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In this timely monograph, Paul L. Joskow argues that the crisis in the financial market should not become an excuse for reversing beneficial regulatory reforms in other sectors.
This paper describes electric power transmission access, pricing, and investment policies in the United States over the last fifteen years and evaluates the current state of those policies.
Was the Environmental Protection Agency’s denial of the petition to regulate emissions of greenhouse gases from motor vehicles reasonable?
The U.S. has neither a third world transmission network nor (anymore) the most reliable transmission network on earth.
Congress has introduced several bills on net neutrality, but mostof themare likely to do more harm than good.
Paul L. Joskow is president of the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation and presently on leave from MIT, where he is the Elizabeth and James Killian Professor of Economics and Management. His lecture will review the broad experience with deregulation, regulatory reform, and industry restructuring in the United States over the...
Bush became president after more people voted for Gore, thus maintaining the integrity of the Electoral College.




