By David L. Bahnsen
Monday, January 12, 2026
Economic conservatives find themselves increasingly
isolated in today’s politics as the reality of horseshoe theory plays out in
the current populist moment. This past week, President Donald Trump explicitly
suggested all four of the following policy ideas, some taken verbatim from the
policy portfolio of Bernie Sanders or Elizabeth Warren:
1.
An outright ban on institutional buying (if
those investors own more than one hundred properties) of single-family
residential real estate
2.
Government control of executive compensation at
defense and aerospace companies, along with, under loosely defined
circumstances, a ban on such companies’ returning capital (whether by share
buybacks or dividends) to investors
3.
The implementation of quantitative easing by
ordering the government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs) Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac
to purchase $200 billion of mortgage-backed securities
4.
A federally imposed limit of 10 percent on the
interest rates that credit cards can charge borrowers
Of that list, only No. 3 is arguably allowed within the
powers of the presidency (and even that only because the federal government has
foolishly maintained the conservatorship of Fannie and Freddie 17 years past
their demise). To the president’s credit, his Truth Social announcement
regarding No. 1 (a ban on institutional ownership of residential real estate)
acknowledged a need to get the codification of Congress. But even if all of
these ideas go the way of his 50-year-mortgage idea of not that long ago (it
has already been abandoned), even mere ideation on social media carries
consequences. Not only do these proposals stroke the emotions of his populist
base that demands that the government “do something,” but they offer
credibility and support to future endeavors to do the same thing that may prove
more serious and substantive.
Even if there were proof that these four policy ideas
would work toward their desired aims (cheaper housing, better quality, more
rapidly produced military equipment, and a lower cost of credit), significant
arguments exist against their implementation. On principle, one should object
(as I do) to the federal government’s telling sellers whom they can sell their
homes to and telling buyers where they can and cannot put their capital to
work. One should object to the concept of quasi-nationalization of our defense
and aerospace industry. One should object to the distortive interference of the
heavy hand of government in the supply and terms of mortgage financing. And one
should object to the statist imposition of price controls in the highly complex
(and risky) world of unsecured consumer credit.
However, I would be perfectly willing to forgo the
objections of the preceding paragraph and to engage these four policy issues
only along the lines of whether they are likely to work and achieve their
stated aims. Indeed, these policy prescriptions not only do not work, but they
actively hurt the very people they are intended to benefit.
In economics, we refer to the idea that some policies
deserve legitimacy because of their intentions as the “piety myth.” It was
Thomas Sowell who most lambasted the idea that left-wing ideas or general
collectivist intentions warrant more grace as long as the policies “mean well.”
With each of his proclamations, I believe the president finds political value
in a midterm election year and, to some degree, believes that they would
benefit, at least superficially or marginally, the people for whom they are
intended. The opposite is true.
1.
An outright ban on major institutional buying
of single-family residential real estate. Despite the fact that the very premise
of the idea is deeply flawed (that institutional
ownership of real estate is driving home prices higher), the solution proposed
is even more problematic. The existence of more buyers in the market produces
more incentive to build and develop, and if there is any viable solution to the
supply–demand imbalance that has driven prices higher, it is an increase in
building and development. Taking out an entire class of capital contributors to
the space would put downward pressure on production. It not only takes away a
category of buyers, but it limits optionality for sellers — that is, it stunts
total transaction volume. More activity promotes more supply. It fosters
capital formation and brings fluidity to a sector that has been hobbled by
regulation and risk–reward headwinds since the financial crisis. Pricing is a
by-product of supply and demand, and whether the buyers are institutions
looking to add rental stock or individuals looking to enjoy a primary
residence, eliminating entire actors from the marketplace pushes the supply
curve the wrong way.
2.
Government control of executive compensation
at defense and aerospace companies, along with a complete ban on such
companies’ returning capital to investors. The president may have missed
the ironic undermining of his own argument in his social media post. He claimed
that our military equipment and defense innovations are the greatest in the
world but went on to bemoan the return of capital to investors via dividends
and stock buybacks, claiming that these companies ought to produce the greatest
defense products in the world only because doing so is great for America. He is
correct that the technology, innovation, and precision of our defense industry
are the greatest in the world, and I can think of no greater way to undermine
that than to treat the capital that undergirds it poorly. It is
not an accident that our defense sector shines — it is well capitalized and
well incentivized to perform. Nationalized defense companies in other countries
trail by leaps and bounds. The investors (in both private and public companies)
put forth capital that drives these innovations and continue doing so when they
find the return on their investment worthwhile. Government intervention in that
process would be destructive, and the wholesale elimination of capital return
would stultify the sector, quasi-nationalize the space, ensure mediocrity for a
generation in the ability to hire and retain talent, and freeze companies’
ability to attract capital.
3.
The implementation of GSE quantitative easing
by ordering Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to purchase $200 billion of
mortgage-backed securities. This endeavor can succeed in bringing down
long-term yields as non-price-sensitive buyers overwhelm the market with
mortgage bond purchases that drive prices up and yields down, but if the goal
is to create greater affordability for home purchasers, this would only
exacerbate the problem. Those on the right already know the talking points,
having just (accurately) used them barely a year ago against then–presidential
candidate Kamala Harris in the 2024 election, when she naïvely suggested
subsidizing down payments for first-time homebuyers. The rebuttal, valid then
as it is now, was that such a step would merely be priced into the market,
fueling demand but doing nothing to address the supply side of the market’s
disconnect. Much like Harris’s proposal, using the purse of government-sponsored
enterprises to manipulate the mortgage market with quantitative easing fuels
the demand side but does nothing to address the deficit of supply. Any action
in housing policy that increases the demand curve yet ignores the supply curve
would make housing more expensive, no matter how much those who might be first
to benefit from lower rates would enjoy the idea.
4.
A federally imposed limit of 10 percent on
the interest rates credit cards can charge borrowers. As was the case in
Bernie Sanders’s bill from a year ago to do exactly this, this plan for
federally sanctioned price-fixing ignores the obvious consequence when banks
are told they cannot price the risk of this unsecured lending themselves: the
wholesale removal of credit from riskier borrowers. Those with lower incomes or
troubled credit histories will not enjoy 10 percent credit card interest but
rather no credit card interest, because millions of borrowers will lose
access to credit. Their need for borrowing will not subside, though, so
they will pivot to payday lenders, pawn shops, loan sharks, or otherwise less
reputable outlets at a cost far greater than they incur now. If 10 percent were
the right number to meet the risk–reward trade-off of unsecured consumer
lending, some bank would have already priced it right there, knowing that it is
far less than what competitors currently charge, and it would soon dominate the
market. JPMorgan wrote down $7 billion of charge-offs in its consumer-credit
business last year, an indication of the high risk that exists in this space.
That risk finds remuneration in higher interest rates, and attempts by
Washington to “fix” that price would result in a huge percentage of the
population’s being cut off from access to credit, an access they enjoy now as
they seek to rebuild credit and financial standing.
Economic populism is a dangerous thing, even when its
stated policies may work for a period. Being untethered to first principles
leads to a slippery slope of abuse, distortion, malinvestment, and even
corruption that undermines optimal conditions for human flourishing. But
economic populism, as embodied in the aforementioned four policies, becomes a double
whammy when it not only violates the principles of our American
experiment but also woefully fails to deliver on its very own terms.
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