Fox Businesses’ Charles Payne Discusses Where the U.S. Is Headed at the Launch of the 2021 Index of Economic Freedom

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Fox Businesses’ Charles Payne Discusses Where the U.S. Is Headed at the Launch of the 2021 Index of Economic Freedom

Mar 5, 2021 2 min read
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Former Research Coordinator

Patrick Tyrrell was a Research Coordinator in The Heritage Foundation’s Margaret Thatcher Center for Freedom.
Charles Payne at Fox Business Network Studios on July 26, 2019 in New York City. Steven Ferdman / Getty Images

Key Takeaways

The United States suffered a large setback in economic freedom last year, primarily because of a steep drop in fiscal health due to the ballooning federal deficit.

Payne noted that since the COVID-19 pandemic began, “The amount of new business applications has gone through the roof.”

Payne concluded, “Sometimes, you don’t know how good you have it until you throw it away.”

Charles Payne of the Fox Business Network sat down with Jack Spencer, vice president of the Institute for Economic Freedom at The Heritage Foundation, to discuss the revealing—and alarming—key points from the 2021 Index of Economic Freedom, at the index’s launch event on Thursday.

The index shows that the United States suffered a large setback in economic freedom last year, primarily because of a steep drop in fiscal health due to the ballooning federal deficit.

The United Sates is not alone in faltering fiscal health. Massive deficit spending by most countries in the wake of COVID-19 bodes ill for fiscal health around the world. The shift towards socialism in the U.S. and around the world further endangers fiscal health.

Unfortunately, Payne does not see the fiscal restraint that is needed happening until America “go[es] over the proverbial cliff, [comes] out of the ashes,” and learns the hard way.

On the other hand, Payne described himself as “a rose-colored glasses kind of guy,” and an optimist about America’s future. Pointing to his own inspirational story, and others as well, Payne noted that since the COVID-19 pandemic began, “The amount of new business applications has gone through the roof.” He attributes that to the entrepreneurial drive and spirit of Generations Y and Z.

For Payne, the U.S. is still the “land of opportunity.”

Speaking of socialism, Payne acknowledged that it can sound “really good,” like “we all get a piece of the action and no one is richer than anyone else.” The reality is quite different, and one need only talk to immigrants to this country from other lands, according to Payne, to understand that many have come to America precisely to avoid the horrors of socialism they experienced in their homelands.

Asked about Wall Street, where Payne has made his mark, he decried the widespread negative mischaracterizations promoted by leftists. Focusing on the massive fortunes made by a few, they ignore the essential role of the Street  as a place where financial transactions are facilitated, and where companies raise money to expand and grow their businesses, allowing the people who work at those companies to achieve their potential and the American dream.

Speaking not just of Wall Street but of the American economic system as a whole, Payne concluded, “Sometimes, you don’t know how good you have it until you throw it away.”

Sadly, according to this year’s Index, the U.S. has moved a bit further down the road toward throwing it all away, falling to  20th out of 178 countries overall, its lowest ranking ever.

This piece originally appeared in The Daily Signal.