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  • December 6, 2023
    Cointelegraph
    Global Policymakers Are Still Pushing CBDCs Despite Their Failures
    Global Policymakers Are Still Pushing CBDCs Despite Their Failures
    Despite the risks and the failures associated with central bank digital currencies (CBDCs), global policymakers are pushing forward to make them a reality. In November alone, officials from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Bretton Woods Committee, and Bank for International …
    By Nicholas Anthony
  • December 6, 2023
    Blog
    Pandemic Policymaking Warrants Narrower Fed Mandate
    Pandemic Policymaking Warrants Narrower Fed Mandate
    Federal Reserve With the COVID-19 pandemic (hopefully) in the rearview mirror, it is time to reevaluate the Fed’s broadened mandate. While many policymakers want the Fed to fix everything from inflation and financial instability to unemployment and climate …
    By Jai Kedia
  • November 30, 2023
    Blog
    Temporary Tax Extenders Are Still Bad Policy
    Temporary Tax Extenders Are Still Bad Policy
    … so‐​called “tax extenders” usually rotate from year to year, but as temporary provisions, they are not only bad tax policy, they are also bad budget policy and bad economic policy. Recent reporting indicates that Democrats have proposed a roughly …
    By Adam N. Michel
  • 2024 State Health Policy Summit Readings
    … Singer and Michael F, Cannon, White Paper, October 20, 2020 Studies “Expand Access to Methadone Treatment,” by Jeffrey A. Singer, Policy Analysis no. 960, Cato Institute, Washington, DC, September 7, 2023 “The Original Sin of U.S. Health Policy,” by …
  • November 20, 2023
    Cato Daily Podcast
    Taiwan's Defense and US Policy
    Taiwan’s Defense and US Policy
    Eric Gomez is author of the new Cato Institute paper, “Taiwan’s Urgent Need for Asymmetric Defense.”
    Featuring Eric Gomez and Caleb O. Brown
  • November 9, 2023
    The American Conservative
    Foreign Policy Lessons from Ronald Reagan, a Conservative Peacenik
    Foreign Policy Lessons from Ronald Reagan, a Conservative Peacenik
    … artifact. Nevertheless, Reagan’s legacy is as relevant as ever. In a far more dangerous world, he practiced a foreign policy of prudence, avoiding the bloody conflicts big and small that deform current U.S. foreign policy. Reagan saw the …
    By Doug Bandow
  • October 31, 2023
    Power Problems
    Israel, Gaza, and America’s Broken Middle East Policy
    Israel, Gaza, and America’s Broken Middle East Policy
    Justin Logan, Cato’s director of defense and foreign policy studies, and Jon Hoffman, a foreign policy analyst at Cato, discuss the outbreak of war between Israel and Hamas and the imperative of avoiding further U.S. entanglement in the Middle East. They talk about the deep problems with the Abraham Accords, Biden’s misguided bid for a Saudi-Israeli normalization deal, how client states employ “reverse leverage” on their U.S. patron, whether Israel can avoid America’s post-9/11 mistakes, and the prospects for a genuine change in U.S. policy towards this region, among other issues. 
    Featuring Justin Logan, Jon Hoffman, and John Glaser
  • October 5, 2023
    The American Conservative
    Base American Policy in Ukraine on American Interests
    Base American Policy in Ukraine on American Interests
    Vladimir Putin bears responsibility for starting what is a criminal war. However, Washington and its allies irresponsibly helped create the circumstances that spawned the conflict.
    By Doug Bandow
  • September 24, 2023
    Cato Daily Podcast
    A Glimpse at a Trump Foreign Policy Agenda for 2025
    A Glimpse at a Trump Foreign Policy Agenda for 2025
    Donald Trump might prefer to leave Congress out of the loop on decisions about which nations or actors receive U.S. weapons. A new Heritage Foundation report also leans toward giving POTUS fewer checks on foreign policy moves. Jordan Cohen comments.
    Featuring Caleb O. Brown and Jordan Cohen
  • September 14, 2023
    Cato Daily Podcast
    Joe Overton, Policy Change, and the 'Overton Window'
    Joe Overton, Policy Change, and the ‘Overton Window’
    Policy change can be a long slog. The now-famous “Overton Window” gives us a way of thinking about how change happens. Joe Lehmann of the Mackinac Center discusses how the late Joe Overton thought about policy change.
    Featuring Joe Lehmann and Caleb O. Brown
  • September 5, 2023
    Blog
    EWG Farm Policy Summit
    EWG Farm Policy Summit
    Republicans often say that low-income welfare, such as food stamps, should be only temporary, and that people should strive to stand on their own two feet. The same should be true of high-income welfare—that is, subsidies for farmers.
    By Chris Edwards
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