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  • November 2, 2016
    Huffington Post
    Excluding Tobacco from Trade Agreements: the Wrong Way to Promote Policy Space
    … drafted treaties offer ample protection for legitimate measures. If obligations are drafted precisely, and general exceptions included, international economic agreements should not interfere with domestic public policy. There is no need to discriminate against tobacco and strip one industry defenceless.
    By Simon Lester
  • October 31, 2016
    National Interest (Online)
    Donald Trump vs. Hillary Clinton: the Trade-Policy Paradox
    … Like Clinton’s proposal for a “trade prosecutor,” Trump’s “American Desk” proposal does not include any real change in policy, just a minor bureaucratic reshuffling. Trump explained his reasoning at a recent campaign event: “American trade policy is currently …
    By K. William Watson
  • October 27, 2016
    Blog
    Why Don’t We Allow Markets to Dictate Parking Policy?
    … city streets. Providing an implicit subsidy to some of the richest people in town is not only bad land-use policy but it also costs the low and middle income earners plenty by creating the economic conditions that dampen the …
    By Ike Brannon
  • October 27, 2016
    Washington Examiner
    A Long-Term Ally Signals a Foreign Policy Pivot Away from the US
    … would draw the U.S.-Philippines alliance even closer together. Instead, in a move still largely baffling to Washington’s policy‐​makers, the Philippines’ President Rodrigo Duterte recently announced his “separation” from the United States, indicating in no uncertain terms …
    By Christine Guluzian
  • October 14, 2016
    Blog
    Trump Adviser Peter Navarro: Reagan Critic, Industrial Policy Fan
    … That Trump-Sanders hostility to trade liberalization, in turn, is identical to that of the AFL-CIO and the Economic Policy Institute, a leftist think tank created and largely financed by labor unions. It should be no surprise that Donald …
    By Alan Reynolds
  • October 10, 2016
    Blog
    Foreign Policy Schizophrenia
    Foreign Policy Schizophrenia
    In last night’s presidential debate, policy issues were barely discussed among the conspiracy theories and scandal-mongering. But even the limited discussion of foreign policy highlighted a pretty strange fact: the Republican ticket effectively has two distinct foreign policy
    By Emma Ashford
  • October 10, 2016
    Cato Daily Podcast
    Finding Foreign Policy Substance in POTUS Debate
    Finding Foreign Policy Substance in POTUS Debate
    There wasn’t much, but the small bit of foreign policy substance in the second debate between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump was illuminating. Chris Preble comments.
    Featuring Christopher A. Preble and Caleb O. Brown
  • October 7, 2016
    Blog
    Refugees, Immigrants, and the Polarization of American Foreign Policy
    Refugees, Immigrants, and the Polarization of American Foreign Policy
    Since 9/11, when pollsters call Americans to ask them how they feel about refugees and immigrants, their responses increasingly reflect the widening gap between Democrats and Republicans rather than a cold-eyed assessment of the actual threat they perceive.
    By A. Trevor Thrall
  • October 3, 2016
    National Mortgage News
    How Meddling with Monetary Policy Shaped Modern Mortgages
    The Great Inflation completely changed the face of our mortgage market by changing the industrial structure of mortgage origination and holding, while also changing the variety of products allowed on the market.
    By Mark A. Calabria
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