Appropriations Bill Adds Fake “Emergency” Spending
Romina Boccia and Dominik Lett Within weeks of passing new discretionary spending limits, Congress is proposing to
The State of Kids Online Safety Legislation at the end of the 2022–2023 State Legislature Session
Jennifer Huddleston In previous years, debates about online speech at a state level had largely focused on issues
The U.S. Economy Has Been Indeterminate Since the Financial Crisis
Jai Kedia Recently, CMFA published an article and a working paper that detailed the Federal Reserve’s departure from
Biden Is Once Again Being “Generous” to Student Debtors with Taxpayer Money
Neal McCluskey Today, the Biden administration launched a new website for student debtors to enroll in its next
The Untested Assumptions in SEC Chair Gensler’s Pivot to AI
Jack Solowey Crypto startups and venture capitalists are not the only ones pivoting to artificial intelligence (AI).
The Culture Wars and Public Libraries
Jeffrey Miron This article appeared on Substack on July 31, 2023. A recent front in the culture wars
The Case Against the Child Tax Credit
Adam N. Michel and Vanessa Brown Calder First introduced by Republicans as part of the Contract
Governments Should Not Fund Research
Jeffrey Miron and Jacob Winter This article appeared on Substack on July 27, 2023. In fiscal year 2022,
Obama, Biden Have Mislead More Health Insurance Purchasers than Short‐Term Plans Ever Will
Michael F. Cannon A week or so ago, friend and HuffPost reporter Jonathan Cohn emailed me: Consumers frequently