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Some Ideas for President‐​elect Biden

Joe Biden

When President‐​elect Biden is sworn in January 20, 2021, he will inherit the pandemic and surrounding crises. Our Pandemics and Policy series provides an actionable guide to policies that can harness American ingenuity and foster a resilient society capable of meeting the challenges ahead — with ideas that appeal across the political divide.

  • Pandemics and Policy, a Cato Institute series

Drug Reformation: End Government’s Power to Require Prescriptions

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U.S. law grants the Food and Drug Administration the power to make consumers get a prescription before purchasing certain drugs. The rationale behind government‐​imposed prescription requirements is consumer safety—that is, the idea that some drugs are too dangerous for consumers to use without physician supervision. In a new study, Cato scholars Jeffrey A. Singer and Michael F. Cannon argue that government‐​imposed prescription requirements violate the rights of individuals to access the medicines they want, and actually make patients less safe, not more.

  • “Drug Reformation: End Government’s Power to Require Prescriptions,” by Jeffrey A. Singer and Michael F. Cannon

2020 Arms Sales Risk Index

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To promote debate and help improve U.S. decision making about arms sales, the Cato Institute has released its 3rd edition of the annual Arms Sales Risk Index. By identifying the factors linked to negative outcomes of arms sales, such as dispersion, diversion, and the misuse of weapons by recipients, the index provides a way to measure the risk involved with selling arms to another nation. Though by no means an exact science, the Arms Sales Risk Index can help policymakers incorporate the risks and make better decisions about which nations should and should not receive American weapons.

  • 2020 Arms Sales Risk Index

A Fiscal Cliff: New Perspectives on the U.S. Federal Debt Crisis

A Fiscal Cliff book cover

The unsustainable, and still rapidly growing, U.S. federal government debt is a classic case of ‘‘in denial.” Despite numerous congressional committees, bipartisan commissions, and votes, we are no closer to a solution to the debt crisis than we were more than a decade ago. In fact, in 2018, a congressional committee was appointed to recommend budget process reforms, but that committee could not agree on any recommendations to submit to Congress. In this timely volume, scholars and policymakers assess the United States’ fiscal constraints and provide new perspectives that are desperately needed in order to solve the nation’s debt crisis.

  • A Fiscal Cliff: New Perspectives on the U.S. Federal Debt Crisis

Featured

Blog

No, State Legislatures Aren’t Going To Override The Popular Vote on Presidential Electors

By Walter Olson.

Could a state legislature intervene to prescribe its own slate of presidential electors rather than letting voters make the choice? In theory, yes — but not in the circumstances that follow Election Day 2020. 

Blog

November 3, 2020 was a Bad Day for Drug Prohibition

By Jeffrey A. Singer.

Voters are unifying against the failed war on drugs.

Blog

A Year of Content Moderation and Section 230

By Matthew Feeney and Will Duffield.

Section 230 will be much‐​discussed in the coming weeks and months regardless of the election’s outcome. We can only hope that the lessons of the last year help inform such discussions.

Blog

Sanctuary Cities Reduce Deportations Without Increasing Crime

By Alex Nowrasteh.

Hausman’s work is the best so far on how sanctuary city immigration policies affect crime rates.

Blog

Are Ideological Differences the Only Reason Republicans and Democrats Can’t Agree?

By Michael Bernstein and Emily Ekins.

Data demonstrate that partisans allow the political leaders they like and dislike to color their views of public policy and that policy support depends not only on political ideology but also on the president who is promoting the policy.

Commentary

Tax Hikes Are on the Ballot

By Chris Edwards. Washington Examiner.

Voters should reject tax increases at the ballot box and instead demand governments restrain their budgets as families and businesses are doing this year.

Commentary

Packing the Supreme Court Would be Bad for the Law

By Walter Olson. CNN.com.

Whatever you think of the politics, packing the Supreme Court would be bad for the law itself — bad for the efficiency and quality of the court’s work, bad for its credibility and public legitimacy.

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Libertarians Spoiled 2020 for Donald Trump?

Featuring David Boaz and Caleb O. Brown. November 9, 2020.

Ilya Shapiro discusses Pennsylvania’s election litigation on WNIS’ The Kerry and Mike Show

Featuring Ilya Shapiro. November 9, 2020.

Ilya Shapiro discusses California v. Texas on FOX’s Fox & Friends

Featuring Ilya Shapiro. November 9, 2020.

Enrique Ghersi discusses the electoral future of Peru and other topics on the Power & Markets podcast

Featuring Enrique Ghersi. November 8, 2020.
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Research Areas

  • Constitution, the Law, and the Courts
  • COVID-19
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Upcoming Events

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Live Online Policy Forum

Race and Medical Licensing Laws

November 10, 2020 12:00 PM to 1:00 PM EST
Live Online

Featuring Harriet A. Washington (@haw95), Writing Fellow in Bioethics, Harvard Medical School; instructor in Bioethics, Columbia University; Marshala R. Lee (@DrLeeMD), Harrington Trust Physician Scholar; Member, National Medical Association Council on Clinical Practice; Jeffrey A. Miron (@jeffreyamiron), Director of Economic Studies, Cato Institute; Director of Graduate and Undergraduate Economic Education, Harvard University; moderated by Jeffrey A. Singer (@dr4liberty), Senior Fellow, Cato Institute.

Live Online Book Forum

A Fiscal Cliff: New Perspectives on the U.S. Federal Debt Crisis

November 11, 2020 12:00 PM to 1:00 PM EST
Live Online

Featuring John Merrifield, Professor Emeritus of Economics, the University of Texas at San Antonio College of Business; Barry Poulson, Professor Emeritus of Economics, University of Colorado Boulder; Chris Edwards (@CatoEdwards), Director of Tax Policy Studies, Cato Institute; moderated by Jason Kuznicki (@JasonKuznicki), Editor, Cato Books and Cato Unbound.

Live Online Policy Forum

Trade Policy in a Biden Administration: Back to Normal, or into the Great Unknown?

November 12, 2020 12:30 PM to 1:30 PM EST
Live Online

Featuring Nasim Fussell, Partner, Holland & Knight LLP; Michael Smart, Managing director, Rock Creek Global Advisors LLC; Halie Craig (@haliecraig), Associate Fellow, R Street Institute; moderated by Simon Lester (@snlester), Associate Director, Herbert A. Stiefel Center for Trade Policy Studies, Cato Institute.

Live Online Book Forum

Open: The Story of Human Progress

November 16, 2020 4:30 PM to 5:30 PM EST
Live Online

Featuring the author Johan Norberg (@johanknorberg), Senior Fellow, Cato Institute; with comments by Tom Palmer (@tomgpalmer), Executive Vice President for International Programs, Atlas Network; moderated by Chelsea Follett (@Chellivia), Policy Analyst, Center for Global Liberty and Prosperity, Cato Institute, and Managing Editor, www​.human​progress​.org.

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