When the Market Turns to the State
For much of the twentieth century, the United States presented itself as the world’s purest example of capitalism. The creed was simple: markets decide, government regulates only at the margins, and competition produces innovation. Yet in recent years that creed has eroded. The announcement that Washington would take a 10 percent equity stake in Intel is not an isolated event but a signal of a larger shift. The government is not simply regulating or providing incentives; it is entering boardrooms as a shareholder. Subsidies for semiconductors under the CHIPS Act, tax credits for green energy, and multibillion-dollar bailouts during crises reveal a pattern: the United States is practicing industrial policy on a scale it once criticized in others.
There are pragmatic reasons behind this shift. China has built dominance in strategic industries through state capitalism, blending private initiative with government direction. To compete, the U.S. is adopting tools it once rejected. Semiconductor manufacturing is a national security concern as much as an economic one. Without direct investment, American firms might fall behind Taiwan and South Korea. Supporters of this strategy argue that Washington is simply correcting market failures, securing supply chains, and protecting jobs. But the larger consequence is that the line between capitalism and state intervention has blurred. What was once condemned as distortion is now justified as necessity.
The risk is that this intervention does not remain limited to sectors like chips or green energy. Once the precedent is set, industries from pharmaceuticals to automobiles may argue for similar treatment. What began as a targeted response to strategic challenges could evolve into a structural reliance on government support. This raises the question: is the United States still practicing capitalism, or has it drifted toward a model where the state becomes both referee and player in its own markets?
Oligarchy Masquerading as Markets
Beyond subsidies, a deeper challenge to American capitalism lies in how corporations interact with politics. Lobbying has become less about influencing broad regulation and more about capturing the political process outright. Companies spend billions to shape tax codes, secure regulatory loopholes, and prevent competition. The result is a system where success is often determined not by efficiency or innovation but by access to power.
This is not capitalism in the classical sense. True capitalism assumes that firms rise and fall based on their competitiveness. In practice, many of America’s largest corporations are insulated from failure because their risks are shifted to the public. The 2008 financial crisis exposed this dynamic: banks made reckless bets, profits were privatized, and when collapse came, losses were socialized through taxpayer bailouts. The pattern repeated during the pandemic, when government stimulus disproportionately benefited large corporations, even as small businesses closed in record numbers.
Economists like Joseph Schumpeter once described capitalism as “creative destruction,” where innovation constantly replaces old models. Yet in today’s America, destruction is avoided at all costs for the largest players. Losses are contained through political rescue packages, while profits remain untouched. The outcome is closer to oligarchy than capitalism. Power is concentrated in a narrow elite that controls both capital and politics, and the broader public shoulders the risk.
Historical parallels are instructive. In the late Roman Republic, elites captured the economic system, using state resources to enrich themselves while ordinary citizens faced growing inequality. Rome’s political system, much like modern America’s, struggled to balance short-term populist pressures with long-term strategic needs. The question then, as now, was whether an economy dominated by entrenched elites could still call itself competitive or whether it had crossed into oligarchic territory.
Competing with China’s State Capitalism
The U.S. shift toward industrial policy is often justified by invoking China. Beijing has spent decades refining its model of state capitalism, directing investment, protecting national champions, and planning over decades rather than election cycles. This model has allowed China to become the world’s manufacturing powerhouse, dominating solar panels, batteries, and electronics. By contrast, America’s political system is designed around short cycles and policy whiplash. An administration may invest billions in one sector, only for the next to reverse course. This volatility makes long-term planning difficult.
Yet Washington increasingly feels it has no choice but to mirror Beijing’s tactics. The semiconductor industry illustrates the dilemma. Taiwan produces over 60 percent of the world’s chips, and any disruption would cripple global supply chains. Relying on the market to correct such vulnerabilities seems risky when geopolitical tensions in the Taiwan Strait are escalating. By stepping in with subsidies and equity stakes, the U.S. hopes to reduce dependence and maintain technological leadership.
But here lies a contradiction. While the U.S. seeks to compete with China by adopting elements of state capitalism, it lacks the political and social infrastructure to sustain it. Chinese state capitalism is underpinned by centralized authority and a willingness to suppress dissent in favor of long-term stability. The American system, by contrast, is fragmented, contested, and often paralyzed by partisan divides. Industrial policies may begin with strategic intent, but they risk devolving into political patronage and corporate lobbying. Instead of building resilience, America could entrench inefficiency.
The irony is sharp. For decades, the U.S. warned developing countries against state intervention, urging them to embrace market liberalization and globalization. Today, it is practicing the very policies it once dismissed. The question is whether this adaptation is a pragmatic evolution of capitalism—or an admission that American capitalism, as it was once defined, no longer exists.
The Future of Capitalism in America
The bottom line is not that capitalism has disappeared from the United States, but that it has been reshaped. What passes for capitalism today is a hybrid: part market-driven, part state-supported, and heavily influenced by corporate power. The dangers are clear. If government subsidies become permanent crutches, innovation could stagnate. If lobbying continues to dominate policy, competition will erode further. If profits remain private while losses are socialized, public trust in the system will collapse.
For capitalism to survive in any recognizable form, it must return to its foundational principles. That means a competitive environment where firms succeed or fail on merit. It means political systems resilient enough to resist capture by corporate elites. It means a government that intervenes only to set fair rules, not to pick winners and losers. History shows that capitalism is adaptable—it has survived depressions, wars, and globalization—but its legitimacy depends on balance. Too much market chaos invites collapse. Too much state intervention risks oligarchy.
The debate over whether American capitalism is still capitalism is not academic. It is a live question that will shape the country’s economic and political trajectory in the decades ahead. If the U.S. continues down its current path—half-market, half-oligarchy—it risks losing the very dynamism that made it the world’s economic leader. The challenge is not to copy China, nor to retreat into nostalgia for a free market that never fully existed. The challenge is to reinvent capitalism in a way that restores fairness, competition, and responsibility. Without that reinvention, the phrase “American capitalism” may soon describe a system that looks less like a model and more like a contradiction.




