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  • December 22, 2021
    Blog
    Can Taxing Cryptocurrencies Really Add $28 Billion to the Budget?
    … amendment that somehow keeps the estimate intact or an amendment that completely dismisses it, one thing remains clear: a single, un‐​audited estimation should not be the deciding factor for any policy––especially when it leaves so many questions unanswered.
    By Nicholas Anthony
  • December 17, 2021
    UK Telegraph
    The Prime Minister Has Been Selling Economic Fairy Tales
    The Prime Minister Has Been Selling Economic Fairy Tales
    … rises above target occur when too much money is chasing too few goods, reflecting a faulty judgment by the Monetary Policy Committee. Discussions about whether the Bank’s policy was nevertheless correct and how it should respond now are therefore …
    By Ryan Bourne
  • December 16, 2021
    The American Conservative
    It’s Time to End 'Strategic Ambiguity'
    It’s Time to End ‘Strategic Ambiguity’
    … has come under fire. Last year, Richard Haass, president of the Council of Foreign Relations, advocated dropping the veil: “The policy known as strategic ambiguity has, however, run its course. Ambiguity is unlikely to deter an increasingly assertive China with …
    By Doug Bandow
  • December 15, 2021
    Research Briefs in Economic Policy
    No. 280
    Getting Schooled: The Role of Universities in Attracting Immigrant Entrepreneurs
    Getting Schooled: The Role of Universities in Attracting Immigrant Entrepreneurs
    … what are some factors that contribute to these benefits? The answers to these questions have important implications for designing immigration policy and regulation, which have become increasingly acrimonious topics in public discourse. They also have important implications for firms and …
    By Natee Amornsiripanitch, Paul A. Gompers, George Hu, & Kaushik Vasudevan
  • December 14, 2021
    Power Problems
    Competing for Status?
    Competing for Status?
    The desire for high status drives great powers’ foreign policies. Cambridge University professor Steven Ward discusses how status concerns motivate rising powers like China as well as declining powers like the United States, and how that can produce belligerent policies …
    Featuring Steven Ward and John Glaser
  • December 14, 2021
    Blog
    How the United States Wastes Transportation Dollars
    … construction gotten so expensive in the past two or three decades? I explore this question in detail in a recent policy brief, but in a nutshell the answer is that transit advocates have successfully persuaded many politicians and voters to …
    By Randal O’Toole
  • December 10, 2021
    Blog
    Cato Scholars on China and the World Trade Organization—20 Years On
    Cato Scholars on China and the World Trade Organization—20 Years On
    Over the years, Cato scholars have weighed in on China’s entry into the rules based international trading system, and this post provides a summary of many of those contributions and reflects on the lessons learned from this momentous policy.
    By Alfredo Carrillo Obregon
  • December 10, 2021
    National Interest (Online)
    The Truth of Biden's Fraudulent Democracy Summit
    The Truth of Biden’s Fraudulent Democracy Summit
    The democracy summit demonstrates that Washington’s alleged commitment to freedom and democratic values as a key feature of U.S. foreign policy is as inconsistent and hypocritical as ever.
    By Ted Galen Carpenter
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