Thursday, December 30, 2010
China's Carrier-Killer Missile Now Operational
"If the report is accurate, America's ability to project power near China, e.g., defend Taiwan, could be greatly diminished, absent effective counter-measures that could thwart such a missile."
Now, the Washington Times is reporting that the DF-21 is operational, though not yet thoroughly tested. The Times quotes an American Admiral stating that China has deployed the missile, which apparently has not been tested on sea-based targets. Given the missile's range, the Chinese could, for instance, threaten American vessels coming to the aid of Taiwan or South Korea. (Note in this connection that the F-18 Superhornet, the main offensive weapon deployed from carriers, has a combat radius of between 400 and 450 miles. Hence, even carriers deployed west of Taiwan would be vulnerable to DF-21 attack.) (However, the F-35 will have a combat radius closer to 600 miles, without refueling.)
As reported in this blog's initial post on the subject, this version of the DF-21 would rely upon satellites, over the horizon radar, and unmanned aerial vehicles to track its targets -- which themselves travel over 30 miles per hour --- and guide the missile to its destination. This particular version of the DF-21 carries a conventional warhead, so near misses will be misses.
There are, it should be noted, various counter-measures the U.S. could take to blunt the relevance of the DF-21. For instance, the RIM-161 Standard Missile 3, deployed on Aegis-class cruisers, has an anti-ballistic missile capability and can presumably shoot down the DF-21. Indeed, as previously discussed on this blog, the United States deployed such interceptors to defend Hawaii against a threatened North Korea missile "test" during 2009. Moreover, the same missile can destroy low-orbit satellites; in 2008 a Standard 3 launched from the USS Lake Erie destroyed a malfunctioning American satellite at an altitude of 130 miles. Presumably the same missile could destroy satellites employed to help guide the DF-21 to its intended target.
Monday, December 27, 2010
If Nuclear Power Works for the Chinese Navy . . . . .
According to Richardson, China may take aggressive steps (what he calls "strong arm tactics") backed by a strengthened military, to assure itself of adequate supplies of oil and natural gas --- both by keeping sea lanes open and locating and exploiting supplies of oil and gas in waters also claimed by other nations. (At the same time, as Richardson notes, China is also moving to exploit offshore sources of oil and gas in undisputed Chinese waters.) Richardson also notes that China could choose a more cooperative approach to meeting its vast and rapidly increasing needs for oil and natural gas.
There is, of course, another way for China to deal with it growing dependence on imported oil and gas. That is, the country could follow the lead of the United States and other nations that have moved more aggressively to encourage carbon free energy production. As previously reported on this Blog, China is the world's largest emitter of greenhouse cases, having passed the United States several years ago, largely due to its coal-intensive energy strategy. Indeed, according to one source, the combined emissions of three Chinese electricity companies exceed those of Britain, and another source predicts that China will nearly triple its coal-fired electricity generating capacity and use 135 percent more coal than the United States by 2030. At the same time, China's GDP is currently less than one half that of the United States, with the result that China employs more than twice as much carbon per unit of output than the United States, for instance.
What could China do? Of course wind power and solar power are options. However, China might also take a hint from its own Navy, which boasts ten nuclear-powered submarines, one of which is pictured above. While China is rapidly modernizing its own navy, and, according to some reports, planning to deploy a nuclear-powered aircraft carrier by 2020, the nation truly lags behind several other nations when it comes to non-military nuclear power. Indeed, according to one source, China ranks 9th in the world in nuclear power generation, behind Ukraine, Canada and South Korea, to name a few. Indeed, while China produces more output than France, for instance, France generates six times more electricity with nuclear power than does China. (The United States generates more than 12 times more electricty with nuclear power than does China.) According to the U.S. Energy Information Agency, China's coal-fired power plants had just under 496 gigawatts of generating capacity in 2007. That's less than the combined nuclear generating capacity of France (418 gigawatts) and Canada (84 gigawatts) in 2008.
If China is truly serious about moving to a clean energy economy, it should get with the (nuclear) program.
Sunday, December 26, 2010
Has George Will Tripped on Federalism?
Wednesday, December 22, 2010
The Senate Stands for Federalism
As the Daily Press puts it:
"From California to Massachusetts, localities are raising taxes, borrowing money, cutting services and eyeing bankruptcy to pay for the police and fire union contracts that have driven up costs, in some cases to the point where the average firefighter costs $170,000 a year in pay and benefits."
