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Keyword: catoinstitute

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  • "The Need for Comprehensive Immigration Reform: Serving Our National Economy"

    04/08/2006 5:27:32 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 60 replies · 780+ views
    The Cato Institute ^ | May 26, 2005 | Daniel Griswold
    TESTIMONY OF DANIEL GRISWOLD Director, Cato Institute Center for Trade Policy Studies before the Senate Committee on the Judiciary, Subcommittee on Immigration,Border Security andCitizenship May 26, 2005 "The Need for Comprehensive Immigration Reform: Serving Our National Economy" Mr. Chairman and members of the Subcommittee, thank you for inviting the Cato Institute to testify today on the subject of immigration reform and the U.S. economy. Our current immigration system is fundamentally out of step with the realities of American life and desperately needs comprehensive reform. Immigrants play an important part in the success of America's free-enterprise economy. Immigrant workers willingly fill...
  • Taxes worse everywhere else (New Hampshire)

    04/01/2006 5:09:27 PM PST · by Graybeard58 · 14 replies · 404+ views
    Concord Monitor ^ | April 1, 2006 | Stephen Ohlemacher (A.P.)
    N ew Hampshire had New England's lowest per capita taxes, and it was the only state in the union whose residents didn't see a tax increase in 2005. Nationally, states collected a total of $649 billion in taxes in the 2005 budget year, which ended in June for most states, according to a report yesterday by the Census Bureau. That's $2,192 per person. The numbers include only taxes collected by states. They do not include federal or local taxes, which can greatly increase a person's taxes. All states collected more taxes in 2005 than they did in 2004. And every...
  • What Are Op-Eds For? (The Left unfolds new attacks on free speech in the War of Ideas)

    02/01/2006 2:03:54 PM PST · by Cruz · 5 replies · 516+ views
    The American Spectator ^ | 2/1/06 | Iain Murry
    Another Perspective What Are Op-Eds For? By Iain Murray Published 2/1/2006 12:08:02 AM WASHINGTON -- Ever since the Cato Institute fired syndicated columnist Doug Bandow over the revelation that disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff had asked and paid him to write articles favorable to his clients, the Left and some in the media have launched a witch hunt against conservative writers with links to private industry. Yet, during this burning time, no one is asking the question: What are opinion pieces for? The question has not arisen because some on the Right, by acquiescing to the Left's desire for blood, are...
  • WSJ: How It Became Safe to Embrace Global Warming

    07/06/2005 5:23:39 AM PDT · by OESY · 20 replies · 853+ views
    Wall Street Journal ^ | July 6, 2005 | Holman W. Jenkins, Jr.
    ...Mr. Bush stands himself in excellent company here with some of the most respected names in business: GE's Jeff Immelt, Duke Energy's Paul Anderson, Ford's Bill Ford Jr. They, in turn, have benefited from the pioneering PR efforts of BP's John Browne, whose conversion to climate change was based firmly on science -- sociology not climatology.... Mr. Browne and his copycats have largely restricted themselves to acknowledging the inevitability of carbon regulation, not the inevitability of carbon-driven global warming. Most of all, they see a cornucopia of subsidies and tax breaks flowing from an emerging Western consensus to treat carbon...
  • Social Security 70 Years Later - Time For A New(er) Deal

    03/15/2005 10:12:22 AM PST · by anymouse · 4 replies · 528+ views
    Magic City Morning Star ^ | Mar 14, 2005 | Doug Wrenn
    As President Bush "goes on tour," trying to sell his still ambiguous Social Security Reform plan to the American people in 60 different cities, the one idea that is clear is that the program, as we know, it should be reformed. If Social Security was one of its own recipients, it would already be retired and collecting, now at age 70. Come to think of it, retirement doesn't sound like a bad idea, either. It seems President Bush is not the only one who can be accused of ambiguity on this issue. Many members of Congress have differing opinions about...
  • "Ownership Society" Should Start with Education

    11/20/2004 2:38:25 PM PST · by everitt12 · 19 replies · 367+ views
    Cato Institute ^ | Nov 20 | David Salisbury and Neal McCluskey
    Since his re-election, President Bush has spoken a number of times about domestic reforms designed to create an "Ownership Society." Among the best known of those proposed reforms are personal Social Security accounts and health savings accounts that would give individuals, rather than government, control over their financial futures and health care. Both of those initiatives are essential reforms, and an Ownership Society itself is desperately needed. But there is a third component that should be included in this agenda: education. If an Ownership Society means anything, it should mean giving parents control over their children's education. When children are...
  • The Trade Front Combating Terrorism with Open Markets

