Consider This from NPR - Trump is rewriting the rules of the economy…is it ‘crony capitalism’?
Episode Date: January 19, 2026President Trump has spent his first year back in office blurring the lines between business and government. The administration has bought shares in private companies like Intel, NVIDIA, and others in...volved in mining and energy. President Trump has also publicly pressured CEOs, and forced the restructuring of social media giants like TikTok.NPR financial correspondent Maria Aspan says that’s generating a lot of questions, and worries, about the future of the U.S. economy. For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org. Email us at considerthis@npr.org.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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President Trump has taken a pretty unusual hands-on approach to the economy,
using billions of dollars in taxpayer funds to purchase shares in private companies like Intel for the U.S. government.
I said, you know what you should do? If you're smart, give the United States of America 10% of your company.
And you looked at me and he said, I'll do that.
The U.S. government also has positions in a handful of other companies, many involved in minerals and energy.
President Trump has publicly pressured CEOs and forced the restructuring of social media giants like TikTok.
Members of the administration argue that these moves are essential for national security.
We've got to have the infrastructure to help our national security and our economic security.
And that's what Donald Trump is bringing to America.
But critics, like California Governor Gavin Newsom, call it, quote, crony capitalism.
This notion of crony capitalism, I don't like it. It's corruption.
People that can afford to make a phone call, afford to get an exemption on a tariff, afford to get something no one else can get, before to even get in the door.
I've never seen open corruption like this in my life.
Consider this. What is the boundary between business and presidential power?
And how is the Trump administration rewriting those rules?
From NPR, I'm Elsa Chang.
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It's consider this from NPR.
President Trump has spent his first year back in office rewriting the rules of American capitalism.
But what will that mean for the future of our economy and of our government?
Well, those are the questions that NPR financial correspondent Maria Aspen set out to answer.
Intel is one of America's original tech startups.
Remember this sound from its Intel Inside commercials?
Founded back in 1968, Intel made some of the first computer chips that have become so crucial to today's tech boom.
By the start of this century, its chips had made the tech company into a giant of American capitalism.
But last year, Intel became something very different, a symbol of how much President Trump is taking control of private companies.
In August, Trump publicly threatened Intel CEO Lip Butan, calling for his resignation.
nation over his ties to China. Then Tan went to the White House to meet with Trump.
I said, you know what? I think the United States would be given 10% of Intel. And now the United
States owns a chunk of Intel and several other companies. It's also seeking more control over
today's tech darling, NVIDIA. Trump wants NVIDIA to pay the U.S. a 25% cut of some sales in China
as a condition of allowing it to sell some computer chips there. Trump often makes these
deals with CEOs who have gone out of their way to court him, sometimes donating to his personal
projects, like NVIDIA CEO Jensen Wong, who's among the tech billionaires and companies
funding Trump's controversial White House ballroom. Here's Wong in April at a White House press
conference. So I want to thank you, sir, for everything that you've done and the strong
encouragement and the great policies that make it possible for us. Thank you, sir.
CEOs have always tried to court the White House, whoever it's occupants.
But for the U.S. government, which almost never takes a direct stake in U.S. companies, this is a huge break from tradition.
Now business experts across the political spectrum are worried that the United States is starting to look more like China.
If companies aren't competing on their ability to innovate and develop better products, if they're competing on their ability to schmuse, then, I mean, that's bad for everybody.
Anne Lipton has been working in corporate law for decades. She's a professor at the University of Colorado's Law School. She says that when the government picks winners and losers, companies have less incentive to compete with each other. That leads to less innovation and less spending and less job creation, which can all hurt the economy. This has long been the conventional wisdom in Washington and on Wall Street.
If you believe that the free market is the best way of generating resources and innovations and everything,
then this just sort of messes with that.
It certainly messes with what's known as free market capitalism,
which for decades has been the gospel of corporate America.
We are seeing a shift away from the type of rules-based capitalism that has made America's economy so robust.
Danielle Boulou-Air's founded a consulting company and served in the Obama.
Obama administration. Now she runs the Leadership Now Project, a coalition of business leaders that has
endorsed political candidates from both parties. She's worried that the United States is even at risk
of tipping over into crony capitalism, meaning that companies rise and fall based on how much
a political leader likes them. Like, say, the Russian billionaires who own oil companies under
Vladimir Putin. What we have right now is a lot of personalized decision-making, chaotic decision
decision-making instability that we're seeing the cost of.
A White House official, speaking to NPR and condition of anonymity,
largely dismisses these concerns and says that companies like Intel and
NVIDIA are crucial to U.S. national and economic security.
And to be sure, the U.S. stock market is booming away.
Intel didn't respond to requests for comment.
In an emailed statement, an NVIDIA spokesperson says its discussions with President Trump
have focused, quote, on his desire for America to win as a nation.
Ballou airs says that it's tough for business leaders to know how to stand up to Trump,
especially after he's threatened some of them.
You don't want to say anything unless it's like clearly exactly in your core interests,
in your core business, and at no risk.
But she warns that crony capitalism can have some pretty dire consequences for the overall economy,
but also for individual business leaders.
In extreme cases, like Russia, executives who fall out of favor then sometimes fall out of windows.
The cronies and crony capitalism, they don't end up. Look at the oligarchs in Russia.
It doesn't really end well for many of them. And you can't predict if you were one who ends up okay or not.
Russia is an extreme example. But she hopes it's an early warning to U.S. business leaders to stand up for free market capitalism.
If not for the sake of the economy, at least,
for their own long-term self-interest.
Maria Aspen, NPR News.
This episode was produced by Vincent Acovino
with audio engineering by Tiffany Vera Castro.
It was edited by our executive producer, Sammy Yenigan.
It's Consider This from NPR.
I'm Elsa Chang.
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