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The White House has made broad interpretations of existing legislative authority to make unilateral policy moves. We examine how this centralised ad hoc decision-making raises structural concerns and how the economic policy framework may evolve.
14 November 2025 | 6 minute read
By Atul Bhatia, CFA
In recent months, the Trump administration has sought or executed on actions that leave the U.S. government more closely intertwined with private enterprises. These range from direct investment in select U.S. chipmakers and mining companies to revenue participation in exports of strategic assets. Less directly, the administration has sought to use tariffs to influence supply chain management across the entire private sector.
Decisions like these have been criticised as “unprecedented” and “government overreach” by commentators on both the left and right of the political spectrum.
In our view, those comments emphasise labels over reality, ignore important context, and – most importantly – focus too heavily on today’s concerns while ignoring the significant implications for future government action.
Strictly speaking, we don’t see these actions as unprecedented.
The U.S. has taken stakes in private entities in the past, most recently in response to the global financial crisis, and has even directly operated private assets, such as President Harry S. Truman’s decision to take over steel mills during the Korean War.
There are fewer direct analogues for the Trump administration’s idea to take a cut of sales on newly licensed chip exports to China, but that’s largely a matter of form. For decades, the U.S. government has used overseas arms sales to bring down the per unit cost of key weapons systems used by the U.S. military. It’s a different structure from a revenue-sharing arrangement, but the bottom line for the U.S. Treasury is the same: more export licences, more cash in the bank.
The question of government overreach is more political than economic. Reasonable people can certainly come down on both sides of the economic and strategic tradeoffs involved with government ownership of productive assets in key sectors.
More broadly, however, we think the overreach question mischaracterises the existing relationship between the federal government and private enterprise in the U.S. In particular, it overlooks the many ways in which long-standing government powers are tantamount to partial U.S. ownership of many private endeavors.
Take individual investors who buy stocks. For those shareholders, the rights and privileges largely boil down to percentage participation in the company’s earnings, a right to vote on major corporate decisions, and a right to vote for the board of directors, which hires management and protects shareholder interests.
Is the U.S. government really in a very different position? Similarities abound:
Add it all up, and the U.S. may not have an explicit stake in private companies, but the set of rights and powers it does have at least puts the government in the ballpark of ownership.
As a result, the practical difference between the Trump administration’s policies and the existing government framework is one of degree, not kind. But when it comes to process, that’s where we see what we believe is a radical change.
Prior administrations used relatively slow-moving tools with broad input. The current administration, however, has used broad interpretations of existing legislative authority to make unilateral policy moves. In many cases, we believe, this essentially boils down to the president choosing to exert control over a private company or contract. The moves are swift, so-called bureaucratic speed bumps are flattened out, and quick, decisive action is the hallmark.
The immediate impact of these moves may very well be a positive. When evaluating any individual move, it comes down to the quality of the idea. If it’s good, moving faster works. If it’s not good, faster implementation just means faster problems.
But this type of centralised ad hoc decision-making raises two major, related structural concerns.
First, they can’t all be winners. Even a sound decision-maker is going to have an occasional stumble, and without an institutional control, the bad decisions can flow just as easily as the good ones. Japan’s Ministry of International Trade and Industry achieved fame in the U.S. for its role in promoting Japan’s auto industry. Less appreciated is the agency’s attempt to block Sony from using transistor technology, raising the specter of a Walkman-less 1980s.
Second, even if one likes the current policy mix, the nature of democracy is changing political leadership. The next administration can use the same techniques to switch goals and promote contradictory policy.
Take the nearly completed wind farms that the administration effectively cancelled. Whatever one’s views on wind power, the nearly worst-case scenario for the economy is to make the investment but never reap the benefits. In a similar vein, future administrations could cancel pipeline or bridge permits. The only thing economically worse than a bridge to nowhere is half a bridge to nowhere.
We see four ways the economic policy framework can evolve from here:
For investors, the issues raised by centralised decision-making are easy to ignore for now, in our opinion. There is uncertainty on how the Court will rule, and the long-term consequences will depend both on electoral results and how future presidents choose to exercise – or not – the authority the current administration claims. We remain concerned, however, on the sustainability and advisability of the current path, and believe the typical legislative and regulatory process offers important safeguards.
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