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"Contains papers prepared for an American Enterprise Institute conference ... held March 20 to 23, 1987"--Page 236.
This volume explores the environmental impact of farm policies on farm programmes and environmental goals, along with the environmental consequences of alternatives to the current farm programmes.
This essay is the lecture delivered by James Q. Wilson at the annual dinner of the American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research in Washington, DC, on 4th December 1997.
Policy analysts and scholars in China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and the United States discuss the major issues arising in the aftermath of the explosive events in China in 1989. Contributors include Arthur Hummel, the former U.S. ambassador to the People's Republic of China, and Ding Mou-Shih, the representative of the Coordination Council for North American Affairs to the United States.
Envisioned as a symbol of President Clinton's commitment to social change, the Vaccines for Children Program was designed to be a single-payer system for childhood vaccines, covering everyone up to the age of eighteen, but today the program is in disarray. It is an entitlement of nearly $1 billion a year, and in the words of Senator Dale Bumpers, it "will not immunize one additional kid."
This witty, accessible volume offers personal observations and discourses about the state of the economy, the budget and taxes, history, and politics.
This text outlines the history of attempts to supervise the supply of specialist providers, revealing the false premises of the Clinton health plan and the likely hazards of its consequences.
Offers an insider's perspective on the bureaucratic structure of governmental institutions that shape economic policy, and the incentives and limitations of the individuals who head them.
This study examines how hospitals have evolved since 1975.
News reports reveal public dissatisfaction with government and pessimism about American economic prospect; many polls support these conclusions. The authors inspect survey data on attitudes towards government, confidence in institutions, the American dream, and personal prospects and expectations.