Get the latest research and policy analysis from the Mercatus Center.
Email not displaying correctly? View in Browser.
[link removed]
[link removed]
July 17, 2019
Top Features
[link removed]
A Better Way to Fix Gerrymandering: Math
[link removed]
Charles Blahous | The Hill
Across the political spectrum, Americans strongly disapprove of gerrymandering, and rightly so. The practice undermines the foundational principle of district-based representation: that voters within a constituency should share local perspectives and live reasonably near to one another. Recent national discussions of gerrymandering, however, have been missing the point. For needed reform to occur, we must get the focus off of political engineering and back to the foundational purpose of legislative districting.
Keep Reading →
[link removed]
Tweet This →
[link removed]
Share This →
[link removed]
get more on this topic
[link removed]
[link removed]
Why Politicians Prefer Debt Ceiling Crises to Balanced Budgets
[link removed]
Bruce Yandle | Washington Examiner
According to recent estimates, the Treasury Department could run out of cash in September. Eventually, Congress will either raise the debt limit, face another government shutdown, or allow the United States to default on its debt. A temporary fix or even a government shutdown is likely, but not a default – yet. Applying public choice theory to Congress’ habitual debt limit increases show that lawmakers, in their quest to get reelected, want to give constituents more benefits for less taxes, leading to deficit spending. In the Washington Examiner, Bruce Yandle explains that members of Congress use artificially created budget crises to add more pork barrel spending into bills that will not get enough time for debate.
Keep Reading →
[link removed]
get more on this topic
[link removed]
[link removed]
The Global Trade War Comes Full Circle
[link removed]
Veronique de Rugy | Creators Syndicate
The simplified notion that protecting the US market with tariffs is a good idea misses the great lesson of economics: that global markets are connected in surprisingly intricate ways. Even now, tariffs have distorted market signals for American steel consumers and backfired against the US steel industry, which are ostensibly protected. Veronique de Rugy explains how tariffs create massive market distortions and malinvestments.
Keep Reading →
[link removed]
get more on this topic
[link removed]
[link removed]
Depictions of Reality
[link removed]
Neal Stephenson and Tyler Cowen | Conversations with Tyler
Across more than a dozen books, Neal Stephenson has created vast story worlds driven by futuristic technologies that have both prophesied and provoked real-world progress in cryptocurrency, social networks, and the creation of the web itself. Stephenson joins Tyler to discuss the future of physical surveillance, how much freedom you could expect on a Mars colony, whether today’s media fragmentation is trending us towards dystopia, why the Apollo moon landings were communism’s greatest triumph, what storytelling has to do with giving good driving directions, and much more.
Listen Now →
[link removed]
get more on this topic
[link removed]
[link removed]
The Market for Neighborhoods
[link removed]
Salim Furth | National Affairs
How much is a strong community worth in the sense of a neighborhood? Because it’s not a strictly defined good and different people mean different things when they use the term, the strength of any given neighborhood is not quantifiable. For these reasons, it can be difficult to perform an intelligible economic analysis on the construct. In National Affairs, Salim Furth sketches the contours of what an economics of neighborhoods might look like, which can help us figure out what makes a strong neighborhood and how individuals, organizations, and policymakers can work together to allow neighborhoods to thrive.
Keep Reading →
[link removed]
get more on this topic
[link removed]
Additional Links
Will Congress Put Three People out of Work for Each One It Helps?
[link removed]
Bruce Yandle | Washington Examiner
Spending Addicts Rule the House
[link removed]
Veronique de Rugy | American Institute for Economics Research
What the US-China Trade War Is Really About
[link removed]
Tyler Cowen | Bloomberg
Even Economists Lie to Themselves
[link removed]
James Broughel | Foundation for Economic Education
Are High-Risk Pools Market-Friendly?
[link removed]
Robert F. Graboyes | InsideSources
Get More →
[link removed]
Get Mercatus research and scholarly insights on the issues most important to you
Subscribe →
[link removed]
[link removed]
[link removed]
Donate
[link removed]
| Manage Preferences
[link removed]
Copyright © 2019, All rights reserved.
Mercatus Center at George Mason University, 3434 Washington Blvd, Arlington VA, 22201
Opt out of all emails.
[link removed]
Clicking this link will prevent you from receiving Mercatus emails in the future.