Cato Institute
1000 Massachusetts Ave, NW
Washington, DC 20001-5403

Phone (202) 842 0200
Fax (202) 842 3490
Contact Us
Support Cato
Where's the Accountability?
Michael D. Tanner in National Review (Online).
Mitt Romney: The Foreign Policy of Know-Nothingism
Doug Bandow in the American Conservative.
U.S. Doesn't Need Industrial Policy
Daniel J. Ikenson in USA Today.
JPMorgan Losses Do Not Make the Case for Regulation
Mark A. Calabria on the Huffington Post.
UN Indian Land Claims Hatched on Campus
Walter Olson in the Daily Caller.

Cato University 2012
Cato Institute
Washington D.C.
July 29 - August 3, 2012
Cato Pocket Constitution Can the government do that? Check the Constitution!
Special: 10 copies for $10

Cato @ Liberty Blog

"When Bipartisanship Is A Dirty Word"
by Sallie James

"Looking at Austerity in Italy"
by Juan Carlos Hidalgo

"Limit Access to Deposit Insurance Fund"
by Mark A. Calabria

May 16, 2012

JPMorgan Losses Show the System Works

Unsurprisingly, President Obama and others have used the recent $2 billion loss by JPMorgan Chase as a call for more regulation. What the president and his allies miss is that recent events at JPMorgan illustrate how the system should — and does — work. Argues Cato scholar Mark A. Calabria, "Just as the Dodd-Frank Act used the cover of a crisis to reward special interests and ignore the actual fault lines in our financial system, President Obama and others are attempting to use JPMorgan's recent losses to cover up and distract from regulatory failings."

Ending Congestion by Refinancing Highways

Although gasoline taxes have long been the main source of funding for building, maintaining, and operating America's network of highways, roads, and streets, the tax is at best an imperfect user fee. In a new paper, Cato scholar Randal O'Toole proposes an affordable vehicle-mile fee system that preserves traveler privacy, eliminates nearly all traffic congestion, adequately funds all federal, state, and local roads, and does so in a revenue-neutral manner after eliminating gas taxes and local road subsidies.

Questioning Homeownership as a Public Policy Goal

For decades U.S. housing policy has focused on promoting homeownership. In a new study, author Morris A. Davis shows that the policies designed to further homeownership have been ineffective and expensive and that homeownership as a public policy goal is not well supported. "A back-of-the envelope calculation suggests the present value of the cost of these policies to U.S. taxpayers is a staggering amount: $2.5 trillion," says Davis.


Get the Flash Player to see this player.

Daily Podcast
Randal O'Toole - Replace Gas Taxes
1234
OF SPECIAL NOTE

SAVE CATO

Behind the CaseBehind the Case
Details and resources related to the lawsuit brought by David and Charles Koch against the Cato Institute.

NEW FROM CATO

Tough TargetsTough Targets
Examines defensive gun use, analyzing eight years of news reports on ordinary citizens defending themselves against criminals.

Cato JournalCato Journal
"Is Immigration Good For America?" - features articles from experts in the field and covers some of the most controversial aspects of immigration today.

SUBSCRIPTIONS

SUBSCRIPTIONSFrom audio recordings of the best of Cato's events to articles by world-class experts, CatoAudio, Regulation and Cato Journal offer an amazing range of quality news and analysis.