Dr. Doug Cardell

An Eclectic Economist Explains Evidentiary Economics

Clear Thinking in a Complicated World

“Ideology asks for acceptance—Intelligence asks for evidence.”
Why Socialism Struggles book cover
Buy Dr. Cardell's Book

Why Socialism Struggles

Recent Articles   About Dr. Cardell   See Dr. Doug on Podcasts

Featured Article:

  
   August 28, 2025

The Trump administration's decision to acquire a 10% stake in Intel by converting CHIPS Act grants into equity is a move that carries significant risks. The CHIPS Act itself was a controversial step, and this latest move has sparked intense debate across political, economic, and technological circles. While the administration frames it as a way to secure national interests and bolster domestic semiconductor manufacturing, it's a decision that could have profound implications. First, it erodes free market principles. At its core, this involvement challenges the fundamental idea of American capitalism: that markets, not governments, should determine who wins and who loses. This move gives Intel an unfair competitive advantage over its current and potential competitors. If you've read my articles defining socialism, such as 'Economic Systems', you already know that the definition of socialism is a system in which the government owns the means of production. The fact that this is only partial government ownership of a private tech giant, such as Intel, rather than an entire industry, may not be considered full-on socialism. Still, it is a step in that direction and sets a dangerous precedent that future administrations will surely exploit to justify deeper intervention in other industries. This potential for future government intervention should invoke a sense of caution among the citizenry. Secondly, the government's stake in Intel risks geopolitical blowback and has inherent global market risk. Intel operates globally, with a significant business presence in Asia, including China. The global community and Intel customers might perceive the US government's stake in Intel as politicizing the company's operations. In a time of heightened US–China tech tensions, this move could escalate distrust and lead to retaliatory measures against American firms. Third, it poses a significant innovation risk, as it may lead to conflicting political priorities with market needs. Government ownership, however small or passive, introduces the risk of political interference in corporate strategy. This administration or some future one could divert Intel's engineering bandwidth toward national security projects at the expense of commercial innovation in AI, data centers, and edge computing. This shift in priorities could significantly impede Intel's ability to compete with nimble rivals like Nvidia and AMD, who remain laser-focused on market-driven innovation. This potential loss of competitiveness should raise serious concerns among industry professionals and informed citizens concerned about technology and economics. Fourth, it raises profound corporate governance concerns. While the government claims it will not seek board representation or governance rights, it has secured voting power aligned with Intel's board and a warrant for an additional 5% stake if Intel loses majority control of its foundry business. These governance concerns raise legitimate questions about long-term influence. Even without direct control, the government's presence can hamper decision-making, especially in areas such as foreign partnerships, executive hiring, and strategic pivots. Fifth, it distorts capital allocation. The $8.9 billion investment was funded by converting unpaid CHIPS Act grants and Secure Enclave program funds into equity. While this may seem fiscally clever, it distorts the original intent of those grants, which was to incentivize innovation, not to nationalize assets. This change will affect private investors, who may now worry about competing with government-backed capital or facing unpredictable policy shifts. Sixth, it opens a slippery slope toward broader government ownership and ever closer to genuine socialism. Intel isn't the only company involved. The administration has also taken 'golden shares' in US Steel and negotiated profit-sharing deals with Nvidia and AMD for AI chip sales to China. This pattern suggests a broader strategy of creeping government ownership in strategic sectors. This slope could lead to a quasi-state capitalist model or full-blown socialism, undermining the dynamism of American enterprise. The potential for market uncertainty in the face of such a shift naturally invokes a sense of unease. Seventh, it sends mixed signals to the tech industry as well as the broader market. The design of the CHIPS Act aimed to catalyze private investment in domestic chip manufacturing. Turning grants into equity sends a mixed message. What is the government's role? Is the government a partner, a regulator, or a shareholder? This ambiguity could deter startups and investors from engaging with federal programs, as they fear entanglement or loss of autonomy. In conclusion, this move is an example of strategic overreach rife with the possibility of unintended consequences. While the administration's intent behind the US stake in Intel — securing supply chains and national security — is understandable, the execution raises serious concerns. It risks politicizing a vital industry, distorting market incentives, and undermining the very innovation it seeks to protect. Intel's turnaround requires bold engineering and market agility rather than bureaucratic oversight. If the US wants to lead in semiconductors, it should empower companies through smart policy, not partial ownership. Governments throughout the world have historically had an abysmally poor record when it comes to partially or fully directing economies. Free markets, regulated by governments to ensure their integrity, have consistently demonstrated that they react more effectively and efficiently to market forces than any government. It's sometimes messy, and companies will succeed and fail—but they will do so based on their ability to satisfy the needs of their customers. The free market delivers what people want because they economically vote with their spending; they literally put their money where their collective mouths are. Take a quick look around the room you are reading this in; how much of what you see was provided by markets and how much by governments. Markets work best.

