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  • May 15, 2006
    Blog
    No Courage Behind Global Warming Convictions
    … to be a kook to be opposed to it.” Indeed, who would object to what is in effect an insurance policy with no premium? If the Greens really think that global warming is serious, they are demonstrating both political and …
    By Jerry Taylor
  • October 27, 2003
    Washington Times
    Wrong Way Out of the Dark?
    … the least expensive coal plants. But many nukes turned out to be too expensive. Second, the 1978 Public Utilities Regulatory Policies Act (PURPA) required the utilities to accept generation from independent producers at rates set by the state. Some states …
    By Peter Van Doren and Jerry Taylor
  • January 23, 2001
    Cato.org
    Electricity Deregulation Must Target Demand
    … the least expensive coal plants. But many nukes turned out to be too expensive. Second, the 1978 Public Utilities Regulatory Policies Act (PURPA) required the utilities to accept generation from independent producers at rates set by the state. Some states …
    By Peter Van Doren and Jerry Taylor
  • September 21, 2022
    The Dispatch
    Politicians for Higher Prices
    Politicians for Higher Prices
    … get tamer next year. But right now, you’d think that persistent food and housing price pressures would push American policymakers to be laser focused on keeping food and housing costs down—or, at least, not actively working to increase …
    By Scott Lincicome
  • November 3, 2019
    Blog
    More Evidence in Support of Needle Exchange Programs
    … Considering diagnoses averted over the 10‐​year modeled period, the lifetime cost savings associated with averted HIV diagnoses stemming from policy change to support SEPs may be more than $2.4 billion and $624 million dollars for Philadelphia and Baltimore …
    By Jeffrey A. Singer
  • September 23, 2019
    Blog
    Is the DEA Branching Out Into Regulating Medicine?
    … century became diverted pain relievers, which then became a dominant component of the opioid-related overdose statistics. Concerted efforts by policymakers to reduce opioid production and prescribing led to a 58 percent reduction in per capita high-dose opioid prescription …
    By Jeffrey A. Singer
  • June 18, 2019
    Blog
    1973: The Year John Kenneth Galbraith Made Socialism Mainstream
    … products, that is about as far as we can possibly get from a free market, and Nixon’s New Economic Policy was perhaps as close as the U.S. ever came to full‐​blown socialism (aside from rationing in major …
    By Alan Reynolds
  • September 3, 2014
    Legal Briefs
    King v. Burwell
    By Bert Rein, William S. Consovoy, Michael Connolly, & Ilya Shapiro
  • April 21, 2013
    Times of India
    Manna from Heaven, or a New Recession?
    The bursting of a bubble is often a sign of a supercycle ending, and hopefully that’s what is happening today.
    By Swaminathan S. Anklesaria Aiyar
  • March 5, 2013
    Washington Times
    Locking in the Homeowner
    Low interest rates enrich the government and starve the economy.
    By Richard W. Rahn
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