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Cities should forget sport-subsidy hype and focus on basics

Cities should forget sport-subsidy hype and focus on basics By D. Dowd Muska   |  August 8, 2025 Three years to go. The opening ceremony for the Games of the XXXIV Olympiad is scheduled for July 14, 2028. And the men and women of the organizing committee are working feverishly ...
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Despite ‘pro-housing’ programs, California’s crisis getting worse

Cities including Spokane, Tulsa and Memphis support pre-approved designs to streamline small-scale builds, similar to what California has sought to promote with its Pro-housing Designation Program (PDP). But many question why California’s land entitlement process—getting the zoning, use and building design approval from local governments to comply with state mandates—often ...
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The Gordon Chang Report–China is Making the World Food-Insecure

READ THE PDF China Is Making the World Food-Insecure Of all the countries in the world, only one produces all the food it needs: South America’s Guyana.[1] Does food self-sufficiency matter anymore? In a peaceful and stable period, perhaps not, because the trade in foodstuffs this century led to rising ...
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Read the latest on California's rising gas prices

California Goes Groucho On Gasoline

What did California officials think was going to happen when they decided it was a dazzlingly brilliant idea to hound the oil industry out of the state? That magic would take over and there would be no consequences for their rash decisions? Apparently, they weren’t thinking at all, because, according to reports, the California Energy ...
Blog

The fast food minimum wage hike continues to kill jobs

Governor Newsom Protests Too Much – the Minimum Wage Increase Did Destroy Jobs

As the New York Post reported, Newsom’s deputy director of communications Tara Gallegos disputed the findings of the piece, pointing out to Fox News Digital that the research paper was linked to the Hoover Institution, a public policy think tank she claimed has published “false or misleading information” about California’s ...
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Read the latest from PRI's Free Cities Center

Why are urbanites more likely to embrace zero-sum thinking?

The well-worn stereotypes of urban sophisticates versus country bumpkins took a hit in July when an up-and-coming French economist explained her latest findings in The Economist, a publication with more than 1.2 million subscribers globally and significant influence with policymakers in the English-speaking world. “Some groups are more likely than others to see the world ...
Blog

Teacher shortages, layoffs hit big cities and rural areas hardest

Teacher shortages, layoffs hit big cities and rural areas hardest​ by John Seiler | July 31, 2025 Even $24,764 average spending per student can’t stop the shortage of teachers in California. The number comes from Gov. Gavin Newsom’s budget proposal for fiscal year 2025-26, which began on July 1. For ...
Blog

Read part 3 of a series on drug pricing

Regulations, Not Anticompetitive Actions, Are Obstructing Drug Competition

The flaws driving up costs across the broader health care landscape are also driving up the costs for innovative drugs. After all, pharmaceuticals are an integral component used in combination with the broader healthcare system. As a result, spending on medicines both influences and is influenced by the spending on ...
Blog

California’s flawed budgeting causes routine deficits

For years analysts have warned that California’s overreliance on a roller-coaster stock market destabilizes California’s budget. During bull markets, revenues surge and Sacramento politicians commit to an unaffordable level of spending that only becomes evident when revenues inevitably crash. Rather than admitting that the spending was never affordable, the political ...
Agriculture

Immigration policy reform, not Medicaid recipients, is the answer to our workforce problem

Some harvests have already started across the country despite farms and ranches facing labor shortages. Where will workers come from to ensure crops don’t go unharvested? U.S. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins recently made a suggestion. In a news conference Rollins said, “So, no amnesty under any circumstances, mass deportations continue, ...
Blog

Cities should forget sport-subsidy hype and focus on basics

Cities should forget sport-subsidy hype and focus on basics By D. Dowd Muska   |  August 8, 2025 Three years to go. The opening ceremony for the Games of the XXXIV Olympiad is scheduled for July 14, 2028. And the men and women of the organizing committee are working feverishly ...
Blog

Despite ‘pro-housing’ programs, California’s crisis getting worse

Cities including Spokane, Tulsa and Memphis support pre-approved designs to streamline small-scale builds, similar to what California has sought to promote with its Pro-housing Designation Program (PDP). But many question why California’s land entitlement process—getting the zoning, use and building design approval from local governments to comply with state mandates—often ...
Blog

The Gordon Chang Report–China is Making the World Food-Insecure

READ THE PDF China Is Making the World Food-Insecure Of all the countries in the world, only one produces all the food it needs: South America’s Guyana.[1] Does food self-sufficiency matter anymore? In a peaceful and stable period, perhaps not, because the trade in foodstuffs this century led to rising ...
Blog

Read the latest on California's rising gas prices

California Goes Groucho On Gasoline

What did California officials think was going to happen when they decided it was a dazzlingly brilliant idea to hound the oil industry out of the state? That magic would take over and there would be no consequences for their rash decisions? Apparently, they weren’t thinking at all, because, according to reports, the California Energy ...
Blog

The fast food minimum wage hike continues to kill jobs

Governor Newsom Protests Too Much – the Minimum Wage Increase Did Destroy Jobs

As the New York Post reported, Newsom’s deputy director of communications Tara Gallegos disputed the findings of the piece, pointing out to Fox News Digital that the research paper was linked to the Hoover Institution, a public policy think tank she claimed has published “false or misleading information” about California’s ...
Blog

Read the latest from PRI's Free Cities Center

Why are urbanites more likely to embrace zero-sum thinking?

The well-worn stereotypes of urban sophisticates versus country bumpkins took a hit in July when an up-and-coming French economist explained her latest findings in The Economist, a publication with more than 1.2 million subscribers globally and significant influence with policymakers in the English-speaking world. “Some groups are more likely than others to see the world ...
Blog

Teacher shortages, layoffs hit big cities and rural areas hardest

Teacher shortages, layoffs hit big cities and rural areas hardest​ by John Seiler | July 31, 2025 Even $24,764 average spending per student can’t stop the shortage of teachers in California. The number comes from Gov. Gavin Newsom’s budget proposal for fiscal year 2025-26, which began on July 1. For ...
Blog

Read part 3 of a series on drug pricing

Regulations, Not Anticompetitive Actions, Are Obstructing Drug Competition

The flaws driving up costs across the broader health care landscape are also driving up the costs for innovative drugs. After all, pharmaceuticals are an integral component used in combination with the broader healthcare system. As a result, spending on medicines both influences and is influenced by the spending on ...
Blog

California’s flawed budgeting causes routine deficits

For years analysts have warned that California’s overreliance on a roller-coaster stock market destabilizes California’s budget. During bull markets, revenues surge and Sacramento politicians commit to an unaffordable level of spending that only becomes evident when revenues inevitably crash. Rather than admitting that the spending was never affordable, the political ...
Agriculture

Immigration policy reform, not Medicaid recipients, is the answer to our workforce problem

Some harvests have already started across the country despite farms and ranches facing labor shortages. Where will workers come from to ensure crops don’t go unharvested? U.S. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins recently made a suggestion. In a news conference Rollins said, “So, no amnesty under any circumstances, mass deportations continue, ...
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