Economic Policy News

The Daily Signal provides economic policy news with reporting, analysis, and commentary on markets, growth, and fiscal responsibility.
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    • Opinion

    26 Economic Policy Reforms That Could Get Passed By Congress

    There’s wide support for many economic policy reforms, despite the perception (and often the reality) that there’s partisan gridlock. Of course, getting anything passed through Congress is difficult, but some reforms have a much better chance of getting passed than other reforms. They are the “low-hanging fruit.” Policy experts from Heritage’s Roe Institute have put…
    Daren Bakst
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    • Opinion

    What Exactly Congress Is Spending Your Dollars On

    Let’s say you were a financial adviser, and a family came to you with the following situation. They make the median family income in the United States—$52,000. But last year they spent $61,000. That’s right, $9,000 more than they’re making, and it all went on the family credit card. That’s bad enough, but then you find out they…
    Ed Feulner
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    • Opinion

    Americans Want to Drive, Not Take Mass Transit. But Government Spending Doesn’t Reflect That.

    The Highway Trust Fund—which provides funding for building and maintaining the nation’s roads and bridges as well as transit, such as buses, streetcars, light rail and metros—will exhaust its operating funds by the end of May. Now more than ever, it is important for the nation to rethink the way it invests in transportation. As…
    Michael Sargent
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    • Opinion

    House’s Bipartisan Deal Would Hike Deficit, Hurt Economy in Long-Term

    Washington is exhibiting symptoms of schizophrenia. At the same time that lawmakers are debating their budget blueprints to eliminate deficits before the end of the decade, the Boehner-Pelosi deal to address the looming Medicare physician payment cuts proposes to add $141 billion to the deficit over the same period. The deal in question would replace…
    Romina Boccia
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    • Opinion

    Budget Resolutions Need More Transparency

    It’s a big week for the new GOP-controlled Congress. Unlike the past when Congress was divided, this year there is no one to blame if GOP lawmakers fail to pass a budget. This puts tremendous pressure to unite diverse lawmakers in the House and Senate behind one spending plan by the mid-April deadline. But first…
    Romina Boccia
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    • Opinion

    Under an Honest Budget the Doc Fix Plan Adds to the Debt

    On Friday night, House leaders released details of a proposal that would increase spending on doctors paid through Medicare (called the doc fix). Based on what is currently known without at official score by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO), the new spending would only be partially offset in both the 10-year “budget window” and over…
    Paul Winfree
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    • News

    How Steve Forbes Would Turbocharge the ‘Molasses-Like Economy’

    Steve Forbes made the flat tax the centerpiece of his two presidential campaigns. Now, he’s promoting the idea once again as he relaunches an organization called Americans for Hope, Growth and Opportunity to advance a pro-growth agenda. “The flat tax is absolutely crucial to turbocharging our molasses-like economy,” Forbes, editor in chief of the magazine that…
    Thaleigha Rampersad
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    • Opinion

    The KORUS FTA at 3: Strengthening the U.S. Economy, Not Weakening

    The retiring President and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, Richard Fisher, once famously noted, [P]rotectionism is the crack cocaine of economics. It provides a temporary high but is instantly addictive and leads to certain economic death. Indeed, here comes the latest example of that: Public Citizen’s bogus job loss claims against the…
    Anthony B. Kim
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    • Opinion

    Federal Spending Per Household Has More Than Doubled Since 1962

    Just how large has government grown over the past couple decades? To answer that, take a look at the increase in the amount the government spends per household in Heritage’s 2015 Federal Budget in Pictures. In 1962, the U.S. government spent about $12,000 of today’s dollars per American household; it now spends almost $29,000—more than…
    Michael Sargent
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    • Opinion

    How Does the House Budget Measure Up?

