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Republicans Proposed Trigger Mechanism in Tax Bill Would Make Recessions More SevereCEPR / December 01, 2017
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Jeb Hensarling Has Never Heard of George W. Bush and Bill Clinton and Neither Has NPRCEPR / December 01, 2017
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If Cutting Taxes is "What Makes a Republican a Republican," Why Are They Raising Them on So Many Middle Income Families?CEPR / November 30, 2017
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Are Poor Girls Really Leaving their Brothers Behind?Shawn Fremstad / November 29, 2017
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WaPo Gets It Seriously Wrong: Ron Johnson Does NOT Want Pass-Through Corporations to Be Treated Like Other CorporationsCEPR / November 29, 2017
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Taking Issue with Dani Rodrik: Trade Deficits are Different with Secular Stagnation (see Addendum)I am a big fan of Dani Rodrik's writings on trade, and I agree with most of what he says in his NYT column today, but I do have one major disagreement. However, before going there let me emphasize some of the key points he makes in the piece.
First, Rodrik is very much on the mark in arguing that recent trade deals, like the Trans-Pacific Partnership, have very little to do with free trade. As he says, these deals are about imposing a corporate-friendly structure of regulations on both our trading partners and the U.S. (The deals have the effect of locking in laws that could otherwise be more easily altered.)
He also is right in singling out the pharmaceutical industry as the biggest villain in this story. We have been using these trade deals to ensure ever longer and stronger patents and related protections. The result is to make drugs, which would otherwise be cheap, extremely expensive. The price of drugs can be a serious burden even in rich countries, but patent protection can make life-saving drugs altogether unaffordable in developing countries. We should be looking to foster alternative, more efficient, mechanisms for financing research, not using trade deals to impose patent monopolies everywhere.
It's worth mentioning in this context the effort to impose rules on digital commerce in these trade deals. Folks following the scandals related to Facebook and Twitter's involvement in the presidential election know that we don't really have the rules down ourselves. In other words, we do not have a system in place that prevents both foreign and domestic actors from using dishonest means to influence public opinion and interfere with the democratic process. We also don't have effective systems in place to ensure the privacy of our personal data. These are really big issues that are probably worth getting sorted out before we try to shove a one-size-fits-all model on the rest of the world.
CEPR / November 28, 2017
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Latin America and the Caribbean
Ministro de Honduras próximo dos EUA está envolvido com tráfico de drogas, diz informante da DEAJake Johnston
The Intercept, 27 de novembro, 2017
Jake Johnston / November 27, 2017
Article Artículo
Janet Yellen and Barack Obama's Economy Is Looking GoodDean Baker
Truthout, November 27, 2017
Dean Baker / November 27, 2017
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Le commerce électronique et l’Organisation mondiale du commerceDeborah James / November 27, 2017
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How Did Mara Liasson Determine that the Federal Budget Deficit is "Dangerously High"CEPR / November 27, 2017
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If You Thought Republicans Were Just Trying to Give More Money to Rich People, the NYT Sets You StraightCEPR / November 27, 2017
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Latin America and the Caribbean
Informants Claim Drug Traffickers Sought Assistance of U.S.-Backed Honduran Security MinisterJake Johnston / November 26, 2017
Article Artículo
Latin America and the Caribbean
Estados Unidos siempre supo del golpe de Estado en HondurasJake Johnston
FACTum, 23 de noviembre, 2017
Jake Johnston / November 25, 2017
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Latin America and the Caribbean
Elections in Honduras: A Step Forward or Another Step Back?Alex Main
The Hill, November 25, 2017
Alexander Main / November 25, 2017
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There is a Legislative History on the Consumer Financial Protection BureauCEPR / November 25, 2017
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Republicans Do Not "Think" Tax Bill is Political Death: More Mind Reading at the NYTCEPR / November 23, 2017
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NYT Says Republican Lawmakers View SALT Deduction Repeal As Opportunity to Kick Democrats in the TeethCEPR / November 23, 2017
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Holiday Compilation: CEPR on the GOP Tax BillCatching up on your reading over the long holiday weekend? Prepare yourself for Monday’s smack of reality by reading up on CEPR’s insights into the GOP tax plan. The Senate is scheduled to vote on their version of the tax bill just after Thanksgiving.
Dean Baker, Eileen Appelbaum, and Alan Barber are talking (WBAI, WDET) and writing (BTP and CEPR Blog) about the potential outcomes of both versions of the bill that now includes the repeal of ACA’s individual mandate.
Dean Baker has this statement about the House version of the tax overhaul bill passed last week:
“The Republicans in the House voted to raise taxes on people with cancer, recent college grads and young people still attending graduate school in order to help finance tax cuts to corporations — that are already drowning in cash — and the very richest people in the country. There is no basis for the promised economic boom. This is a transparent giveaway to the people who fund their election campaigns. It is taking the corruption of politics in the United States to a new level.”
November 22, 2017
Article Artículo
Latin America and the Caribbean
Honduras: Social and Economic Indicators Since the 2009 CoupJake Johnston and / November 22, 2017