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  • March 21, 2011
    Conference
    The New Health Care Law: What a Difference a Year Makes
    David Rivkin, Partner, Baker & Hostetler LLP, and attorney for plaintiffs in Florida v. HHS; Moderated by Ramesh Ponnuru, Senior Editor, National Review; Michael F. Cannon, Director of Health Policy Studies, Cato Institute; Ron Pollack, Executive Director, Families USA; Douglas Holtz-Eakin, President, American Action Forum; former Director, Congressional Budget Office; Kavita Patel, M.D., Managing Director of Delivery-System Reform at the Engelberg Center for Health Care Reform, Brookings Institution, former Director of Policy for the White House Office of Public Engagement and Intergovernmental Affairs, and former Deputy Staff Director for the Senate HELP Committee chairman Senator Edward Kennedy; Roger Pilon, Vice President for Legal Affairs, Cato Institute; Neera Tanden, Chief Operating Officer, Center for American Progress. Moderated by Jan Crawford, CBS News Chief Legal Correspondent.
  • January 4, 2021
    Blog
    The Economics of Divestment

    Disinvestment does promote the objectives of its advocates; but claims that doing so is costless do not stand up to theory or evidence.

    By Jeffrey Miron and Peter Van Doren
  • Fall 2020
    Regulation
    Deaths of Despair
    To understand what is behind the increase in the death rate, the authors look at state data and note that death rates increased in all but six states.
    By David R. Henderson
  • Fall 2020
    Regulation
    Instead of PPP, How About a Credit Lifeline?
    Instead of PPP, How About a Credit Lifeline?
    Assuming that it is a proper role of the federal government to help firms survive during the pandemic, there is a better way to achieve that goal.
    By Veronique de Rugy
  • June 18, 2020
    Blog
    SCOTUS Opens Up DACA for About 130,000 New Applicants
    This Supreme Court decision is more meaningful than just preserving the status quo, and that’s a good thing for Dreamers, their families, and the Americans who work with them or depend on them.
    By David J. Bier
  • May 22, 2020
    Washington Examiner
    Do School Spending Cuts Really Hurt Students?
    Researchers claim to have found evidence that spending cuts harm students. But perhaps what they actually found was that state regulations harm students.
    By Max Eden and Corey A. DeAngelis
  • October 31, 2017
    Blog
    Make “Enhanced” Vetting Great Again
     The eleven countries singled out for intensive new refugee scrutiny make little sense from a national security perspective and even less sense if the goal is to secure the public safety of Americans.
    By Alex Nowrasteh
  • April 20, 2015
    Blog
    Dealing with the California Drought
    Instead of complaining about farmers’ use of water, why not allow them to trade away their water rights?
    By Peter Van Doren
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