Government Subsidies Keep Your Food Boring
The feds’ focus on large-scale crops hinders the resurgence of heritage grains and results in less food diversity.
The feds’ focus on large-scale crops hinders the resurgence of heritage grains and results in less food diversity.
Government officials seek to shape the economy to the liking of politicians.
And the real kicker is that Intel was probably going to create those jobs without taxpayers funding anything.
Support for industrial policy and protectionism are supposed to help the working class. Instead, these ideas elevate the already privileged.
Just say no to empowering government actors to put their thumbs on the scale on behalf of certain sectors.
Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo says more chip subsidies are needed, even before the Biden administration has distributed $52 billion or measured how effective that spending was.
The projects include $1.4 million for a charging station in a remote Alaskan community with barely 2,000 people.
That's bad news for Americans.
According to a Treasury Department website, two of the three Cybertruck models currently offered would qualify for tax credits.
Tariffs and sugar subsidies have propped up overvalued land needed to fix the environmental damage.
The former South Carolina governor can't decide whether she likes corporate subsidies or opposes them on principle.
Over the last several years, they have worked nonstop to ease the tax burden of their high-income constituents.
Presidential administrations from both parties keep trying to make "place-based" economic development work.
At least a dozen states have beefed up targeted incentives to coincide with handouts from the Commerce Department.
One company is betting that it can run a commercially viable passenger rail service without massive federal subsidies.
Joe Biden is making an $80 billion bet that's doomed to fail.
The GOP presidential candidate also definitively said climate change is real.
Thankfully, you don't need fancy dining halls or a college degree to have a good life or get a good job.
The company blames much of its problems on the Teamsters trucking union's "intransigence," while the Teamsters say Yellow is delinquent on benefit payments.
Reason reported last month that with less than two years left on its loan, Yellow Corporation owed more than it originally borrowed and had repaid only $230 in principal.
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company cites regulatory costs and a lack of skilled workers as specific impediments. Biden and Congress can fix those without giving out billions of taxpayer dollars.
Joe Biden's big economic speech is a poor attempt at a branding exercise.
The hard lesson that free markets are better than state control may have to be relearned.
One place where environmentalists and libertarians are on the same page
Plus: did the editors sing Happy Birthday to Adam Smith?
Plus: did the editors sing Happy Birthday to Adam Smith?
The Democratic president is supercharging former president Trump's failed approach to domestic manufacturing.
During the pandemic, the U.S. mortgage market avoided collapse without any bailouts. Here's how.
When politicians manipulate industry, the public pays the price.
Plus: The editors puzzle over Donald Trump’s latest list describing his vision for America.
The basics of middle-class life are too expensive. But more subsidies won't help.
If Congress wants to spend taxpayer money on child care services, it should pass a bill authorizing that.
The warning signs are flashing "don't be like China."
Ending subsidies can help cut emissions and energy costs.
While campaigning for the midterm election, the president is promoting a disastrous and expensive form of economic protectionism.
Plus: Reason livestream on right-wing populism, the government can't solve the fentanyl crisis, and more...
Brayton Point was a coal-fired plant that tried to clean up its act. Protesters and politicians demanded its closure. A new offshore wind project won't be sufficient to replace it.
The bank's new domestic financing program is a poorly defined, unnecessary exercise that will throw taxpayer money at projects the private capital markets have deemed too risky.
The government has learned nothing about affordable housing in the 50 years since Pruitt-Igoe came toppling down.
These schools are already extremely accessible to low-income students. Don’t mess with their flexibility.
Track and field equipment and salaries for custodians are among the goods and services school districts purchased with COVID-19 relief money. Figuring out what they did with the rest of it remains difficult.
Thirty-five years after Bill Bennett sounded the alarm about student loan defaults, we still haven't learned a damn thing.
A grant revoked under President Donald Trump will be returned.
This is a subsidy for the schools, not the students.
We already know how to affordably expand connectivity; government-run networks ain’t it.
More federal spending won’t make housing more accessible as long as regulations and zoning drive up prices.
Say hello to "Cash for Clunkers 2.0."
State officials gleefully line their own pockets at taxpayers' expense.