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  • October 17, 2018
    Blog
    Why Federal Debt Is Damaging
    … incomes. Those distortions occur whether spending is financed by debt or current taxes. But the availability of debt financing induces policymakers to increase overall spending, which at the margin goes toward lower‐​valued activities. Tax Damage Compounded. When taxes are …
    By Chris Edwards
  • October 16, 2018
    USA Today
    Don’t Believe Donald Trump; We’ll Be Just Fine Without Saudi Arabia
    … it is arming rebels in Syria, initiating a blockade of Qatar or kidnapping the prime minister of Lebanon, Saudi foreign policy is increasingly a destabilizing force in the region. Minimizing our ties to Saudi Arabia certainly won’t worsen our …
    By Emma Ashford
  • October 15, 2018
    Blog
    Ethanol Politics Trump Common Sense
    The federal government imposes a mandate to blend corn ethanol and other biofuels into the nation’s gasoline. This “renewable fuel standard” or RFS produces a range of negative effects. 
    By Chris Edwards
  • October 15, 2018
    Foreign Affairs
    Nuclear Weapons Don’t Matter
    For nearly three-quarters of century, the world has been told it is perched precariously on Rube Goldberg’s precipice, perennially at risk of plunging into apocalyptic devastation. But oddly enough, both we and the weapons are still here.
    By John Mueller
  • October 12, 2018
    Blog
    Saving the WTO’s Appeals Process
    The other, practical way should be the alternative means of trade dispute resolution currently available under Article 25 of the dispute settlement rules that are part of the WTO treaty – WTO arbitration.
    By James Bacchus
  • October 10, 2018
    Townhall
    Best and Worst Governors 2018
    The focus of governors should be delivering efficient state services at lower costs to create budget room for competitive tax rates.
    By Chris Edwards
  • October 9, 2018
    Blog
    U.S. Whitewashes Saudi War Crimes
    Even leaving aside the Saudi regime’s possible murder of a dissenting journalist, Riyadh does not come close to meeting the most basic human-rights standards for receiving U.S. aid.
    By Ted Galen Carpenter
  • October 9, 2018
    Real Clear Markets
    10 Years Later, Assessing the Dangerous Legacy of TARP
    While businesses should take risks in order to innovate, too many companies are operating today with the notion that, if things don’t work out, Uncle Sam will be there to bail them out.
    By John A. Allison
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