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This book suggests and explores three key foundations that explain why emerging markets behave differently than developed markets.
Health insurers, hospitals, doctors, and the government are fighting each other to gain control over the $2 trillion health-care system, and patients could be the losers in this battle for power and profit. In her new book, Who Killed Health Care? (McGraw-Hill, June 2007), Harvard Business School professor Regina Herzlinger...
The court's rationale in Midwest Railcar Repair v. South Dakota Department of Revenue and Regulation contradicts basic principles of public finance economics.
In the housing and mortgage bubble of the twenty-first century, the government sponsored credit rating agencies turned out to be a notable weak spot.
While seeking to make college more affordable and accessible, the Obama administration has launched a worrisome but largely unnoticed assault upon the nation's publishers and the vibrant market in online learning.
End the government-sponsored cartel in credit ratings.
The Securities and Exchange Commission should revise its certification standards to permit other qualified firms to become nationally recognized statistical rating organizations.
Calls for transformative change in American schooling have too often accepted the orthodoxies of the nineteenth-century schoolhouse. This Outlook offers a more promising vision for twenty-first-century, choice-centered reform.





