May 28th, 2013
The U.S. job picture is clearly getting better these days – unless you haven’t been to college. While there’s been much discussion in popular media recently about the value of a college degree, the latest employment data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics suggests there’s really only one side …
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May 22nd, 2013
President Obama made a great choice for his “regulatory czar” – a.k.a. the administrator of the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs in the Office of Management and Budget. Howard Shelanski, a professor of economics and law at Georgetown with impeccable government and academic credentials, will replace Cass …
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May 21st, 2013
The announcement from Samsung that it has found the secret to 5G wireless reminds us that the technology revolution is moving at an amazing pace.
5G, which Samsung says it aims to commercialize by 2020, would enable consumers to download vast data files such as high-definition video in a matter …
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May 17th, 2013
Tom Lenard (Technology Policy Institute) and Larry White (NYU Stern School) raised in interesting issue in Politico this week. Will broadcast television survive its technological, economic and cultural obsolescence much longer? Equally to the point, would we be better off without it? TV broadcasters are spectrum hogs, …
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May 14th, 2013
The U.S. debate over immigration reform got a little bit nastier recently with publication of a Heritage Foundation report concluding that immigrants – documented or not – who haven’t finished high school are going to cost taxpayers a lot of money. We are deeply skeptical about the assumptions underlying …
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May 7th, 2013
The Financial Times recently published commentary by Jacob Weisberg deploring Amazon.com’s use of political and financial muscle to avoid collecting sales taxes on out-of-state purchases. Amazon, he notes, only recently relented because the company sees greater advantage in positioning warehouses closer to customers.
Wall Street Journal writer Gordon Crovitz …
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May 1st, 2013
Young adults have done a better job than older Americans of reducing debt since the Great Recession, but they’re deferring some traditional parts of the American Dream to do so. That may be good personal budgeting, but the spending pullback is likely one reason for anemic economic growth.
The Pew …
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April 23rd, 2013
Once again, European policymakers are divided on a major issue. And this time, we feel their pain because our own views are divided, too. The issue is climate policy, specifically the EU’s rejection this week of a proposal from Climate Commissioner Connie Hedegard to revise Europe’s “cap-and-trade” system for limiting …
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April 23rd, 2013
Political rhetoric in U.S. political campaigns suggests that factory jobs are all fleeing overseas, but a recent report from the Congressional Research Service (CRS) suggests the facts aren’t quite that simple. There’s no doubt that factory work accounts for a shrinking share of total employment, but CRS says the …
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April 18th, 2013
It turns out that a court ruling rejecting New York Mayor Bloomberg’s bid to crack down on supersized soft drinks may have saved the Mayor from regulatory backfire. At least that’s the suggestion from a new study that suggests that food sellers would have responded with menu options that would …
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For an assistant professor (American University’s School of International Service) three years out of graduate school (Princeton), Jeff Colgan is making quite a splash. As a scholar working at the nexus between economics and political science, he’s specialized in analyzing the links between petroleum and international conflict. His new book, Petro-Aggression, explores the question of why some oil-fueled regimes stir the geopolitical pot (think Iran, Venezuela) while others are quite conservative (Saudi Arabia). But we’re most taken with his working paper on OPEC, in which he argues that the cartel (as opposed to individual cartel members) is toothless.
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