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In "Freedom’s Forge: How American Business Produced Victory in World War II," Pulitzer Prize finalist Arthur Herman describes how the U.S. won history’s greatest conflict by harnessing free market principles and private-sector creativity and innovation to increase war production.
This working paper addresses what is probably a significant driver of drug quality--the legislative environment, and in particular, the registration process in which medicines are made and, more critically, sold.
At this event, AEI visiting scholar R. Richard Geddes, who urged for postal reform in his 2003 AEI Press book "Saving the Mail," will present an updated policy paper that assesses the USPS’s current situation and argues for long-term, concrete reform.
President Obama recognizes the powerful positive economic impact a capital gains tax cut would have for small business owners--so why not give it to every American family and business in order to encourage growth and success?
As Congress weighs the benefits of a new federal insurance regulator, it is worthwhile to pause and consider the weaknesses of the current system, and whether a new regime would effectively fill that gap.
Many Africans lack access to essential medicines for myriad reasons, including the relatively high price of drugs: local production is unlikely to alleviate this problem.
It is time to follow Franklin Delano Roosevelt and suspend mark-to-market.
Since the 1930s, accountants and bank regulators have recognized the inherent weaknesses of mark-to-market accounting.