    11/20/2004 2:33:18 PM PST · by everitt12 · 2 replies · 215+ views
    Freetrade.org ^ | Nov 20 | Brink Lindsey
    In May 2003 President Bush announced plans to create a U.S.-Middle East free-trade area within a decade. The new trade initiative aims to combat terrorism, and the Islamist extremism that underlies it, by promoting economic and political development in the Muslim world. The administration moved quickly to begin putting its plans into action by announcing that the United States and Bahrain would soon commence negotiations for a free-trade agreement (FTA). Meanwhile, negotiations for an FTA with Morocco are already under way, and a U.S.-Jordan FTA, now in its second year, has produced a boom in Jordanian exports. The Bush administration...
  • For Conservatives, Mission Accomplished

    05/18/2004 9:06:43 PM PDT · by neverdem · 15 replies · 425+ views
    NY Times ^ | May 18, 2004 | JOHN MICKLETHWAIT and ADRIAN WOOLDRIDGE
    OP-ED CONTRIBUTORS Last week Washington was the site of the biggest birthday party you never heard of. The occasion was the 40th anniversary of the American Conservative Union, and the guest list included all the grandees of right-wing America, from Senator Mitch McConnell to Phyllis Schlafly to Wayne LaPierre of the National Rifle Association to, of course, President Bush. In his speech, the President promised that "for our blessed land the best days lie ahead," and was greeted with several foot-stomping ovations and cries of "Four more years!" But the real flavor of the event was captured by what the...
  • How much is Terri Schiavo's life worth?

    04/12/2004 9:05:24 PM PDT · by Huber · 19 replies · 237+ views
    TownHall.com ^ | 4/12/04 | Doug Bandow
    WASHINGTON - The world has moved on since the case of Terri Schiavo, whose husband sought to remove the feeding tube that kept her alive, briefly grabbed public attention last fall. But Terri's life remains at risk. Michael Schiavo, her parents, the state of Florida, and advocacy groups continue to fight over her future. Alas, she keeps losing where it matters most, in court. Terri collapsed in 1990, leaving her profoundly cognitively disabled. Her husband won a $1.3 million malpractice judgment that included money for her medical care, but subsequently refused to fund rehabilitative treatment for her. Along the way...
  • Gigantic Outlay Party

    02/03/2004 1:27:10 PM PST · by neverdem · 7 replies · 227+ views
    Reason ^ | February 3, 2004 | Ralph R. Reiland
    Republicans stuff record pork down federal piehole "The pledge not to waste our tax dollars rings hollow," says Stephen Moore, president of the Club for Growth and a senior fellow at the Cato Institute, "given that in a matter of days [President Bush] will sign into law a budget-buster that provides money for Alaska skating rinks, Michigan swimming pools and Iowa indoor rain forests." Moore is referring to the president's pronouncement in his State of the Union address that "we must spend tax dollars wisely" and the complete lack of opposition from the White House to the mile-high pile of...
  • New Forms of School Choice: The Real McKays

    12/23/2003 9:27:08 PM PST · by bdeaner · 219+ views
    Capital Research Center ^ | 12/17/03 | Robert Holland
    New Forms of School Choice: The Real McKaysSchool Choice Forces Emboldened by Recent String of Judicial and Legislative Victories By Robert Holland Printer Friendly   Email a Friend The fastest-growing voucher program in the land is the McKay Scholarship, which three years ago emerged in the choice-friendly climate of Florida. As of July 2003, more than 9,200 Florida special-education students were using McKays to attend private schools equipped to accommodate them. (Special education is education lingo for  individualized instruction developed  to meet the needs of each student judged to have a disability.) McKays predate the June 2002 Zelman decision. But the...
  • Spending Escalates Under GOP Watch

