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on November 9, 2017. Andy Wong/Associated Press Other alleged concessions center on Taiwan, the self-governed island that China claims as its territory and has vowed to unify with, by force if necessary. The Trump administration has blocked Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te from making a brief stopover in New York during a planned trip to visit Taiwan's diplomatic allies in Latin America, according to the Times, which cited multiple sources. Both Lai's predecessors and Lai himself in his previous role as vice president were permitted to make brief stopovers in the U.S., during which they met with supporters and officials. A separate report from the British paper said a planned meeting between the Taiwanese Defense Minister Wellington Koo and the U.S. Under Secretary of Defense for Policy Elbridge Colby was canceled at the last minute last month. Newsweek was unable to independently confirm either of these reports. The move sparked criticism from prominent China watchers, who warned against using the self-ruled democracy and key trade partner as a bargaining chip. Liu Pengyu, a spokesperson for the Chinese Embassy in Washington, D.C., told Newsweek that he was not aware of the details of the reports. He emphasized Beijing's firm opposition to visits to the U.S. by Taiwanese leaders, invoking the "one China" policy—which holds that the government in Beijing is the sole legal government of China. China's concessions during the talks have been limited by comparison. They include designating two more chemicals as precursors to fentanyl, the powerful opioid behind the U.S. overdose crisis that has become a sticking point in bilateral ties—with Washington pressing Beijing to do more to stem the flow of the drug into the U.S. Following the first round of talks in May, China also announced it would ease some restrictions on rare earth magnets, which are vital for a range of both military and civilian technologies. However, the U.S. and other countries continue to complain of ongoing delays in the export of these resources. Beijing weaponized its dominance over rare earths in April by curbing exports in response to Trump's tariff salvos. What People Are Saying Li Chenggang, the Chinese vice minister of commerce and international trade representative, told state media: "Both sides had candid communication regarding each other's important economic and trade concerns. … The two sides will continue to push for the extension of the pause on 24 percent of reciprocal tariffs of the U.S. side, as well as counter measures of the Chinese side." David Sacks, a fellow for Asia studies at the Council of Foreign Relations, wrote in an article: "The cancellation of President Lai's transit, paired with the Trump administration's decision to allow Nvidia to sell its H20 inference chip to Chinese customers and to freeze planned export controls, suggests that the administration is pausing any actions that China may find offensive in favor of setting the table for a meeting between Trump and Xi." What Happens Next Trump administration officials have suggested that an in-person meeting between the president and his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping, is likely by the end of the year. On Monday, Trump wrote on Truth Social that he would consider such a meeting only if Xi extended an invitation, adding, "otherwise, no interest!"


UPI
5 minutes ago
- UPI
Economists: Federal Reserve unlikely to drop interest rates
July 30 (UPI) -- The United States Federal Reserve will release its interest rates decision Wednesday, but it's unlikely to cut rates, economists say. The economy is mostly unchanged since last month, and the effects of President Donald Trump's tariffs are just beginning to take effect. So the Federal Open Market Committee is likely to stay the course until September. Trump has waged a verbal war against Fed Chair Jerome Powell, demanding that he lower interest rates or resign. Trump has even suggested he might fire Powell, whose term on the FOMC ends in May 2026. "They're not going to get anything if they ease, other than they'll look like they're knuckling under to the president," Bill English, the Fed's former head of monetary affairs and now a professor at the Yale School of Management, told CNBC. "So I think their best policy for sure is just to look at the data, make their best judgment, make their policy decision and explain it as well as they can." For the first time since 1993, two FOMC governors could dissent against keeping the rates where they are. Governors Christopher Wallen and Michelle Bowman have backed Trump's call for a rate cut. "It's a long way to September," Morgan Stanley said in a note to clients. "The Fed needs more time to determine how the economy is evolving versus its goals." Oxford Economics Chief U.S. Economist Ryan Sweet said he doesn't expect the "central bank to tip its hand, as it will want to remain flexible because of the lingering uncertainty of where tariffs will ultimately settle, the magnitude of the boost to core goods prices, and whether tariffs are bleeding into other prices." Last year, the Fed lowered its benchmark short-term rate by one percentage point after a pandemic-related inflation spike eased but has since been on hold. But the imposition of tariffs on imported goods makes economists expect an inflation boost and slowed growth. Tariffs have had little effect on inflation so far, but they were beginning to be felt by consumers in June because Chinese-made products got more expensive, according to the consumer price index. But that's because retailers and manufacturers loaded up on goods before the tariffs went into effect or took the costs on themselves. Forecasters say this isn't likely to continue.