Cato Institute | Individual Liberty, Free Markets, and Peace Blog
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Cato Institute | Individual Liberty, Free Markets, and Peace Blog
5h ago
Daniel Raisbeck
Colombian President Gustavo Petro.
In June of 2022, a slight majority of Colombian voters elected Gustavo Petro as president. To say that they ignored numerous warning signs would be an understatement.
Petro began his public life in the late 1970’s as a member of the M‑19, the bloodthirsty urban guerrilla group that—among its many acts of terrorism— stormed the Ministry of Justice in November of 1985, held its magistrates and hundreds of employees as hostages, and ultimately caused the violent death of 111 people.
In 1994, a mere two years after the M‑19’s final ..read more
Cato Institute | Individual Liberty, Free Markets, and Peace Blog
5h ago
Colleen Hroncich
Catholic schools are known for many things—quality academics, character formation, a family‐ friendly atmosphere, teaching self‐discipline, and more. They aren’t necessarily known for innovative instructional approaches. But Holy Family Catholic School in Jacksonville, FL, could help change that.
In many ways, Holy Family is a pretty traditional school. Children are in regular grade levels based on their age, they are in classrooms with normal desks and teachers who are instructing them, and classes change at regular intervals. But within that traditional framework ..read more
Cato Institute | Individual Liberty, Free Markets, and Peace Blog
9h ago
Ryan Bourne
As I outlined in “Five Fiscal Truths,” the United States faces an alarming fiscal outlook characterized by historically high budget deficits, high accumulated debt levels, and the prospect of further debt escalation driven by an aging population and elevated interest rates. But some people look at the same budget numbers and yet remain relaxed about the country’s fiscal situation.
So here are three economic arguments I present in my new policy analysis for why policymakers should reduce deficits now, even if a fiscal crisis doesn’t appear imminent.
1. As Insurance a ..read more
Cato Institute | Individual Liberty, Free Markets, and Peace Blog
1d ago
David Inserra
Last month, Instagram users took notice of two features that change how much political content users see on Instagram. However, the rollout wasn’t exactly smooth, with users of various political stripes accusing Meta of trying to suppress content. But rather than attack this change, users and policymakers should recognize it as a significant move to give users greater control over their news feeds and opportunity for a more user‐first social media experience.
First, let’s understand what changed on Instagram. Within the user controls for Instagram,
users are now able ..read more
Cato Institute | Individual Liberty, Free Markets, and Peace Blog
1d ago
Ryan Bourne
In a new policy analysis out today, I make the case for a substantial spending‐cut‐led federal deficit reduction effort. Tomorrow I will outline three economic reasons why deficit reduction is desirable. But today, I just want to take stock of the federal government’s budget realities by outlining five fiscal truths.
1. The United States Today Has a Historically High Budget Deficit
The recorded federal deficit from 2023, at $1.7 trillion (or 6.3 percent of gross domestic product, or GDP), was 23 percent higher than in 2022, but even that was pushed ..read more
Cato Institute | Individual Liberty, Free Markets, and Peace Blog
2d ago
Romina Boccia and Ivane Nachkebia
[T]he European nations’ larger welfare states are the product of the transformative effect of the Second World War […] Total war suspended constraints on the expansions of entitlements beyond a needy minority: it hobbled private financing of health insurance and retirement, excused the broad‐based tax increases necessary to fill the gap with public funds, and weakened the political capacity of those losing out to resist.—Chris Pope, “War and European Welfare Exceptionalism”
The United States is often considered an anomaly when it comes to social welfar ..read more
Cato Institute | Individual Liberty, Free Markets, and Peace Blog
2d ago
Clark Packard, Scott Lincicome, and Alfredo Carrillo Obregon
Earlier today, the White House called on the US Trade Representative to “consider” tripling the existing Section 301 tariffs on Chinese steel. The administration says the tariffs are necessary because China unfairly subsidizes its high‐emissions steel producers, which undercuts cleaner American steel producers and workers. Yet closer examination reveals the move to be far more about politics than unfair practices (despite the administration’s assertions to the contrary).
It is true that China subsidizes its domestic steel industry ..read more
Cato Institute | Individual Liberty, Free Markets, and Peace Blog
2d ago
Patrick G. Eddington
House and Senate members can be notoriously thin‐skinned when questioned about their policy and legislative choices. That was evident on April 14, when Sean Vitka, policy director for the left‐leaning advocacy group Demand Progress, took to X (formerly known as Twitter) to ask House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence (HPSCI) ranking member Jim Himes (D‑CA) a question.
Vitka asked whether Himes understood that an amendment he co‐authored and which was included in the just‐House passed Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) reauthorization bill grante ..read more
Cato Institute | Individual Liberty, Free Markets, and Peace Blog
3d ago
Scott Lincicome
Today we’ve published three essays for Cato’s Defending Globalization project:
Separating Tariff Facts from Tariff Fictions, by Erica York, explains that tariffs are costly taxes, and economists consider them to be poor tools for boosting the economy, reducing the trade deficit, or achieving strategic objectives.
Climate Change and Globalization, by Charles Kenny, makes the case that globalization is an ally, not an enemy, in the fight against climate change.
The Moral Case for Globalization, by Tom G. Palmer, shows that rigorous thinking and empirical research refute, one by o ..read more
Cato Institute | Individual Liberty, Free Markets, and Peace Blog
4d ago
Travis Fisher
Montana has become an unlikely frontier in the climate movement. Last August, Montana District Court Judge Kathy Seeley ruled in favor of climate activists in Held v. Montana, one of dozens of lawsuits filed across the country by Our Children’s Trust on behalf of youth plaintiffs. The District Court’s opinion is significant because it granted the plaintiffs legal standing—for the first time—on the grounds that they were directly injured by climate change. It also endorsed the concept of using the Social Cost of CO2 (SCC) in environmental reviews.
If the Montana Supreme Court agr ..read more