"Whatever object of government is confined in its operations and effects, within the bounds of a particular state, should be considered as belonging to the government of that state; whatever object of government extends, in its operation or effects, beyond the bounds of a particular state, should be considered as belonging to the government of the United States."
Indeed, the Daily Press put this point in Constitutional terms.
The Daily Press is plainly referring to the 10th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which provides:
"The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people."
Because the Constitution does not authorize Congress to determine the working conditions of state and local employees, the argument goes, the 10th Amendment reserves such issues to individual states.
Kudos to Senator Mark Warner for displaying such sensitivity to federalism concerns in this case and protecting the sovereignty of Virginia against such unjustified intrusion into the state's authority.
Monday, December 20, 2010
Erroneous and Tautological Arguments for The Coercive Health Insurance Mandate
Monday, December 13, 2010
The Constitution Vindicated (so far).
Judge Henry Hudson of the Eastern District of Virginia has struck down a portion of the recent Health Care Reform Act that would have required individuals to purchase over-priced health insurance. His opinion is here.
In so doing, Judge Hudson rejected the administration's claim that Congress may coercively compel all individuals to purchase health insurance because: (1) such individuals will, at some unspecified time in the future, need medical care, with the result that failure to purchase such insurance now will have an impact of some sort on the health care market and (2) failure by some individuals to purchase health insurance will undermine Congress's effort to pool risks, by allowing some individuals to avoid participating in the risk pool and subsidzing individuals who pose higher risks, by paying premiums higher than those that are actuarially justified. (Apparently the first argument by the United States assumes that individuals who decline to purchase health insurance now will not have such insurance when they need medical care in the future or will not be able to pay for such care at that time "out of pocket."). It should also be noted that, actuarial considerations to one side, the insurance Congress hopes to force individuals to purchase will be over-priced, because Congress failed to take numerous steps that would have lowered the cost of medical care and also lowered the price of insurance. Such steps would have included preempting state certificate of need laws, allowing additional immigration of physicians, and repealing the McCarran-Ferguson Act, thereby reinstating the Federal ban on collusion between health insurance providers and eliminating otherwise unconstitutional state-created barriers to entry by out-of-state health insurance providers. Put another way, by failing to enact other, perfectly vaild federal legislation, Congress has itself helped to create the very economic conditions that supposedly justify additional (and unconstitutional) legislation.
According to Judge Hudson:
"This broad definition of the economic activity subject to congressional regulation lacks logical limitation and is unsupported by commerce clause jurisprudence." (See page 23).
and:
"Of course, the same reasoning [by the United States] could apply to transportation, housing or nutritional decisions." (See page 23).
and:
"Neither the Supreme Court nor any federal circuit court of appeals has extended commerce clause powers to compell an individual to involuntarily enter the stream of commerce by purchasing a commodity in the private market." (See page 24).
In other words, if courts accept the rationale for federal intervention offered by the government here, Congress would also have to power to compel individuals to purchase and eat more nutritional foods, to take vitamins, to purchase a treadmill and use it three times a week, and to get more sleep, all because an individual's failure to engage in such activities would have an impact on their future health care expenditures and thus, for this reason alone, be appropriate objects of Congressional regulation. As Judge Hudson rightly noted, no American appellate court has ever sustained national legislation on such a theory. Doing so would even further erode the boundaries that constrain what the founders and ratifiers meant to be a national government of limited powers.
As Judge Hudson himself put it:
"The unchecked expansion of Congressional Power to the limits [necessary to sustain the coverage mandate] would invite unbridled exercise of federal police powers.” (See page 37).
Judge Hudson also rejected the government's claim that the fine imposed for non-compliance with the mandate to purchase insurance was merely a revenue-raising tax, and not a penalty. If the fine is a tax, then it would be constitutional so long as it furthers the general welfare. According to Judge Hudson, "the notion that the generation of revenue was a significant legislative objective was a transparent afterthought." (See page 32). Moreover, he concluded that "the use of the term 'tax' appears to be a tactic to achieve enlarged regulatory license." (See page 33). Finally, after a careful review of the statute, he concluded that numerous features of the Act itself confirm that, unlike the actual taxes explicitly imposed by the law, the penalty imposed for non-compliance is not a tax. (See pages 33-36). In other words, Congress and the President now realize that the coercive mandate exceeded Congress's power under the Commerce Clause and have thus sought to recharacterize what had been conceived of as a penalty, inducing purchase of insurance, as a tax.