    Today the House Budget Committee released its fiscal year 2016 budget blueprint. Any good budget should balance within 10 years or less, without raising taxes above the average historical level (roughly 18 percent of gross domestic product (GDP)). In addition, Heritage policy experts previously established seven priorities for the congressional budget resolution. Let’s see how…
    Romina Boccia
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    • Opinion

    7 Things Congress Should Do in the Budget

    For Washington, it’s budget season. President Obama released his budget early last month, and this week it’s Congress’ turn to reveal its own budget resolutions. Government spending and debt has grown out of control: The current national debt exceeds $18.1 trillion and is only growing higher. It is Congress’ responsibility to address the national spending…
    Sophie Simunek
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    • News

    Republicans Will Unveil Their Budget Next Week. Here’s What You Need to Know.

    Budget season on Capitol Hill is quickly approaching, but Republican lawmakers have remained quiet about the details of their fiscal blueprints. Both Senate and House Republicans are expected to release separate budgets next week and plan to vote on the resolutions by the end of the month. Though few details on the proposals have emerged,…
    Melissa Quinn
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    • Opinion

    How the New Lee-Rubio Tax Plan Would Boost the Economy

    The U.S. has the highest corporate tax rate in the developed world, is the only major country to tax its businesses on income earned outside the country and delays the ability of businesses to deduct capital expenses for as long as 39 years. The monstrous complexity of the U.S. tax system has a disproportionately adverse…
    David Burton
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    • Opinion

    Flexibility with Just 10 Percent of No Child Left Behind Spending Is Not Enough

    The Student Success Act, currently under consideration in Congress, consolidates several dozen programs authorized under the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (now known as No Child Left Behind) into what is being called a Local Academic Flexible Grant. Although some are championing the grant as an improvement on the status quo, it would only provide…
    Lindsey Burke
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    • Opinion

    Why Hong Kong Might Lose Its No. 1 Spot on the Index of Economic Freedom

    It’s good to be No. 1. But as any former champ will tell you, you have to avoid becoming complacent if you want to stay ahead of the pack. First-place finishes aren’t guaranteed, just ask Hong Kong. Every year since 1995, the Heritage Foundation and The Wall Street Journal have measured the state of economic…
    Ed Feulner
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    • Opinion

    What Marie Harf Got Right: We Need to Promote Economic Freedom in the Middle East

    State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf recently blamed “lack of opportunity for jobs” as a root cause of terrorism in the Middle East. Her assertion, made in an interview Monday, that “we cannot kill our way out of this war” is unlikely to replace “I have not yet begun to fight” on lists of famous military…
    Bryan Riley
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    • Opinion

    More and More Economic Research Refutes Piketty

    In his surprise best seller Capital in the Twenty-First Century, Thomas Piketty argues that the wealth of rich owners of capital grows faster than the wages of workers in capitalist economies. Hence, inequality always increases unless destructive world wars or heavy-handed government regulation of the economy intervene. To remedy modern inequality, he proposes punitive taxes…
    Alex Rendon
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    • News

    13 Charts Measuring Economic Freedom Around the Globe

    The results are in. When it comes to economic freedom, Hong Kong takes the gold, with Singapore following closely behind and New Zealand rounding out the top three in The Heritage Foundation’s 2015 Index of Economic Freedom. The annual index, now in its 21st year, is a guide for measuring improvements in 186 countries’ economic…
    Thaleigha Rampersad
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    • Opinion

    ‘The Budget Book’ Offers 106 Ways to Cut Spending

    Ever heard of the Agriculture Risk Coverage program? How about the Price Loss Coverage program? You’re paying for them. Along with the Conservation Technical Assistance program, the Biological and Environmental Research program, and the USDA Catfish Inspection program. The list goes on, but why have I highlighted these particular entries? Because of the millions we…
    Ed Feulner
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    • News

    The History of Defense Spending in One Chart

    Last week, President Obama outlined his budget proposal for fiscal year 2016. It includes an increase in defense spending over the next 10 years to keep pace with inflation but falls short of the level proposed by The Heritage Foundation. After a 25 percent reduction in annual spending over the past six years, Heritage's Diem Nguyen Salmon…
    Thaleigha Rampersad
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