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  • November 28, 2011
    Blog
    Apparently a Little Economics Education Does Work on Congress….
    While most of my adult life has been devoted to simply imparting basic Economics to policymakers, I have to admit to being a little skeptical as to if they are actually listening. I’ve seen too many times, especially during …
    By Mark A. Calabria
  • Fall 2011
    Cato Journal
    pdf (71.43 kB)
    Supply: A Tale of Two Bubbles
    … context of inelastic supply or where there are significant differences between short-run and long-run supply. This implies that policymakers conducting monetary policy need to be particularly attuned to the supply behavior of interest-rate sensitive assets. Policymakers also …
    By Mark A. Calabria
  • September 9, 2010
    News Releases
    The Miscellaneous Tariff Bill: A Blueprint for Future Trade Expansion
    Media Contact: (202) 789‑5200 Daniel Griswold, director of the Cato Institute’s Center for Trade Policy Studies and author of Mad About Trade: Why Main Street America Should Embrace Globalization, maps the course to broader and more effective U …
  • July 19, 2010
    Blog
    ObamaCare Is Unpopular: a Response to Maggie Mahar
    The Century Foundation’s Maggie Mahar is one of the Left’s more knowledgeable and insightful health policy wonks. Today, she blogs about my colleague Michael Tanner’s claim — made in his recent white paper, “Bad Medicine: A Guide to …
    By Michael F. Cannon
  • May 24, 2010
    Blog
    ObamaCare, Social Democracy & Socialism
    The following excerpt from Jeffrey Friedman’s article in the January/​February 2010 issue of Cato Policy Report, though about the financial industry rather than health care reform, captures why so many critics of ObamaCare are comfortable describing it as …
    By Michael F. Cannon
  • March 23, 2010
    Blog
    We Passed ObamaCare, but Will It Improve Health?
    The answer may not be so obvious. I’ll explore that issue at a Cato Institute policy forum this Thursday with two leading authorities on the subject: John Ayanian of Harvard Medical School and David Meltzer of the University of …
    By Michael F. Cannon
  • January 20, 2010
    TownHall.com
    The Message from Massachusetts
    Scott Brown’s stunning upset in the Massachusetts special election may have done what the best policy arguments could not – defeat the Democrats’ plans for a massive government takeover of the U.S. health care system. Democrats will undoubtedly offer …
    By Michael D. Tanner
  • September 4, 2009
    Blog
    Weekend Links
    If Eric Holder is going to investigate the CIA on torture, he should go after policymakers, too. Five myths about terrorism, Afghanistan, and why we’re still at war. Let’s look at the Constitution. There’s nothing in there …
  • January 27, 2009
    Blog
    What Did the New Deal Do?
    There has been much recent debate about whether or not President Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal policies increased the nation’s economic pain during the Great Depression or led to its end. In today’s Cato Daily Podcast, Regulation Magazine …
  • June 8, 2007
    Blog
    NCLB: What a Mess
    Only two days after a fatally flawed but positive report from the Center on Education Policy (CEP) inspired No Child Left Behind (NCLB) fans to declare NCLB a success, two new analyses have come out showing that far from being …
    By Neal McCluskey
  • February 2, 2007
    Blog
    The Libertarian Vote: New Returns Trickle In
    Don’t miss the latest from David Kirby and me on the libertarian vote. In Cato Policy Report (pdf; less attractive HTML version here) we report the results of our Zogby International poll of 2006 voters. In the Zogby survey …
    By David Boaz
  • March 8, 2006
    National Review (Online)
    Driving Bin Laden?
    By Jerry Taylor and Peter Van Doren
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