Of course, the United States will appeal Judge Hudson's ruling to the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals and then, if necessary, to the U.S. Supreme Court. Hopefully the appellate judges who hear the case will keep in mind the following excerpt from the majority opinion of Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes (pictured above), joined by, inter alia, Justice Brandeis, in Schechter Poultry v. United States, 295 U.S. 495 (1935).
"It is not the province of the Court to consider the economic advantages or disadvantage of such a centralized system. It is sufficient to say that the Federal Constitution does not provide for it. Our growth and development have called for wide use of the commerce power of the federal government in its control over the expanded activities of interstate commerce, and in protecting that commerce from burdens, interferences, and conspiracies to restrain and monopolize it. But the authority of the federal government may not be pushed to such an extreme as to destroy the distinction, which the commerce clause itself establishes, between commerce "among the several States" and the internal concerns of a State."
Wednesday, November 24, 2010
President Lincoln's 1863 Thanksgiving Proclamation
By the President of the United States of America.
A Proclamation.
The year that is drawing towards its close, has been filled with the blessings of fruitful fields and healthful skies. To these bounties, which are so constantly enjoyed that we are prone to forget the source from which they come, others have been added, which are of so extraordinary a nature, that they cannot fail to penetrate and soften even the heart which is habitually insensible to the ever watchful providence of Almighty God. In the midst of a civil war of unequaled magnitude and severity, which has sometimes seemed to foreign States to invite and to provoke their aggression, peace has been preserved with all nations, order has been maintained, the laws have been respected and obeyed, and harmony has prevailed everywhere except in the theatre of military conflict; while that theatre has been greatly contracted by the advancing armies and navies of the Union. Needful diversions of wealth and of strength from the fields of peaceful industry to the national defence, have not arrested the plough, the shuttle or the ship; the axe has enlarged the borders of our settlements, and the mines, as well of iron and coal as of the precious metals, have yielded even more abundantly than heretofore. Population has steadily increased, notwithstanding the waste that has been made in the camp, the siege and the battle-field; and the country, rejoicing in the consciousness of augmented strength and vigor, is permitted to expect continuance of years with large increase of freedom.
No human counsel hath devised nor hath any mortal hand worked out these great things. They are the gracious gifts of the Most High God, who, while dealing with us in anger for our sins, hath nevertheless remembered mercy. It has seemed to me fit and proper that they should be solemnly, reverently and gratefully acknowledged as with one heart and one voice by the whole American People.
I do therefore invite my fellow citizens in every part of the United States, and also those who are at sea and those who are sojourning in foreign lands, to set apart and observe the last Thursday of November next, as a day of Thanksgiving and Praise to our beneficent Father who dwelleth in the Heavens. And I recommend to them that while offering up the ascriptions justly due to Him for such singular deliverances and blessings, they do also, with humble penitence for our national perverseness and disobedience, commend to His tender care all those who have become widows, orphans, mourners or sufferers in the lamentable civil strife in which we are unavoidably engaged, and fervently implore the interposition of the Almighty Hand to heal the wounds of the nation and to restore it as soon as may be consistent with the Divine purposes to the full enjoyment of peace, harmony, tranquillity and Union.
In testimony whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and caused the Seal of the United States to be affixed.
Done at the City of Washington, this Third day of October, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and sixty-three, and of the Independence of the Unites States the Eighty-eighth.
By the President: Abraham Lincoln
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
Federalism at Work Protecting Economic Liberty
In particular the study finds that eight states are projected to gain at least one Congressional seat as a result of the 2010 Census, with the gains distributed as follows. Note that the states highlighted in red cast their electoral votes for George W. Bush in 2004, while those highlighted in blue cast their for John Kerry.
