Cato Policy Report, September/October 1999
Vol. 21, No. 5
June 2: The Cato Institute held a City Seminar in New York City on Liberty in the New Millennium. Speakers included Roger Ailes, chairman and CEO of Fox Broadcasting and Fox News Channel; John Stossel of ABC News; and Mike Tanner, Ted Galen Carpenter, and Stephen Moore of the Cato Institute. The event at the Waldorf-Astoria was attended by more than 300 people.
Cato Mencken
Fellow P. J. O’Rourke (left) talks with National Federation
of Independent Business chairman Jack Faris at Cato’s reception
for Bill Gates. |
Senate
Judiciary Committee chairman Joseph Biden welcomes Cato scholar
Roger Pilon to hearings on civil forfeiture reform. |
June 10: Experts from four continents gathered for a Cato conference, “The Crisis in Global Governance,” on the struggle between state corporatism in its various forms and laissez faire. Deepak Lal of the University of California at Los Angeles gave the luncheon address, “The Challenge of Globalization: There Is No Third Way,” and Sen. Don Nickles (R-Okla.) delivered the closing comments.
June 15: Ned Graham, son of evangelist Billy Graham and head of East Gates International, said at a Cato Policy Forum, “China in the Balance: The Case for Normal Trade Relations,” that Western religious organizations working in the People’s Republic of China have benefited from the expanding commercial ties between America and China. Nicholas Lardy of the Brookings Institution and Robert Kapp of the U.S.-China Business Council argued that American companies and consumers will benefit once America starts to treat China as a member of the World Trade Organization
June 15: The Cato Institute hosted a Reception for Microsoft founder and CEO Bill Gates. Gates thanked Cato for defending free-market principles before answering questions from guests.
June 28: The Justice Department’s investigation of American Airlines for allegedly slashing fares to snuff out competition was the topic of discussion at a Cato Policy Forum, “Big Airlines, Small Airlines, Big Government: Who’s Preying on Whom?” John R. Lott Jr., author of Are Predatory Commitments Credible? argued that vigorous competition shouldn’t be mistaken for predation. James H. Burnley IV, former secretary of transportation; Mark Kahan, CEO of Spirit Airlines; and William E. Kovacic of George Washington University debated whether the suit against American Airlines is good for the industry.
July 14: At a Cato Policy Forum, “Rethinking Employer-Sponsored Health Care,” three corporate health care specialists discussed how companies should move to reform the health care market. Dwight McNeill of WayPoint Health argued that a key to making the health care system work more efficiently is to have employees be the direct buyers of health care. Mary Barker of Baxter International argued that making health care available to more people through markets will result in improvements. Patricia Nazemetz of Xerox Corporation said that Xerox hopes to move to a defined-contribution approach, which will allow employees full access to the dollars allocated to health care so they can decide how they want to spend that money.
July 15: Japan is going to change rapidly and radically within the next decade, said Milton Ezrati at a Cato Book Forum. Ezrati, chief investment officer at Nomura Asset Management and author of Kawari: How Japan’s Economic and Cultural Transformation Will Alter the Balance of Power among Nations, argued that Japan will shed its mercantilist stance and become the “headquarters nation” of Asia. That change, he concluded, will present new military and economic challenges to the West.
Participants
in a Cato roundtable on telecommunications reform in Napa Valley,
California, included Rep. Barbara Cubin, Rep. W. J. (Billy)
Tauzin, FCC chairman William Kennard, and Rep. Vito Fossella. |
Cato author
Charles Peña and Peter Huessy discuss national missile defense
systems at a Cato Policy Forum on July 26. |
Judith
Estrin, chief technology officer at Cisco Systems, discusses
the future of technology and the Internet at the Cato telecommunications
roundtable. |
This article originally appeared in the September/October 1999 edition of Cato Policy Report.