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Returning Prosperity to America with Art Laffer
11.11.2010 6:00:00 PM
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The Canadian Century: moving out of america’s shadow
6.24.2010 5:45:00 PM
Elephant & Castle Pub and Restaurant, 424 Clay Street, San ... More

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6.17.2010 6:30:00 PM

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Publication Archive Archive
Impact - July 2008
PRI Impact
7.31.2008

PRI Ideas in Action - July 2008
Policy Update and Monthly Impact Report
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Demography Is Not Destiny: Florida Schools California
Capital Ideas
By: Vicki E. Murray, Ph.D
7.30.2008

Today California ranks 48th in basic reading and math skills. A challenging student population is a popular scapegoat, especially Hispanic students.” By this “logic,” Hispanic populations are growing rapidly, Hispanic students under-perform, therefore southwestern states are doomed. But states like Florida prove demography is not destiny.
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Unbalanced Billing In California Hospitals: Is This A Problem the State Can Solve By Getting Out of the Way?
Capital Ideas
By: John R. Graham
7.23.2008

Imagine if you bought an airline ticket to fly from San Francisco to Chicago and after the flight you received an extra bill from the co-pilot for what he claims is a fair price for his services. He is unsatisfied with the airline's pay, and would like you and your fellow passengers to make up the difference.
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The High Price of Failure in California: How Inadequate Education Costs Schools, Students, and Society
PRI Education Study
By: Vicki E. Murray, Ph.D
7.21.2008

More than a decade ago, in 1996, the California State University (CSU) trustees adopted a policy to reduce the need for remediation to no more than 10 percent of incoming freshmen by 2007. Results to date are not encouraging.

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California Focus: Cautionary tale of 2 Bustamantes
Op-Ed
By: K. Lloyd Billingsley
7.17.2008

California has recently cemented its reputation as the most politically correct state in the nation, and possibly the most humorless. Those with doubts on that score might compare the cases of Carlos Bustamante and Cruz Bustamante.
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The Costs of California’s “Promote Now, Pay Later” Plan
Capital Ideas
By: Vicki E. Murray, Ph.D
7.16.2008

SACRAMENTO—Last month students across California graduated from high school eager to start college in the fall. How many will wind up in remedial classes repeating work they should have already mastered? The numbers—and the price tag—are probably a lot more than you think.
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Be Careful What You Wish For: Hardship of high gasoline prices previews the impact of emission controls
Environmental Notes
By: Amy Kaleita, Ph.D
7.15.2008

In 2006, at the end of his movie An Inconvenient Truth, Al Gore offered a number of things that the average person could do to decrease their impact on global climate change. They could ride a bike or take mass transit, the former vice-president advised. They could drive a fuel-efficient car, and they could drive less. Two years later, people are evidently making those choices in large numbers. But it’s not because of Mr. Gore, or Sheryl Crow, or Leonardo DiCaprio. It’s because of rising gas prices.
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Blueprint for Education Reform Leaves out Choice
Capital Ideas
By: Ian Randolph
7.9.2008

Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger declared 2008 “The Year of Education Reform,” and more than halfway through the year, California parents continue to wait for promised relief. If the governor’s blueprint for reform is any indication, they may be waiting for a long time.
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The Doubt of the Benefit: Why State Benefit Mandates are a Poor Prescription for Health Insurance
Health Policy Prescription
By: John R. Graham
7.8.2008

A benefit mandate is a state law that commands a health plan to pay for, or at least offer, a specified treatment or type of provider, removing the benefit from negotiation between beneficiaries and health plans. For example, a mandate may require a health plan to cover treatment of alcoholism, or chiropractic services.
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Turning POTS into PANS: California Regulators Slam the Phone on Price Controls
Capital Ideas
By: Daniel R. Ballon, Ph.D
7.2.2008

The California Public Utilities Commission on Tuesday proposed relaxing 13-year old price caps on basic phone service. Yielding to the demands of public interest groups, regulators currently force telecommunications companies to offer the cheapest basic rates in the nation. But if artificially low prices are necessary to protect consumer welfare, why are consumers abandoning these plans in droves?
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Ban the Man?
Contrarian
By: Sally C. Pipes
7.1.2008

Next month the world’s athletes gather in Beijing, what we used to call Peking, for the XXIX Olympics, this iteration bearing the slogan “One World, One Dream.” One outstanding American athlete had a dream to compete in these Olympics, but will not be doing so. It’s not because of drugs, steroids, or anything like that. Rather, it’s because he is a man.
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From Heart Transplants to Hairpieces: The Questionable Benefits of State Benefit Mandates for Health Insurance
PRI Study
By: John R. Graham
7.1.2008

This paper reviews 28 original actuarial and econometric articles that attempt to estimate the cost of benefit mandates, as well as others that summarize the literature on mandates during the last two decades of their development. 
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