1) Texas (4 seats);
2) Florida (2 seats);
3) Georgia (1 seat);
4) Nevada (1 seat);
5) South Carolina (1 seat);
6) Utah (1 seat);
7) Washington (1 seat);
The same study finds the losses distributed thusly:
1) New York (2 seats);
2) Ohio (2 seats);
3) Illinois (1 seat);
4) Louisiana (1 seat);
5) Massachusetts (1 seat);
6) Michigan (1 seat);
7) Missouri (1 seat);
8) New Jersey (1 seat);
9) Pennsylvania (1 seat);
The study also finds that, among the states gaining seats, the average top tax rate on personal income is 2.8 percent, while the average top rate in states losing seats is just over 6 percent. Moreover, 7/8s of the states that gained seats have passed so-called "right to work laws." Such laws, authorized by the Taft-Hartley Act of 1947 (passed over President Truman's veto) prevent Unions and employers from negotiating collective bargaining agreements that require employees to join or financially support a union as a condition of employment with the employer in question. States that decline to adopt so-called "right to work laws" are known as "closed shop states."
For proponents of economic liberty, the message of the study is clear, namely, states with low taxes on high income earners and a favorable climate for business create economic opportunities and thus attract in-migration, while states with high taxes on the well-to-do and unfavorable business climates stultify economic growth and induce out-migration. These proponents would also view such migrations as part and parcel of a well-functioning system of federalism whereby states compete with one another for productive citizens and capital. Such competition, they would argue, deters states from adopting unduly onerous regulations and taxes at the behest of special interests, thereby providing a bulwark against economic oppression.
My own sense is that any "race to the bottom" characterization of these data is strained. I have no doubt that such races can occur. For instance, absent federal regulation, individual states may adopt lax anti-pollution regulation if pollution produced by industrial activity crosses state lines. (Imagine, for instance, a factory in one state that emits pollutants into a river that then flows through several other states.) In such cases, no individual state captures the full costs and benefits of the legislation it passes because of negative externalities flowing from the activity in question. In these settings, it is appropriate for the national government to step in and impose a uniform solution. When it comes to income tax rates and right to work laws, however, any supposed externalities are far less apparent. With respect to these policies, then, states seem to operate more or less as "single owners" of the costs and benefits of legislation they impose. For instance, if a state raises taxes and spends the proceeds on police protection or sanitation, the state's own citizens will benefit and property values will rise. (While other expenditures, e.g., on education, may produce some spillovers, as educated citizens might move elsewhere, the appropriate response to such spillovers would seem to be some national expenditures on education, funded via national taxation, instead of giving individual states the ability to tax and spend without consequence.) Moreover, if "closed shop" laws make industries and workers more productive, then states will adopt such laws as a means of attracting labor and capital. Finally, the size of population flows seems large enough to suggest that working class individuals, that is, individuals supposedly helped by laws allowing closed shops and high taxes on the wealthy, and not just those in the upper income brackets, are moving to low-tax, right to work states.
It should be noted that the "federalism" mentioned here is not of a constitutional dimension, at least according to the jurisprudence of the Supreme Court. Under current Supreme Court case law, Congress could, if it wished, eliminate right to work laws altogether, allowing unions and employers to negotiate "closed shop" arrangements in any state. Indeed, that was the state of the law between passage of the National Labor Relations Act in 1935 and its amendment via the Taft-Hartley Act. (Though it should be noted that, in 1935, the Supreme Court still enforced limitations on Congress's Commerce power, thereby limiting the scope of the NLRA to business of the sort that, if crippled by a strike, would place a direct burden on interstate commerce.) Moreover, Congress could, if it wished, provide citizens in high tax states with tax federal credits that compensate citizens in high tax states for the tax premium they pay compared to their fellow citizens who live in other states. (Indeed, under the current tax code, taxpayers can generally deduct any state taxes they pay from their gross income, and this rule functions as a federal subsidy of sorts for high tax states.) Still, Congress has chosen NOT to take these steps, thereby facilitating competition among the states for labor and capital, competition that deters oppresive taxation and fosters labor and other laws friendly to wealth and job creation. In so doing, Congress seems sensitive to the admonition of James Wilson, perhaps the most under-appreciated of the Founding Fathers, pictured at the top of this post. According to Wilson, describing the appropriate boundaries between state and federal power at the Pennsylvania Ratifying Convention:
"Whatever object of government is confined in its operations and effects, within the bounds of a particular state, should be considered as belonging to the government of that state; whatever object of government extends, in its operation or effects, beyond the bounds of a particular state, should be considered as belonging to the government of the United States."
