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Government Subsidies Are Causing Higher Tuition and Administrative Bloat in Higher Education

by Dan Mitchell | Dec 23, 2015 | Blogs, Economics, Education

I’ve put together a collection of political cartoons that show government as a bloated, clumsy, and sometimes malicious person. This isn’t because of any special animus, but rather because the unintended consequences of government intervention are almost always...
Obamacare Is Still a Disaster

Obamacare Is Still a Disaster

by Dan Mitchell | Sep 25, 2015 | Big Government, Blogs, Economics, Government Spending

Like many Americans, I’m suffering from Obamacare fatigue. Before the law was implemented, I repeatedly explained that more spending and more intervention  in the health sector would worsen a system that already was suffering from too much government. And since the...

Hillary Clinton’s Plan to Increase the Cost of College

by Dan Mitchell | Aug 10, 2015 | Blogs, Economics, Education

Over the past few years, Hillary Clinton has taken advantage of several opportunities to demonstrate that she doesn’t understand economics. Though that’s not a problem. I have friends who routinely demonstrate their economic ignorance by saying things that don’t make...

After 50 Years, We’ve Learned Enough to Know Medicare Should Get Early Retirement

by Dan Mitchell | Jul 30, 2015 | Big Government, Blogs, Economics, Government Spending

Not all birthdays are a cause for untrammeled joy. Most of us baby boomers, for instance, don’t like being reminded that we’re getting older. And for folks who follow fiscal policy, the fact that Medicare is now 50 years old is hardly a cause for celebration.That’s...
Government-Subsidized Third-Party Payer Is a Great Recipe to Make a Sector of the Economy More Expensive and Less Efficient

Government-Subsidized Third-Party Payer Is a Great Recipe to Make a Sector of the Economy More Expensive and Less Efficient

by Dan Mitchell | May 24, 2015 | Blogs, Economics, Education, Health Care

What’s the most effective way of screwing up a sector of the economy? Since I’m a fiscal policy economist, I’m tempted to say that bad tax policy is the fastest way of causing damage. And France might be my top example. But other forms of government intervention also...
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