[ More Commentary ]
During the past few decades, a truly global division of labor has emerged, presenting opportunities for specialization, collaboration, and exchange on scales once unimaginable. But trade and investment policy has not kept pace with these remarkable changes in commercial reality. In a new study, Cato scholar Daniel J. Ikenson argues that governments and policymakers should eliminate trade barriers and commit to policies that nurture the promise of our highly integrated global economy.
The environmental community has been abuzz over emails and other documents hacked from a UK climate-change research center. The documents suggest a deliberate campaign to exclude from scientific journals opinions that challenge global warming as being human caused.
Cato scholar and climatologist Patrick J. Michaels, mentioned prominently and negatively in the emails, has been consistent in his view: "Global warming is indeed real, but it is also a very complicated and difficult issue that can provoke very unwise policy in response to political pressure. Drastic action is unwarranted at this time."
In the most recent issue of Cato Policy Report, Cato scholar Daniel J. Ikenson looks at the aftermath of the GM and Chrysler bailouts. Also in this issue, Cato founder and president Edward H. Crane discusses how Afghanistan presents an opportunity for Republicans to return to their traditional noninterventionist roots, and Chris Edwards reveals the truth of federal employee compensation.
Get the Flash Player to see this player.
The gift of Cato
This holiday season, we hope you'll choose to give a gift from the Cato Institute. At the Cato online store there's a world of possibilities: clothing, acclaimed books, one-of-a-kind publications, Land's End apparel customized with the Cato logo, CDs, gift sponsorships, and more.
Give a year-end gift
Cato depends solely on tax-deductible contributions from Sponsors who share our commitment to a free and prosperous society. When you support the Cato Institute, you are not just a contributor, you are a colleague. You'll be sent the latest Cato publications, reports, newsletters, and invitations to Cato events. You aren't merely supporting our mission, you become a part of Cato.
Financial Fiasco
An easily accessible work on the economic crisis, the book guides readers through a world of irresponsible behavior, showing how many of the "solutions" being implemented are repeating the mistakes that caused the crisis.
Mad About Trade
This much-needed antidote to a rising tide of protectionist sentiment in the United States offers a spirited defense of free trade and tells the underreported story of how a more global U.S. economy has created better jobs and higher living standards for American workers.
Climate of Extremes
An in-depth look at consistent, solid science on the other side of the gloom-and-doom global warming story that is rarely reported and pushed aside: that global warming is likely to be modest, and there is no apocalypse on the horizon.