E-Team Press Conference: Living with Global Warming
Washington D.C. Event
Washington D.C. Event
So, what happens now? You are invited to get the inside scoop from two of the leading researchers on Social Security reform.
Speakers: Dr. Mark McClellan – Doug Badger – Joel White
Health care has become a central issue in the 2004 presidential campaign. George W. Bush and John Kerry have proposed two fundamentally different approaches to reform the health care system and insure the uninsured.
The National Center for Policy Analysis and the Brookings Institution will host a joint briefing to outline important pension reforms on which both right and left can agree.
Few issues generate more debate or emotion from activists than global warming. This Earth Day, the National Center for Policy Analysis (NCPA) examines whether fears of human-induced climate change are based on sound science and what impact proposed solutions will have on the climate and the economy.
Get the latest from two leading health insurance providers – Assurant Health and Destiny Health – who are already offering Health Savings Account plans.
National Center for Policy Analysis Congressional Briefing
National Center for Policy Analysis Congressional Briefing
National Center for Policy Analysis Congressional Briefing
The NCPA is one of the sponsors of a major symposium on health care in Washington, DC. “Toward Affordable Health Care: Prescriptions for Today” will be held Monday, March 31, 2003 in Washington, DC.
Speakers:
– Newt Gingrich, AEI
– John C. Goodman, NCPA
– Thomas Saving, Texas A&M University and NCPA
"Without significant reform, these programs are not sustainable."
Amid skyrocketing costs and growing concerns over healthcare quality, three promising reforms are gaining ground in the market and on Capitol Hill.
Please join us for a discussion on the proposed mental health parity mandate. Is it worth the price? Who gains and who loses?
A Congressional Briefing by the National Center for Policy Analysis and the National Association for Business Economics' Health Economics Roundtable.
Under the old (defined-benefit) pension system, the investment returns were good, but workers were penalized for switching jobs. Under the new (defined-contribution) system, pensions are more portable, but the returns are too low to fund adequate retirement incomes.
What is the best way to help recently unemployed people get health insurance?