Skip to main content
98,926 results found
Sort By:
Best Match | Newest
  • Topics
    International
    Cato’s scholars seek to promote a better understanding around the world of the benefits of market‐​liberal policy solutions, and a principled and restrained foreign policy.
  • March 25, 2025
    News Releases
    New Cato Analysis on USDA School Food Programs
    This paper comes during a national conversation reconsidering the federal government’s role in schooling, including the shuttering of the Department of Education.
  • Topics
    Criminal Justice
    Cato’s research focuses on unconstitutional overcriminalization, self‐​defeating policing, coercive plea bargaining, and challenging our policy of near‐​zero accountability for law enforcement.
  • March 25, 2025
    Blog
    Joint Economic Committee Report Sounds the Alarm on Debt and Deficits
    Joint Economic Committee Report Sounds the Alarm on Debt and Deficits
    The JEC acknowledges that the rising debt and persistent deficits are the result of runaway government spending, not insufficient revenues, as tax receipts have remained stable over time. It specifically identifies spending on entitlement programs as the primary driver of the deteriorating fiscal outlook, noting that costs have grown dramatically due to unsustainable benefit design coupled with an aging population.
    By Romina Boccia and Ivane Nachkebia
  • March 25, 2025
    Policy Analysis
    No. 993
    Cutting School Food Subsidies
    Cutting School Food Subsidies
    Congress should repeal school food programs to reduce budget deficits and hand power back to the states.
    By Chris Edwards
  • March 24, 2025
    Cato Daily Podcast
    Administrative Courts and Presidential Deportations
    Administrative Courts and Presidential Deportations
    They’re not real courtrooms, of course, but administrative courts are being used in the context of immigration. What is their role in adjudicating immigration issues? David Bier and Will Yeatman comment.
    Featuring David J. Bier, William Yeatman, and Caleb O. Brown
  • March 24, 2025
    Blog
    Lawyers Who Anger the Feds Face New Penalties by Decree
    Lawyers Who Anger the Feds Face New Penalties by Decree
    A new memorandum from the Trump administration opens lawyers who oppose the federal government in court to new peremptory and damaging sanctions decided on by the federal government itself, not by courts. 
    By Walter Olson
  • March 24, 2025
    Blog
    Unpacking the Tariffs-Inflation Debate
    Unpacking the Tariffs-Inflation Debate
    Tariff proponents have started using the Fed as cover to deflect inflationary concerns. Tariffs are a recipe for making Americans worse off, and the President’s defenders should leave the Fed out of it.
    By Norbert Michel and Jai Kedia
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
2324252627281234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303112345