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  • February 13, 2007
    Blog
    Another Bush?
    … things. “We” need to fix society. “Our” schools and “our” children need help. Paragraphs like this reveal a Bush‐​style policy mish‐​mash: We strengthen the American people by giving them more freedom, by letting them keep more of what …
    By Chris Edwards
  • Fall 2001
    Cato Journal
    pdf (31.88 kB)
    America the Unusual by Jack Kingdon
    … and readable book. Kingdon ably and succinctly summarizes the relevant literature before offering his own explanation of why the public policies of the United States are different in basic ways from the public policies of other rich nations. “I don …
    By Aaron Steelman
  • February 3, 2025
    News Releases
    Cato Scholars Available for Comment on USAID
    Two senior USAID officials have been placed on administrative leave following a conflict involving Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) and the Trump administration. 
  • May 1, 2024
    Blog
    The State of Student Loan Forgiveness: May 2024
    The State of Student Loan Forgiveness: May 2024
    In sum, the Biden White House has been the most aggressive presidential administration in history regarding student loan forgiveness. Despite many setbacks, the administration has canceled a massive amount of debt, with most of the burden on taxpayers still to come from future repayments that will no longer be made.
    By Andrew Gillen
  • November 17, 2023
    Events
    Let Pharmacists Prescribe
    Let Pharmacists Prescribe
    Prescription restrictions drive up health care costs and unnecessarily inconveniences patients, often when they are in distress.
    Featuring Ross Tsuyuki, Alex J. Adams, Jeffrey A. Singer, & Marc Joffe
  • September 10, 2018
    Blog
    Regulatory Power Leads to Corruption
    The broader message of the story is that when we give government the power to regulate an activity—in this case liquor sales—we open the door to corruption.
    By Chris Edwards
  • June 17, 2016
    Blog
    You Ought to Have a Look: Paris Agreement Prospects, EPA Shenanigans, House Says No to a Carbon Tax
    In this week’s You Ought to Have a Look, we highlight articles looking at the prospects for a quick ratification of the Paris Climate Agreement, how the EPA doesn’t follow its own rules when estimating the “benefits” of its recent emissions regulations, and the 237-163 House vote “Expressing the sense of Congress that a carbon tax would be detrimental to the United States economy.” 
    By Patrick J. Michaels and Paul C. “Chip” Knappenberger
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