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  • January 29, 1999
    Cato.org
    Just Another Buzzword
    … amount to rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic. Make no mistake about it, making accountability a part of education policy is a good idea. In fact, it’s a great idea. For far too long educators have denied being …
    By Casey J. Lartigue Jr.
  • January 29, 1999
    Cato.org
    Just Another Buzzword
    … amount to rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic. Make no mistake about it, making accountability a part of education policy is a good idea. In fact, it’s a great idea. For far too long educators have denied being …
    By Casey J. Lartigue Jr.
  • May 7, 2025
    Blog
    CBO Score Shows Medicaid Is Inefficient and Current Spending Levels Unpopular
    CBO Score Shows Medicaid Is Inefficient and Current Spending Levels Unpopular
    … year. Under any of these options, federal Medicaid spending would continue to grow at least 3 percent per year.  Medicaid Policy Options and Estimated Federal Effects From State Responses, 2025–2034 Source: Congressional Budget Office The CBO found these options …
    By Michael F. Cannon
  • March 26, 2025
    Legal Briefs
     Lozman v. Riviera Beach
    Lozman v. Riviera Beach
    … from their local government. This finality and ripeness rule makes sense in some takings disputes, like when the land-use policies at issue include disputes over tentative planning documents, conditional approvals, and reversals in policy. But, as the Supreme Court …
    By Thomas A. Berry, Brent Skorup, and Caitlyn Kinard
  • March 27, 2023
    Blog
    To Reduce Overdose Deaths, Lawmakers Must Look beyond the News Headlines
    … of fentanyl is a response to market demand. But more crucially, fentanyl is just the latest manifestation of what drug policy analysts call “the iron law of prohibition.” A variant of what economists call the Alchian‐​Allen Effect, the shorthand …
    By Jeffrey A. Singer
  • December 15, 2022
    Empowering the New American Worker
    Conclusion
    Conclusion
    … other policies— were making it increasingly difficult for Americans to adjust and prosper, often under the guise of “pro‐​worker” policy. In truth, it’s policymakers who have failed American workers over the last several decades, not some mythical “free …
    By Scott Lincicome
  • April 25, 2022
    Blog
    Impromptu Questions on the SEC’s Climate Risk Proposal, Part 1
    … was obliged by law to draft them. These Dodd‐​Frank mandates may well have pushed the agency into ideological and policy realms far beyond its historical role, but SEC staff could take comfort in the fact that they had no …
    By C. Wallace DeWitt
  • January 29, 2021
    Blog
    Damning Maryland Report on Rent Control
    … to protect tenants against “economic eviction” by capping rent increases within tenancies, while allowing them to adjust between tenancies. This policy would not allow such market adjustments in prices when tenants move out. So, the dislocations would worsen over time …
    By Ryan Bourne
  • April 16, 2014
    Blog
    The Zombie National ID
    Like some sort of zombie from a 1950s B-movie, the REAL ID Act shambles forward, awaiting the day when some national emergency can bring it back to life.
    By Jim Harper
  • March 25, 2014
    Blog
    Peter Schuck at Cato Thursday
    Peter Schuck’s new book explains how the failure of big government in modern America is not contingent or surprising, but arises from intrinsic failings.
    By Walter Olson
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