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It's tempting to call the shameful taxpayer subsidy for electric cars - vehicles that are unaffordable for all but a small number of wealthy Americans - this nation's costly little secret.
The private sector is entirely capable of developing EVs and other new automotive technologies without the need for subsidies.
Mutual funds compete for investor interest with many other forms of investment. Some of these competing forms are regulated under the Investment Company Act of 1940, but others are not. Panelists at this AEI conference will discuss three competing forms of investment—exchange-traded funds (ETFs), separately managed accounts, and the customized...
The U.S. structure for collective investment, in which individual corporations hire outside investment advisers, is unusual among developed economies. Most other industrialized nations use structures based on a direct contractual relationship between the fund manager and the investor. In such structures, there is no intervening corporation, but there are...
To register for this event please go to: www.aei.org/event1318
Once again, the regulators in California have decided to lead the nation in terms of vehicle emission standards, proposing to require that 15.4 percent of all vehicles sold by 2025 must be electric cars, plug-in hybrid cars, or (currently non-existent) fuel cell cars.
Thispaper examines the public health consequences of the regulatory subsidy given to light trucks.
This report emphasizes one way that regulations following from the CAA directly influences individuals‟ behavior: through the Inspection and Maintenance (I&M) programs.







