Description
Childcare is expensive. Economic evidence suggests childcare prices are driven higher by state-level regulations like input requirements designed to improve care quality, including staff-qualification requirements and minimum staff-to-child ratios, with little evidence that they actually work.
In this video, Ryan Bourne, the Cato Institute's R. Evan Scharf Chair for the Public Understanding of Economics discusses the regressive effects of childcare regulations.
Rights precede government. That's the core of the American founding, and George F. Will argues that it's worth preserving. His new book is The Conservative Sensibility.
Published 07/05/19
Medicare expenditures as a share of gross domestic product (GDP) are now six times larger than they were in 1967. Forecasts for the next 75 years show that almost $1 of every $5 of GDP could be spent on Medicare. That is unaffordable. Without intervention, Medicare’s share of GDP will force some...
Published 06/04/19