News

We assess the macroeconomic implications of the observed and expected changes to immigration policy during the second Trump administration and project a dramatic decrease in inflows and somewhat ...
While some experts may be quick to dismiss AI tools like ElliQ, these technologies provide meaningful support for isolated or vulnerable individuals and should be evaluated with greater seriousness ...
Any moment now, we will be releasing the full results of the AEI Energy/Climate Survey of the American public that my AEI ...
The US Supreme Court’s decision last week in Free Speech Coalition v. Paxton may be understandably popular in some quarters because it blocks minors’ online access to sexually explicit speech, but the ...
The US appears to be now treading the familiar path that recently got emerging market economy of Turkey into economic trouble. The US is increasingly disregarding central bank independence, ...
Increasingly democratic socialist politicians hold a troubling worldview that sees extraordinary wealth as not even possibly the inescapable byproduct of innovation, but as necessarily a policy ...
As a parent, it is not easy to resist the digital tide heading for our children. When the world is digitally dependent, it is challenging to explain to children why having a device is not essential.
In a time when partisan and ideological difference is the easiest tool to find in one’s tool belt, it’s a pleasure to prioritize the craft of designing our free future society together.
Eliminating qualified business asset income (QBAI) undermines the ability to target intangible income, risks US competitiveness, and reduces revenue. Lawmakers should reform it rather than remove it.
The world economy has surprised pessimists. Yet this resilience, while real, looks far from robust. What explains this stubborn vitality? Much of the answer lies in the necessity-driven ingenuity of ...
As Dan Sarewitz once said, among all the things climate change is capable of, making us dumber seems top among them.
The phrase "central planning"—in the context of economic policy—might bring to mind a massive and complex bureaucratic machine, one whirring with the ambitions of apparatchiks armed with clipboards ...