Fortunately Senator Robert Taft, pictured after Wilson above, and other supporters of the Taft-Hartley Act, agreed with Wilson.
Sunday, October 24, 2010
Justice O'Connor's Prescient Support for Corporate Political Speech
Savage provides several examples of decisions congenial to conservatives that the public approves. As he puts it:
"A strong majority [of the public] favored conservative rulings that prohibited “partial-birth” abortions, upheld a homeowner’s right to have a gun, and required voters to show photo identification."
Savage also notes that the public agreed with a couple decisions more congenial to those on the left, e.g., decisions allowing EPA regulation of carbon emissions (a decision, I will note, that did not involve application of the Constitution) as well as a decision striking down laws providing life in prison without parole for juveniles who commit heinous murders. Finally, Savage notes:
The decision protecting corporate speech, of course, was Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, a decision advocated and then approved by this blog.
Here is one of many "money quotes" from Justice Kennedy's opinion:
As Savage reports, Justice Alito joined the Citizens United opinion, thereby reaching the same result that Justice O'connor would have reached, as evidenced by her dissenting vote in Michigan Chamber of Commerce. To be sure, Justice O'Connor may have felt compelled to follow Michigan Chamber of Commerce based on considerations of stare decisis, but there is no reason to believe she would have been more committed to stare decisis on this question than Justices Kennedy and Alito, for instance.
Saturday, October 23, 2010
"So You Want to go to Law School?"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nMvARy0lBLE
Monday, October 18, 2010
Should Big Brother Ration Speech??
Friday, September 17, 2010
A friend has called my attention to a recent Op-Ed in the Washington Post by Courtland Milroy, praising Warren Buffet and D.C. Schools Chancellor Michele Rhee for offering a Leninist solution to the problem of urban education. (Before the reader takes umbrage with my use of the word "Leninist," he or she should note that Millroy himself concedes that Rhee is "sounding like Fidel Castro.")
Here's a summary of the Rhee/Buffet proposal, apparently endorsed, at least in principle, by Millroy:
"I believe we can solve the problems of urban education in our lifetimes and actualize education's power to reverse generational poverty," Rhee wrote. "But I am learning that it is a radical concept to even suggest this. Warren Buffett [the billionaire investor] framed the problem for me once in a way that clarified how basic our most stubborn obstacles are. He said it would be easy to solve today's problems in urban education. 'Make private schools illegal,' he said, 'and assign every child to a public school by random lottery.' " (emphasis added)
It is perplexing to say the least that three otherwise very intelligent and public-spirited people would advocate such a solution, even in partial jest. For one thing the scheme, throwing people in jail for opening a private school --- would entail a frightening invasion of one our most basic civil liberties --- the right of families to choose religious schools for their children. See Pierce v. Society of Sisters, 268 U.S. 510 (1925). The plan would also lead to an exodus from Washington D.C. of families able to move elsewhere, unless Buffet/Rhee/Millroy would also ban such out-migration, thereby further eroding the city's precarious tax base and undermining funding for education.
More fundamentally, such a plan contravenes one of the basic postulates of a free society, namely, that decentralized competition, and not coercively-imposed state-monopoly, produces the highest quality product at the lowest possible cost. To be sure, there is a strong argument for state subsidies of education, because individual families cannot capture the full benefits of investments they make in the children's education. Plus, certain imperfections in the capital market can prevent families of modest means from borrowing the funds necessary to fund, say, a high quality K-12 education. However, even a compelling argument for state subsidy does not justify coercive state control over the means of producing education. All of us would support state subsidies that help the poor purchase necessities like food and clothing. Does that mean, however, that the State must also own the nation's farms and grocery stores, installing a Chancellor of Nutrition to oversee the "Foodstuffs Sector?" Most would chuckle at such an Orwellian proposal.
Indeed, imagine if, instead of education, we were discussing the production of software. Would Buffet, Rhee or Millroy argue that the State should outlaw private software companies, take over Microsoft, and install the firm as a national software monopoly? Would we rely on an elected or appointed "National Software Board" to oversee the development, production, distribution and marketing of software? Of course not. Indeed, most applauded when the national government filed suit against Microsoft, which had obtained a monopoly by providing a product that consumers preferred and then maintained its monopoly position by employing practices that, while questionable, did not employ the sort of state coercion that Rhee, Buffet and Millroy seem to applaud.
