Cato scholars examine federal, state, and local spending and tax issues from a limited government perspective. They explore the benefits of lower-rate tax systems, the distortions caused by government spending, and the dangers of rising debt. A guiding principle for budget policy is federalism, the idea that federal activities should be limited and that most government activities are better handled by the states.
Tax and Budget Policy
10,879 results found
Jared Bernstein’s “Tax Reform” Assault on Pensions, IRAs and 401(k)s
Selling Federal Government Buildings
William Galston’s Not-So-Great Decoupling of Pay, Productivity, and Common Sense
State Fiscal Policies for Budget Stabilization and Economic Growth: A Dynamic Scoring Analysis
Marginal Tax Rates and U.S. Growth: Flaws in the 2012 CRS Study
ABBA and the Story of the Most-Inane-Ever Tax Controversy
How to Spend $3.9 Trillion
Cutting the $4 Trillion Budget
Hyping Billions in Taxpayer Spending
Drake v. Jerejian
Goldilocks, Canada, and the Size of Government
Lobbying the Taxpayers — with Taxpayers’ Money
Federal Government: Much Smaller in Canada
Michael D. Tanner discusses the farm bill on Freedom & Prosperity Radio