Publications
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December 8, 2025|Blogs
Europe Writes the Rules and the World Pays the Price
The EU’s digital rulebook, often praised as global leadership, instead forces many non-EU countries into costly regulatory alignment that stifles local innovation and entrenches global digital inequality, underscoring the need for more flexible, locally tailored frameworks.
December 8, 2025|Reports & Briefings
Still Insignificant: An Update on Concentration in the US Economy
Despite evidence to the contrary, a persistent narrative during the past two administrations has been that corporate power is getting increasingly concentrated, ergo antitrust breakups are warranted. But the latest Census Bureau data once again puts the lie to that argument.
December 8, 2025|Blogs
Fact of the Week: Public R&D Investment in Brazil Increased National Agricultural Productivity by 110 Percent
From 1970 to the present, agricultural research conducted by a public research foundation in Brazil has increased Brazilian agricultural productivity by 110 percent.
December 5, 2025|Blogs
Getting Korea's Narrative Right: AGI Is a Productivity Shock, Not a Justification for Public Compute
Some Korean commentary misreads AGI as a threat to labor and a rationale for public compute. In reality, AGI is better understood as a productivity shock that expands economic output. Resetting the narrative is essential for Korea to pursue policies that strengthen private-sector capacity, support AI diffusion, and enhance innovation.
December 4, 2025|Op-Eds & Contributed Articles
Banning AI Superintelligence Would Be a Historic Mistake
In an op-ed for The Dispatch, Daniel Castro argues that banning superintelligent AI is misguided because it’s based on speculation, would undermine U.S. innovation and security, and should be replaced with strong oversight—not restrictions on advancing knowledge.
December 4, 2025|Testimonies & Filings
Comments to European Commission Regarding Joint Guidelines on the Interplay Between DMA and GDPR
Unfortunately, however complementary the objectives of protecting consumer privacy and promoting competition may be at a high level, complying with several key DMA prohibitions will undermine—not enhance—the privacy goals of the GDPR.
December 4, 2025|Blogs
Innovation Doesn’t Equal Productivity, and Patents Don’t Always Represent Innovation
Economists’ reliance on R&D and patent metrics distorts our understanding of productivity growth. Time to correct the conclusion: Here’s why these proxies fail to capture the forces that do drive it.
December 3, 2025|Blogs
Reducing Trade Friction Can Strengthen the U.S.–India Technology Partnership
Lowering tariffs with India would reinforce one of America’s most important emerging technology partnerships. Completing negotiations and sustaining investment would strengthen supply chains and enhance U.S. economic and strategic competitiveness.
December 3, 2025|Testimonies & Filings
Comments to the FCC Regarding Transfer of Spectrum Licenses Held by EchoStar to AT&T and SpaceX
Rather than heed calls to erect more transaction costs in secondary spectrum markets, the Commission should continue down the path of enabling productivity-enhancing spectrum deals without cumbersome Commission processes or conditions.
December 2, 2025|Blogs
Toward a Truly “America First” Antitrust: Responding to Commissioner Meador
The dominance of antitrust’s old order on the right is probably over, and the battle for the soul of a conservative or “America First” antitrust has begun.
