My new piece is out in Jacobin. I argue that neoliberalism is not dead simply because governments now use tariffs, sanctions, subsidies, or industrial policy more openly. The core of neoliberalism was never only about free trade, but the insulation of markets and capital from democratic control. Right-wing populism has changed the rhetoric, but it has largely preserved the underlying neoliberal order. Contemporary right-wing populism should not be mistaken for a clean break with neoliberalism.
Donald Trump's tariffs, sanctions, and attacks on globalization are often presented as a rejection of the old free-market consensus. But the underlying arguments remain deeply neoliberal. The entrepreneur is still the hero (Tech and crypto-bros). Government is legitimate when it protects national business, punishes foreign competitors, or clears obstacles to private accumulation. Tariffs are sold less as a challenge to markets than as a way of restoring a supposedly fair market order against cheating foreigners, bureaucrats, and global elites.
The same point applies more broadly to the new industrial policy, which was never completely abandoned in the United States or Western Europe, one might add. States may subsidize national champions, direct investment, or protect selected sectors. Yet they can still treat profitability, competitiveness, shareholder value, and private returns as the ultimate criteria of success. Protectionism is not, by itself, an alternative to neoliberalism. Nor is a larger state. States have always intervened in markets. The question is whether intervention changes the social hierarchy of power or merely uses public resources to secure a more competitive capitalism.
Read it here.

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