Publications
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March 18, 2026|Reports & Briefings
Lessons From Europe’s Loss of Biopharma Leadership, and Its Attempts to Recover
Europe once led the world in biopharmaceutical innovation, but it lost ground after adopting policies that weakened incentives for R&D and innovation. America must learn from Europe’s experience to preserve its own biopharma leadership and the related economic benefits and access to the most innovative drugs.
March 17, 2026|Podcasts
Creative Discussion Podcast: Greg Werden on the DOJ, Merger Guidelines and the Evolving Role of Economists
Joseph V. Coniglio hosts the third episode of a new antitrust speaker series and interviews longtime antitrust scholar and retired DOJ economist Greg Werden. They discuss Werden’s path from chemistry to economics and his four-decade career at DOJ, discussing both constants and changes in antitrust enforcement.
March 17, 2026|Testimonies & Filings
Testimony to the House Ways and Means Trade Subcommittee Regarding Advancing America’s Interest at the WTO’s 14th Ministerial Conference
The United States should use MC14 to push for a WTO that actively promotes fair market competition—not one that passively accepts non-market policies, overcapacity, and coercive distortions that are undermining the global trading system.
March 17, 2026|Blogs
Chairman Carr’s Legal Theory of Content Regulation Is More Developed, but Still Wrong
Chairman Carr is refining his legal case for regulating broadcast content through license renewals, but even this more sophisticated approach runs headlong into serious First Amendment problems.
March 16, 2026|Blogs
UBI: Unbelievably Bad Idea
Rather than proposing universal basic income as the solution to robots supposedly taking all our jobs, the task should be to improve federal worker adjustment assistance programs.
March 16, 2026|Reports & Briefings
Leveraging Innovation to Improve Alzheimer’s Diagnosis and Care in Rural America
Rural communities face structural barriers to diagnosing Alzheimer’s early, which increases burdens on patients and caregivers while raising health-care costs. Policymakers should address the problem by expanding provider training and accelerating scalable diagnostic technologies.
March 15, 2026|Op-Eds & Contributed Articles
Will Artificial Intelligence Turn Out to Be a Dream Killer?
Despite what the apostles of artificial general intelligence warn, there is no reason to think AGI will get here anytime soon, if ever.
March 14, 2026|Op-Eds & Contributed Articles
Korea’s Real Jobs Problem Isn’t AI
Seventy percent of young Koreans hold university degrees. Only 14 percent of jobs are in large firms. The most immediate concern is not jobs disappearing due to AI, but that there are too few high-quality jobs in the first place.
March 13, 2026|Reports & Briefings
How Rules for Publicly Available Data Are Shaping the Future of AI
To protect individuals while preserving the open information ecosystem that supports innovation, policymakers should focus on outputs rather than training inputs, encourage transparency norms for autonomous AI agents, and create a safe harbor for responsible use of publicly available data.
March 11, 2026|Blogs
Fact of the Week: Access to High-Speed Internet in Turkey Increased Formal Employment and Wages for Women
A study of a 2010s expansion of high-speed broadband across Turkey found that that access to high-speed Internet increased formal employment and wages, with the greatest effects concentrated in telework-possible positions and among women.
