Downsizing Blog
What Do American Indians Deserve: Name Changes or Policy Changes?
Dan Snyder’s Indian Initiative
Government Infrastructure Is Inefficient Everywhere
Water in the West: It’s Complicated
Water: Excess of Subsidies, Lack of Markets
A recent op-ed in the Wall Street Journal describes what happens in an industry that suffers from a plethora of subsidies and a dearth of free markets. Water experts Peter Culp and Robert Glennon write:
$1 Million in Waste, but No Bathtubs
Occasional episodes of government mismanagement explode into big scandals, such as the General Services Administration’s party in Las Vegas that wasted more than $800,000.
Federal Funds for Cleaning Up Abandoned Mines
An article in the Wall Street Journal offers another example of the problem with the federal government tackling issues that should be left to the states to resolve. Congress passed a law in 1977 requiring coal companies to pay a fee that was to be used to help the states clean up abandoned mines. As is often the case, the distribution of funds to the states has been distorted by politics:
Indian Gaming: The Lobbyists Always Win
One of the issues discussed in my new essay on the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) is the lobbying by groups of American Indians seeking official tribal status. The BIA has the power to confer tribal status, and it does so in a non-transparent manner. With official status comes tribal access to a wide range of federal subsidy programs plus the ability to earn monopoly profits with a casino. The gaining of official status for tribes was one of Jack Abramoff’s specialty services.
Downsizing the Interior Department
Cato has published a new section on www.downsizinggovernment.org that examines the Department of the Interior.
Infrastructure Spending: Yuma Desalting Plant
President Obama is planning to deliver a big speech on jobs and the economy. His wish list for Congress will likely include more government infrastructure spending. So that citizens know what the president is talking about, they should review the success of the government’s past infrastructure projects.