Quick Quiz

Question:The US government should invest in corporations whenever they need help.




If you found this article stimulating, please share it with other folks who might enjoy it. And please share your thoughts below. Dr. Cardell would love to hear from you.

Questions, Comments, Criticisms, or Witty Remarks:

* Required information
1000
What is the fifth month of the year?
Drag & drop images (max 3)
Powered by Commentics

Responses

Avatar
New
Gabriel Vargassays...

The article is very well articulated. This falls in line with Kevin O’Leary’s “queen bee” theory he discussed on the Diary of a CEO podcast. Also, a great example of how NASA holes have came to light once free enterprise competition entered the “race”.

The thing is that there is a dichotomy between government control through bureaucratic structures and government regulation with manipulation through lobbying. How is the balanced maintained without compromising free enterprise?

Avatar
New
Dr. Dougsays...

Good points, Gabriel! I addressed some of this in a previous article, 'Triple Your Income'. In that I said we needed, "A dramatic curtailment of lobbying." One way to stay within SCOTUS guidelines that allow political contributions as free speech is to put the regulation on the politicians. How? A law requiring politicians to refuse contributions from anyone other than a private citizen, and to accept no more than $100 (or some other relatively small amount). This does not limit speech in that offering the money may be speech, but accepting the money is listening to that speech. People have a right to free speech, but they do not have a right to demand that others listen. I've updated the 'Triple Your Income' article with this addition. Thanks to your comment, the article will be better!

Recent Articles

Newest to Oldest

Inequality Is Not Unjust

Capitalist Conundrum

Utopia? Reprise

Jevons' Paradox

Sneak Preview #9

Morality of Capitalism

Sneak Preview #8

Capitalism Explained

Sneak Preview #7

A Venezuela Vision

Sneak Preview #6

Collectivism?

Sneak Preview #5

A Landscape Paradox

Sneak Preview #4

NarcisSocialism #3

Sneak Preview #3

Mamdani Madness

Sneak Preview #2

Imagine No Capitalism

NarcisSocialism #2

Sneak Preview #1

Creeping Socialism?

NarcisSocialism #1

Maximize Your Value

Triple Your Income?

How to Create Value

Values Create Value

Do You Create Value?

Amazon Delivers

The Laffer Curve

Social Security Fix

A Story about Spending

The New Natural Law

Economic Outlook 2025

Can Feet Vote?

BIG Numbers

The Wrong Ruler

Butterfly Economics

Are You an Economy?

Worldwide Wealth

Undoing Inflation

Electionomics

Education Emergency

Election Economics

Meritocracy Matters

How Is It Possible?

Building Wealth

July 4th Worldwide

American Capitalism

And the winner is…

Utopia?

Stagflation

Sense of Purpose

Inflation & Stocks

The Dangers of Debt

Fixing Capitalism

Shrinkflation?

Employment Truth

Achievement Economy

Anti-Social Policy?

Does Amazon Deliver

The Socialist Religion

Defeating Poverty

Economic Myths #3

Economic Myths #2

Economic Myths #1

Who's a Capitalist?

More Pie Please

The Bubble Tax

Colonial-Socialism?

Income Inequality

Is Greed Good?

Racism & Economics

Death by Diet

Crony Capitalism?

No More Do-overs!

Model Behavior

Climate Change Cure

Then & Now Part 3

Then & Now Part 2

Then & Now Part 1

Democratic Socialism?

Capitalism Attacked

Debt Limit

Economic Error

Tax Hikes

Spontaneous Order?

Value and Worth

Evidentiary Econ

Taxing Corporations

Gov't Codependency

Causes of Inflation

What Is Capitalism

What Is It Worth?

CRT Explained

What Is Economics?

Economic Systems

Work Adding Value