Publications
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May 4, 2026|Blogs
States Should Learn From Each Other to Close Cybersecurity Gaps
Cyberattacks are rising across state and local governments, and the blog recommends that all states adopt coordinated strategies, clear standards, and stronger cyber capabilities to close security gaps and improve resilience.
May 4, 2026|Reports & Briefings
US Technology Companies Should Keep Operating in China
When U.S. technology companies compete in China, they capture revenue, learn technologies and trends from a critical market, and extend U.S.-built ecosystems. Forcing them out of China would weaken U.S. global competitiveness and give Chinese firms greater scale to shape technology ecosystems.
May 4, 2026|Blogs
Fact of the Week: China Is the Source of 30 Percent of New Innovative Drugs Produced Globally
In 2024, researchers and scientists in China were responsible for developing more than 1,250 new drugs, more than the EU and just slightly less than the United States, which developed 1,440. In total, China developed 30 percent of the world's new innovative drugs.
May 1, 2026|Blogs
E-Commerce Is Fighting Retail Crime—Governments Should Do More
Organized retail crime is increasingly exploiting e-commerce platforms, and while companies like Amazon and eBay are investing in detection and transparency, governments must strengthen law enforcement and coordination to effectively combat these organized criminal networks.
May 1, 2026|Testimonies & Filings
Comments to the European Commission Regarding Proposed Measures for Google Search Data Sharing
ITIF submits that the Commission’s proposed measures go well beyond what should be necessary for Google to comply with the DMA and will harm consumers and chill innovation in search.
April 30, 2026|Blogs
Creative Destruction With Compassionate Support, or a Null Set?
Creative destruction drives growth but displaces workers. Governments shouldn’t stop it; they should support workers through the transition. The Nordic model shows it’s possible.
April 30, 2026|Op-Eds & Contributed Articles
China Blocks Tech Acquisitions to Weaken America. The US Shouldn’t Follow Suit.
It is easy to be frustrated with the Chinese government and its use of merger and acquisition controls to limit the competitive advantage of American tech firms. But many policymakers in the West have enabled China’s success by weaponizing antitrust and competition laws to kill pro-competitive deals by Big Tech firms.
April 29, 2026|Reports & Briefings
How to Align Incentives to Accelerate Spectrum Productivity
Timing mismatches hamper otherwise mutually beneficial spectrum reallocation processes. Dominant assurance contracts can resolve these mismatches and enhance the overall productivity of spectrum resources.
April 29, 2026|Blogs
States Are Targeting the Wrong Problem in Grocery Pricing
Lawmakers risk misregulating grocery prices by targeting dynamic and algorithmic pricing tools, and should instead focus on enforcing existing laws against clearly defined deceptive practices.
April 29, 2026|Blogs
Don’t Push STEM Talent Out: The Case Against Science Agency Budget Cuts
An increasing share of U.S. doctoral degrees are awarded in STEM fields, and many of these graduates pursue positions that depend heavily on federal research funding. Yet the Trump administration has proposed significant cuts to key science agencies in its FY 2027 budget request.
