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National Review
National Review
18 Apr 2023
Dominic Pino


NextImg:The Corner: It’s Great to Live in the American Economy

Does the U.S. economy have problems? Absolutely. It always has, and it always will. There’s always room for improvement, and policy-makers have plenty of work to do.

It still remains true that despite those problems, the U.S. economy significantly outperforms its peers. That’s the subject of the Economist’s most recent cover story. The British paper doesn’t have a dog in the U.S. domestic partisan fight, and it steps back to admire what the U.S. economy has done.

Here are some of the facts the piece points out:

The piece notes challenges with labor-force participation, drug overdoses, and middle-class income rising slower than upper- and lower-class incomes. Another problem it doesn’t mention is the federal government’s looming fiscal disaster and politicians’ unwillingness to spend responsibly.

But for most people, there’s no economy better than America’s. Zooming out from day-to-day politics, it’s clear that the U.S. free-market system is doing something right. America’s more managed peers in Europe and Japan just aren’t doing as well. The Economist points to how easy it is to start a business in the U.S. — and how easy it is to work through bankruptcy and try again. It also points to something the Founders gave us: a massive common market between the states.

Though there are problems to be solved, and things could be better, the doom narratives from the left and the right should be put in perspective. “The more that Americans think their economy is a problem in need of fixing, the more likely their politicians are to mess up the next 30 years,” the Economist says. Let’s not talk ourselves into stagnation.