    11/28/2003 10:12:11 AM PST · by Theodore R. · 56 replies · 265+ views
    Washington Times ^ | 11-28-03 | Lakely, James G.
    <p>Nondefense spending has skyrocketed under Republican control of Congress and the White House, and critics say the outlays will hit the stratosphere with the passage this week of a drug entitlement for seniors. The Congressional Budget Office reported that nondefense spending rose 7 percent in the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30, nearly double the 4 percent discretionary spending caps that President Bush insisted Congress honor. Since Mr. Bush took office in 2001, nondefense spending has leapt 13 percent — 21 percent if spending on the war on terrorism is included. And he is poised to become the first Republican president to sign into law a new federal entitlement: the $400 billion Medicare expansion to cover prescription drugs. Sean Spicer, spokesman for Rep. Jim Nussle, Iowa Republican and the conservative chairman of the House Budget Committee, said the spending increases appear worse when lumping in the annual late-year "emergency" congressional expenditures that he said are little more than thinly veiled pork projects. "Even without the emergencies, we're looking at [spending] numbers well above inflation, and that's definitely a concern," Mr. Spicer said. Chris Edwards, director of fiscal policy at the libertarian Cato Institute, said the Bush record on spending has been a major disappointment. "My impression of Bush is that I've never seen him give a speech in which he says government is too big and we need to cut costs," Mr. Edwards said, pointing out that President Reagan vetoed 23 bills in his first three years in office, while Mr. Bush has yet to unsheathe his veto pen. Accepting additional spending is the price Mr. Bush pays for getting his agenda through Congress, Mr. Edwards said. "When you have a president who has a bunch of his own spending initiatives like education and the Medicare drug bill, it makes it difficult for him to go out and say that Congress is being wasteful," he said. Prominent conservatives are beginning to chafe about the kind of spending occurring on their watch. Nine Republican senators and 25 House Republicans voted against the Medicare drug bill, citing cost as the major reason. The $31 billion energy bill also has stalled, largely because many in Congress object to the price tag. The president is itching to get the bill to his desk even though it is four times more expensive than what he had proposed. Even radio host Rush Limbaugh, an unwavering booster of the president and his policies, told listeners Tuesday that after passing the Medicare bill Republicans no longer can contend they are the party of smaller government. The White House did not return a call for comment. Brian M. Riedl, a budget analyst for the conservative Heritage Foundation, said mandatory government spending on entitlements such as Medicare will reach 11.1 percent of the nation's gross domestic product, a record high. That number will climb exponentially, he said, once seniors begin getting government-paid drugs in 2006. "Congress often underestimates entitlements by a lot," Mr. Riedl said. "By our calculations, it will cost $2 trillion between now and 2030." That's assuming that the program never is expanded, he said, an unlikely scenario. When Congress created the Medicare program in 1965, the projected cost in 1990 was $9 billion. The true cost, after several expansions that came with low-balled price tags, was $67 billion, 7.4 times higher. "The lawmakers who pushed for the Medicare drug bill never answered the question of how they would pay for it," Mr. Riedl said. "Apparently, they are leaving the $2 trillion tax hike to future congresses to figure out." Tom Schatz, executive director of Citizens Against Government Waste, said he hopes that conservatives can bring the president and Congress "back to earth in terms of spending" if Mr. Bush wins a second term. "We hope that this is not the legacy of the Bush administration," Mr. Schatz said. "We hope these will be aberrations that will be corrected in coming years." A senior Republican congressional aide said many conservatives on Capitol Hill are hoping that is the case. If it isn't, Mr. Bush and the party will have some explaining to do to their political base. "There's only so long we can be told [by the White House], 'Just keep waiting for spending restraint,' " the aide said. "Eventually you develop a credibility problem. There's a point where people say, 'We've heard that for five years and nothing's happened.' "</p>
  • Armey Opposes AL Governor Riley's Sept. 9 Tax Vote

    08/29/2003 7:24:13 AM PDT · by Theodore R. · 37 replies · 277+ views
    Citizens for a Sound Economy ^ | 08-27-03 | Armey, Richard
    Citizens for a Sound Economy August 27, 2003 Alabama Will Lead Us In September, voters in Alabama can show the nation that higher taxes aren't the answer to state overspending. Every once in awhile certain voters in our republic have the opportunity to make a profound impact on the country’s future. In 1979, the voters in California approved proposition 13 which dramatically lowered property taxes in that state. Proposition 13 sparked an anti-tax revolt across the entire country and helped elect Ronald Reagan president. Reagan then proposed and Congress approved across-the-board tax cuts that sparked the longest peaceful expansion in...
  • Libertarian Party: Bush's Dirty Little Budget Secret

    02/05/2003 9:00:28 PM PST · by Commie Basher · 83 replies · 407+ views
    Libertarian Party press release ^ | February 5, 2003 | George Getz
    =============================== NEWS FROM THE LIBERTARIAN PARTY 2600 Virginia Avenue, NW, Suite 100 Washington DC 20037 World Wide Web: http://www.LP.org =============================== For release: February 5, 2003 =============================== For additional information: George Getz, Communications Director Phone: (202) 333-0008 Ext. 222 E-Mail: pressreleases@hq.LP.org =============================== Bush's dirty little budget secret: $10 in new spending for every dollar in tax cuts, Libertarians say WASHINGTON, DC -- If you think President Bush's tax cuts will save you money, guess again, Libertarians say, because the long-term spending increases in his new budget outnumber tax cuts by a ratio of 10 to 1. "Showing gratitude for Bush's tax...
  • Private Accounts Still Popular Despite Meltdown Of Market

