Census Bureau Uninsured Total Still Overstates
The Census Bureau has been over-counting the uninsured for years and the new adjustment is far short of what is needed.
The Census Bureau has been over-counting the uninsured for years and the new adjustment is far short of what is needed.
Here is a simple suggestion. Cut significantly or eliminate all together the capital gains tax now. This was a good idea before the events of September 11, and it is an even better idea now that the markets have fallen daily since re-opening.
A big worry of recent years is the falling U.S. savings rate – it's actually gone negative. A new study by Stephen Entin of the Institute For Research on the Economics of Taxation nails the culprit: the tax code.
I came across a statistic that shows the world has finally changed. As of last year, more than half of U.S. households had at least one computer. Not that there was any suspense about it, but computers are now officially no big deal. In fact, they're just part of the furniture. Life has officially changed.
The group physicians for a national health program and others advocating a single-payer health care system to improve quality and access to care say it would lessen physician frustration and make patients' lives better. But a new NCPA study shows they're exactly wrong.
The most profound step that the United States could take to shore up national security is to reduce U.S. dependence on foreign oil.
A new study by researcher Terry Moe, reported in the publication education matters, confirms what I've long argued about school choice: the appeal for parents of sending their children to private schools is greatest among low-income families, minorities and those living in low-performing districts.
It was a presidential election filled with drama and bitter partisanship, whose dead heat ending was broken only after a long struggle. And it's not the one you're thinking of. It was the election of 1800.
Our nation's prosperity depends in large part on our oil supply and our energy use.
As the financial world braces for U.S. markets to open this morning many financial leaders from legendary investor Warren Buffett to Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill to President Bush and Vice President Cheney are calling on investors to be bullish and invest in America.
As the financial world braces for U.S. markets to open this morning many financial leaders from legendary investor Warren Buffett to Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill to President Bush and Vice President Cheney are calling on investors to be bullish and invest in America.
The National Center for Policy Analysis (NCPA) has added a new feature to its Web site, Terrorism in America: Threats, Strategies and Policy.
President Bush's attempt to draw attention to the social contribution of religious charities represents the best spirit of progressive conservatism. It is an attempt to move away from failed government programs of the past and push toward expanding private and often religious programs that have consistently worked to integrate the poor into productive economic life.
The terrorists obviously don't understand what makes our economic system work. Capitalism is not a few people or even a large building full of financiers. Capitalism is ordinary people doing their jobs; consumers, investors, businessmen and women, all investing in America.
To avoid such catastrophes in the future, the CIA is going to have to get down and dirty in the intelligence business. Congressional criticism of the agency over the years apparently has turned it into too nice an organization to prevent attacks like Tuesday's.
While polls have consistently shown that Americans are concerned about the environment, they are also increasingly worried about high energy costs.
Virtually every child in a low-income family is eligible for either Medicaid or the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP), but a recent fact sheet from the Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured reports that 24 percent (or about 7.7 million) of the 32 million children in low-income families remain uninsured.
One of the more disingenuous claims is coming these days from Washington Democrats who blame the falling budget surplus on the Bush tax cuts. But the villain is the slowing economy, not the tax cuts.
If there's one issue the NCPA has been associated with, it's medical savings accounts. In 1996, congress authorized a limited demonstration project for MSAs. Now, it's time to take the lid off and give them a chance.
President Bush wants to fix the doomed social security system, but the senate once tried to save him the trouble.
NCPA President John C. Goodman issued the following statement following Senator Phil Gramm's announcement that he will not seek re-election:
The U.S. Census Bureau has published its 2000 supplementary survey. The results? Relentless pursuit of the American Dream.
NCPA President John C. Goodman issued the following statement following Senator Phil Gramm's announcement that he will not seek re-election.
The U.S. Civil Rights Commission report on Florida voting irregularities engages in unbelievable demagoguery. Dissenting members have shown it's intellectually sloppy and politically biased.