Commentary

Business & Economics

Reducing the Burden from Occupational Licensing Regulations Will Help Consumers

As President Reagan famously noted, “The most terrifying words in the English language are: I’m from the government and I’m here to help.” The expanding reach of occupational licensing regulations exemplify this maxim. People in a growing number of occupations now require the permission of the government to work in ...
California

California Can’t Afford Single-Payer Health Care Fantasy

A civil war is brewing within California’s Democratic party. Progressives — led by Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom, the frontrunner for governor, and the politically powerful California Nurses Association — plan to fight for a single-payer healthcare system this year. Their more moderate rivals — among them Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon ...
California

Would An All-Electric Car Future Really Benefit Californians?

Sacramento is threatening to outlaw a freedom Californians have enjoyed for more than a century through a bill introduced by Democratic Assemblyman Phil Ting, of San Francisco. If it’s passed and signed, new gasoline-powered cars will become the state’s new undocumented immigrants. Government will refuse to register them. Should it ...
Commentary

Governor Jerry Brown Has It All Wrong About California’s Education Funding

The recent press conference on California Governor Jerry Brown’s proposed 2018-19 budget revealed that the governor wants to increase funding to the Local Control Funding Formula (LCFF), his signature education finance program. However, there are very significant problems with LCFF. Prior to the enactment of the LCFF, funding California’s public ...
Commentary

The Flu Is Grinding Down British Healthcare To A Halt

British health officials are in crisis mode. They just ordered all hospitals to cancel non-urgent surgeries through the end of January — an estimated 55,000 procedures.  At least 20 hospitals have declared that they are unable to adequately care for patients and warned that “safety may be compromised.” The cause ...
California

Water from the Sands

There’s no thirstier state than California. Its history of water wars, droughts—both natural and manmade—and, according to some, outright theft of water from the Owens Valley about four hours north of Los Angeles, has inspired legend, myth, and movies. But even after roughly a century of water flowing into an otherwise ...
Commentary

Sally Pipes in Wall Street Journal: Single-Payer Health Care Isn’t Worth Waiting For

When Brian Day opened the Cambie Surgery Centre in 1996, he had a simple goal. Dr. Day, an orthopedic surgeon from Vancouver, British Columbia, wanted to provide timely, state-of-the-art medical care to Canadians who were unwilling to wait months—even years—for surgery they needed. Canada’s single-payer health-care system, known as Medicare, ...
Commentary

Trump’s AHP Rule Makes Health Care Affordable Again

Earlier this month, the Department of Labor proposed a rule that could dramatically expand access to affordable health insurance. The rule would empower small businesses and self-employed individuals to band together to purchase coverage through “association health plans” or AHPs.  They are exempt from many of Obamacare’s mandates, which have ...
Commentary

Free Marketers Should Use 2018 To Lay The Foundation For Medicare Reform

Earlier this month, President Trump, House Speaker Paul Ryan, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, and other senior Republicans huddled at Camp David to plan the party’s 2018 legislative agenda. Speaker Ryan argued for reforming Medicare. That “is how you tackle the debt and the deficit,” he said. He’s right. Unfortunately, ...
California

Sacramento’s Next Battle – How To Spend A $6.1 Billion Budget Surplus

Gov. Jerry Brown has proposed the biggest state budget in history. He wants to spend $131.7 billion from the general fund, about 5 percent more than is being spent from the $125 billion 2016-17 budget he signed last year. His 16th and final budget also includes a surplus, which some ...
Business & Economics

Reducing the Burden from Occupational Licensing Regulations Will Help Consumers

As President Reagan famously noted, “The most terrifying words in the English language are: I’m from the government and I’m here to help.” The expanding reach of occupational licensing regulations exemplify this maxim. People in a growing number of occupations now require the permission of the government to work in ...
California

California Can’t Afford Single-Payer Health Care Fantasy

A civil war is brewing within California’s Democratic party. Progressives — led by Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom, the frontrunner for governor, and the politically powerful California Nurses Association — plan to fight for a single-payer healthcare system this year. Their more moderate rivals — among them Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon ...
California

Would An All-Electric Car Future Really Benefit Californians?

Sacramento is threatening to outlaw a freedom Californians have enjoyed for more than a century through a bill introduced by Democratic Assemblyman Phil Ting, of San Francisco. If it’s passed and signed, new gasoline-powered cars will become the state’s new undocumented immigrants. Government will refuse to register them. Should it ...
Commentary

Governor Jerry Brown Has It All Wrong About California’s Education Funding

The recent press conference on California Governor Jerry Brown’s proposed 2018-19 budget revealed that the governor wants to increase funding to the Local Control Funding Formula (LCFF), his signature education finance program. However, there are very significant problems with LCFF. Prior to the enactment of the LCFF, funding California’s public ...
Commentary

The Flu Is Grinding Down British Healthcare To A Halt

British health officials are in crisis mode. They just ordered all hospitals to cancel non-urgent surgeries through the end of January — an estimated 55,000 procedures.  At least 20 hospitals have declared that they are unable to adequately care for patients and warned that “safety may be compromised.” The cause ...
California

Water from the Sands

There’s no thirstier state than California. Its history of water wars, droughts—both natural and manmade—and, according to some, outright theft of water from the Owens Valley about four hours north of Los Angeles, has inspired legend, myth, and movies. But even after roughly a century of water flowing into an otherwise ...
Commentary

Sally Pipes in Wall Street Journal: Single-Payer Health Care Isn’t Worth Waiting For

When Brian Day opened the Cambie Surgery Centre in 1996, he had a simple goal. Dr. Day, an orthopedic surgeon from Vancouver, British Columbia, wanted to provide timely, state-of-the-art medical care to Canadians who were unwilling to wait months—even years—for surgery they needed. Canada’s single-payer health-care system, known as Medicare, ...
Commentary

Trump’s AHP Rule Makes Health Care Affordable Again

Earlier this month, the Department of Labor proposed a rule that could dramatically expand access to affordable health insurance. The rule would empower small businesses and self-employed individuals to band together to purchase coverage through “association health plans” or AHPs.  They are exempt from many of Obamacare’s mandates, which have ...
Commentary

Free Marketers Should Use 2018 To Lay The Foundation For Medicare Reform

Earlier this month, President Trump, House Speaker Paul Ryan, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, and other senior Republicans huddled at Camp David to plan the party’s 2018 legislative agenda. Speaker Ryan argued for reforming Medicare. That “is how you tackle the debt and the deficit,” he said. He’s right. Unfortunately, ...
California

Sacramento’s Next Battle – How To Spend A $6.1 Billion Budget Surplus

Gov. Jerry Brown has proposed the biggest state budget in history. He wants to spend $131.7 billion from the general fund, about 5 percent more than is being spent from the $125 billion 2016-17 budget he signed last year. His 16th and final budget also includes a surplus, which some ...
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