A recent Congressional Budget Office report predicts a significant increase in immigration that could boost federal revenue by nearly $1 trillion over the next decade. A new brief by Bill King, John W. Diamond, and Joyce Beebe examines the federal budget benefits and potential state and local financial strains, while urging policymakers to focus on long-term economic growth and meaningful measures for standards of living beyond short-term GDP gains.
Bill King, John W. Diamond, Joyce BeebeSeptember 19, 2024
Last year, 17% of U.S. households with children faced food insecurity — a hunger gap that directly impacts children’s development and later-life opportunities. Universal free school meals are a simple and effective solution, write Rachel T. Kimbro and Simon E. Fern.
In the U.S., Christians tend to vote, and they tend to vote Republican. Michael Emerson explores the links between religion, race, and politics and what they could mean for Election Day.
With high entrepreneurship and startup rates, Latino immigrants are key contributors to U.S. economic development. In a new report for the Center for the U.S and Mexico, nonresident fellow Elizabeth Salamanca explains how their skills and expertise are integral to innovative startups that often evolve into binational businesses, operating in both the U.S. and Mexico.
How do faith, race, and politics intersect? Michael O. Emerson joined the Baker Briefing podcast to explore the role of race in American Christianity and what it means for public policy.
Michael O. Emerson, David M. SatterfieldSeptember 3, 2024
While some scholars claim freeways were designed to adversely impact neighborhoods of color, fellow Edward M. Emmett argues this oversimplifies the issue. In this research paper, he explores the history of Houston’s freeways to uncover a range of factors at play.
Despite innovations in information and communication technologies, Mexico has experienced slow productivity and GDP growth over recent decades. For insights into why the country’s economic progress has been limited, read nonresident scholar James Gerber’s new research paper for the Center for the U.S. and Mexico.
Ken Medlock offers a brief history of the Center for Energy Studies and an overview of its data-driven, cross-cutting research on the forces propelling energy market evolution.
The link from resource endowment to profitability is intimately tied to the full supply chain. In the U.S., concern about market concentration in China is motivating policy intervention to reorient supply chains in the interest of energy and national security. This is not without its obstacles, however. Michelle Michot Foss discusses how new U.S. laws intersect with the challenges of aligning materials supply chains with green energy goals amid political and economic pressures.
Ken Medlock highlights the importance of supply chains and legacy infrastructures for the success of new technologies and stresses the role of coordination along supply chains to drive value. A holistic awareness of economics, politics, regulation, and resource scarcity is critical for developing market structures that support investment for effective decarbonization.