Simply put, the problem with our educational system is not too much freedom --- the problem is a deficit of freedom. Our university system --- a highly competitive mix of public and private colleges and universities --- is the envy of the world, drawing hundreds of thousands of foreign students. (A recent study by the Times of London found that 18 of the world's top 25 universities are American. The top five are private universities.) Does anyone think we could improve the system by banning private colleges and universities and assigning students by lot to the remaining public universities? (Recall in this connection that our best private universities train many of the faculty who then teach and perform research at our public universities.) If not, then why adopt such a strategy for K-12 education?
While Millroy, Rhee and Buffet press for greater centralization, states like Minnesota and Wisconsin have moved in the other direction, promoting public school choice and facilitating the formation of charter schools, the latter of which advertise in an effort to compete with more standard "public schools." Under this approach, state money follows the student; schools that fail see their enrollments fall as students choose other schools, be they traditional "public" or charter schools. Plus, contrary to the Rhee/Buffet/Millroy plan, Minnesota and Wisconsin actually allow private schools to operate in the state! Moreover, between 2004 and 2009, public high school graduation rates in Minnesota's largest city, Minneapolis, rose from 54.5 percent to 76.3 percent. Not surprisingly, there is no movement in Minnesota to ban private schools or charter schools. Unlike Rhee, Buffet and Millroy, Minnesotans apparently understand what the Supreme Court said more than 80 years ago:
"The fundamental theory of liberty on which all governments of this union repose excludes any general power of the state to stadardize its children by forcing them to accept instruction from public teachers only. The child is not the mere creature of the state; those who nurture him and direct his destiny have the right, coupled with the high duty, to recognize and prepare him for additional obligations."
Pierce v. Society of Sisters, 268 U.S. 510 (1925).
Enough said!
Sunday, August 29, 2010
John F. Kennedy, Radical Supply-Sider?
Wednesday, August 4, 2010
Missourians Reject an Individual Health Insurance Mandate Despite Corporate Speech!
Saturday, July 31, 2010
Keynes v. Hayek on the Macroeconomy
SPOILER ALERT!!
U.S. Crushing China in Clean Energy Race
First, the portrayal of China as some sort of clean energy leader is laughable. China is the world's largest emitter of carbon according to this 2006 article in the New York Times, and at the same time produces less than one half the output produced by the United States. In other words, China employs more than twice as much carbon per unit of output than does the United States. Thus, compared to China anyway, the United States has lapped China and is winning the clean energy race "going away."
Second, there is no indication that China will catch up to the United States. Indeed, some have estimated that, even under optimistic assumptions, China's carbon emissions will nearly double over the next two decades. By contrast, U.S. Greenhouse emissions actually fell from 2008 to 2009, according to the EPA. If, in fact, Chinese emissions almost double between now and 2030, this increase in emissions will by itself far offset any plausible decrease in American emissions during the same period.
Third, the U.S. lead over China likely reflects our far more stringent environmental regulations under existing law. Any argument for even more stringent regulation on American industry would have to explain why the USA, and not China, should have to bear an even a greater share of the burden of reducing carbon emissions.
Fourth, the author is certainly correct that a tax on carbon and requirement that utilities employ renewable sources of electricity will cause the additional development and marketing of methods of generating renewable sources of electricity. (Though of course foreign firms might outpace U.S. firms as they do in some other fields.) But this is unsurprising and no argument for such requirements. If the American government required automotive companies to paint all cars pink, then of course we'd witness a boom in the pink paint industry as firms came up with new and better ways to make pink paint. The prospect of such a boom, however, would not be an argument for such a pink paint mandate. Put another way, the fact that industries will respond in a predictable way to regulation is not an argument for such regulation.
Fifth, additional regulation of carbon emissions may be good public policy, but not because such regulations would help us win a race we are already winning or encourage firms to develop technology that helps firms comply with that regulation.
Saturday, May 29, 2010
Should We Mimic Brazil's Tax System and Tax Rates?
Perhaps the Obama administration will take these conclusions to heart and advocate privatization of various state-owned enterprises, such as schools and the automobile industry!