By Ted Tucker
Sunday, June 22, 2025
President Donald Trump’s reciprocal tariff program is
currently under scrutiny by the federal courts, and policymakers worldwide
wonder if it will eventually go into effect. Meanwhile, the administration is
negotiating a trade deal with the European Union, the United States’ largest
trading partner. Because the U.S. does about as much trade with the EU as with China, Japan, and South Korea combined,
a trade war would certainly be damaging for both sides. However, President
Trump may have been emboldened to threaten 50 percent tariffs on European goods
because of a surprising fact: The EU economy is far less imposing today than it
has been in recent memory.
In 2008, prior to the Great Recession, the European Union
and U.S. economies were roughly the same size. Today, the American economy
significantly outpaces Europe’s: As of April 2025, U.S. GDP is almost twice as large. Average European incomes are 27 percent lower than American incomes, while average
European wages are 37 percent lower. In general, the U.S. dominates in
21st-century fields like research, technology, finance, and energy.
What accounts for this rapidly growing divergence in
economic fortunes? Structural economic factors play a role, as do the differing
economic philosophies of the U.S. and of EU member countries. First, consumer
spending generally has shifted away from goods and toward services. Since the
U.S. sells more services worldwide compared with the EU, our economy is better
off. Moreover, the U.S. embraces economic freedom more readily than do EU
member states. According to the Fraser Institute’s Economic Freedom of the
World 2024 report, which ranks countries based on their size of government,
legal system, commitment to trade, regulation, and other factors, the U.S. has the fifth freest economy in the world. By
contrast, the average EU nation ranks 33rd.
Hidden in these statistics, however, lies the best
explanation for the growing U.S.-EU economic divide: the commitment to
entrepreneurship. Why is entrepreneurship important? Simply put, entrepreneurs
innovate, hire employees, create wealth, and drive their economy and society
forward. Entrepreneurship is the secret sauce — the “killer app,” in tech
parlance — of the American economy on which everything else is built.
The list of the world’s largest companies reveals why
entrepreneurship matters. Twenty-two of the 50 largest companies are based in
the U.S.; the EU has just nine. Many of the most successful — including Amazon,
Apple, and Alphabet — were American start-ups founded in the last 30 years. On
the other hand, Europe has stopped producing successful start-ups. Volkswagen,
Germany’s largest company, was incorporated in 1937. Switzerland’s Vitol dates
to 1966. France’s TotalEnergies: 1924. Italy’s Enel: 1962. In fact, a recent
European Commission report confirmed that no EU company founded in the past 50
years has a market capitalization of more than $100 billion. Meanwhile, six
American companies with a market cap above $1 trillion were founded during this
period.
The U.S. is outcompeting the EU in fostering new business
creation and entrepreneurship because it provides better conditions for
entrepreneurs. Our culture is more tolerant of risk-taking, which is
unsurprising given the entrepreneurial nature of our nation’s founding. Our
legal system provides more protections for start-ups and small businesses. Our
regulatory structures are relatively easy to navigate for someone with a new
business idea; launching a new venture is essentially a matter of filing the proper
paperwork. Historically, we have also been welcoming to immigrants, who, in
general, are highly entrepreneurial.
Organizations such as mine, the Foundation for Teaching
Economics (FTE), are essential for preparing the next generation of American
entrepreneurs. FTE introduces teachers and students to the principles of
economic freedom, helping them understand how it benefits their lives and the
nation in general. A new program launching this summer — Entrepreneurship: Economics of Innovation — will prepare
high school and middle school educators across the country to teach the
fundamental economic concepts that promote the entrepreneurial spirit. Since
1975, more than 30,000 students and teachers have participated in FTE programs.
Entrepreneurship depends on strong institutions that
protect property rights, open markets, and the rule of law. All entrepreneurs —
from your local day care or gas station proprietor to Silicon Valley venture
capitalists — need business certainty to function. Unsound economic policies
(including seemingly on-again, off-again tariffs) create uncertainty that is
anathema to entrepreneurs. It’s critical that we continue to teach the
principles of economic freedom to citizens and policymakers to ensure that the
U.S. remains the land of the free and the home of the entrepreneur.
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