    02/04/2003 8:18:54 AM PST · by Isara · 5 replies · 237+ views
    INVESTOR'S BUSINESS DAILY ^ | Tuesday, February 4, 2003 | SEAN HIGGINS
    The Dow has been down from its highs above 10,000 for well over a year. It now hovers around 8,000, and any new bull market still seems far off.For that reason, the White House isn't pushing partial privatization of Social Security. Without a growing market, it seems too risky. Even private account fans say expanding IRAs and 401(k)s may be the best they can hope for now.That may be a mistake, according to a new study by pollster John Zogby and the Cato Institute. It found the appeal of private accounts does not rise or fall with the markets. Even...
  • Tim Penny distances himself from past work with Cato Institute

    09/08/2002 6:19:36 AM PDT · by Valin · 47 replies · 460+ views
    Mpls (red)Star Tribune ^ | 9/8/02 | Patricia Lopez
    <p>In his quest for the governorship, Independence Party candidate Tim Penny has said that he would "keep pressure on Washington" to add a prescription drug benefit to Medicare; that the federal government should pay its "fair share" of special education costs, and that light rail is a must-have -- all positions he says reflect his "sensible center" politics. But three years ago, when Penny was employed as a senior fellow at the Cato Institute, he helped write a federal budget proposal that called Medicare a "Cadillac health plan" that was "unjustifiably generous." On education, the proposal recommended eliminating funding for everything from HeadStart and school-to-work programs to college work study grants and the Direct Student Loan Program.</p>
  • Protecting Private Property Rights from Regulatory Takings

    09/01/2002 6:12:01 PM PDT · by Joe Brower · 16 replies · 316+ views
    CATO Institute ^ | February 10, 1995 | Roger Pilon
    Protecting Private Property Rights from Regulatory Takings Testimony of Roger Pilon Senior Fellow and Director Center for Constitutional Studies Cato Institute Before the Subcommittee on Constitution Committee on Judiciary United States House of Representatives February 10, 1995 Mr. Chairman, distinguished members of the subcommittee: My name is Roger Pilon. I am a senior fellow at the Cato Institute and the director of Cato's Center for Constitutional Studies. I want to begin by thanking Congressman Hyde for inviting me to speak before this subcommittee on the subject of Protecting Private Property Rights from Regulatory Takings. I want also to thank...
  • The effects of the 'vast, right-wing conspiracy' are real

    08/19/2002 8:43:50 PM PDT · by StopGlobalWhining · 43 replies · 443+ views
    The Centre Daily Times ^ | August 18, 2002 | Deb McMurtrie
    Back in the late 1990s when Hillary Rodham Clinton claimed the existence of a "vast, right-wing conspiracy," she was scoffed at by the Republicans, the press and anyone sore at the Clintons for whatever infraction, real or imagined, they might have committed. The country got a good laugh, and the expression has become almost as much a part of our political lexicon as "What did you know and when did you know it," "I am not a crook" and "Read my lips: No new taxes." However, while Hillary's naysayers were chortling and guffawing, those "thinkers" at the Cato Institute may...
  • Girding Against the Copyright Mob (Cato ponders DMCA)

    08/02/2002 11:16:54 AM PDT · by weegee · 9 replies · 265+ views
    Wired.com ^ | 2:00 a.m. Aug. 2, 2002 PDT | Brad King
    <p>PALO ALTO, California -- It's a sunny summer day and you pull your CDs from your home stereo, toss them in your bag and head out. In the car, you listen to your music, and when you reach the beach, you slip a CD into a portable boom box.</p>
  • Manipulation makes us dependent on govt.

    07/12/2002 11:59:19 PM PDT · by greydog · 9 replies · 402+ views
    United Press International ^ | 7/13/2002 | By Jennifer Chew
    WASHINGTON, July 12 (UPI) -- There is a reason why new government programs seem to proliferate, and why existing programs -- even bad ones -- can be as hard to kill as Count Dracula. It is set up that way on purpose using a very specific technique, according to Charlotte Twight, who spoke at a forum at the Cato Institute in Washington D.C. on July 11. "The reality is that today, the government seems to grow, even when the public doesn't want it to grow, and seldom shrinks, even when the public would prefer it to shrink," said Twight. As...