Estimated Impact of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act on Employment and Economic Output from April 2010 Through June 2010


Book Description

The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA) contains a variety of provisions intended to boost economic activity and employment in the U.S. Section 1512(e) of the law requires the author to comment on the reports filed by certain recipients of funding under ARRA that detail how many jobs were created or retained through funded activities. This report fulfills that requirement. It also provides estimates of ARRA¿s overall impact on employment and economic output in the second quarter of calendar year 2010. Those estimates are based on evidence from similar policies enacted in the past and on the results of various economic models. Charts and tables. This is a print on demand edition of an important, hard-to-find publication.







Estimated Impact of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act on Employment and Economic Output from October 2010 Through December 2010


Book Description

The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA) contains provisions that are intended to boost economic activity and employment in the U.S. Section 1512(e) of the law requires comment on reports filed by recipients of ARRA funding that detail the number of jobs funded through their activities. This report fulfills that requirement. It also provides estimates of ARRA's overall impact on employment and economic output in the 4th quarter of calendar year 2010. Those estimates -- which the report considers more comprehensive than the recipients' reports -- are based on evidence from similar policies enacted in the past and on the results of various economic models. Charts and tables. This is a print on demand report.




Economic Impact of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act Of 2009


Book Description

This is a print on demand edition of a hard to find publication. As part of the unprecedented accountability and transparency provisions included in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, the Council of Economic Advisers is charged with providing to Congress quarterly reports on the effects of the Recovery Act on overall economic activity, and on employment in particular. This 4th report provides an assessment of the effects of the Act through the second quarter of 2010. Contents: Intro.; The Progress of Spending and Tax Reductions under the Recovery Act; Evidence of the Economic Impact of the Recovery Act; The Public Investment Provisions of the Recovery Act; Provisions of the Recovery Act That Leverage Other Spending; Conclusion; Appendix: Estimated Employment Effects by State.




Estimated Impact of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act on Employment and Economic Output from January 2010 Through March 2010


Book Description

The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA) contains a variety of provisions intended to boost economic activity and employment in the United States. Section 1512(e) of the law requires the author to comment on the reports filed by certain recipients of funding under ARRA that detail how many jobs were created or retained through funded activities. This report fulfills that requirement. It also provides estimates of ARRA¿s overall impact on employment and economic output in the first quarter of calendar year 2010. Those estimates are based on evidence from similar policies enacted in the past and on the results of various economic models. Charts and tables.




The Obama Administration's Green Energy Gamble


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The Joint Economic Report


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The National Road and the Difficult Path to Sustainable National Investment


Book Description

The National Road is a comprehensive history of the first federally financed interstate highway, an approximately 600-mile span that joined Maryland, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois in the nineteenth century. This book covers the road's contribution to the cultural, economic, and administrative history of the United States, its decline during the second half of the nineteenth century, and its revival in the twentieth century in the form of U.S. Route 40. The story of the National Road embraces an account of its building, its constitutional significance, the unique culture that it represented, the movements and trends that transpired across its route, and the symbolic value that it held, and continues to hold, for the American people. Beyond its status as an American heritage symbol, it serves as a forceful reminder that the United States must continue to pursue the goal of sustainable national investment that began with the National Road and comparable projects during the early republic.




Do Federal Social Programs Work?


Book Description

Addressing an issue of burning interest to every taxpayer, a Heritage Foundation scholar brings objective analysis to bear as he responds to the important—and provocative—question posed by his book's title. Of course, the answer to that question will also help determine whether the American public should fear budget cuts to federal social programs. Readers, says author David B. Muhlhausen, can rest easy. As his book decisively demonstrates, scientifically rigorous national studies almost unanimously find that the federal government fails to solve social problems. To prove his point, Muhlhausen reports on large-scale evaluations of social programs for children, families, and workers, some advocated by Democrats, some by Republicans. But it isn't just the results that matter. It's the lesson to readers on how Americans can—and should—accurately assess government programs that cost hundreds of billions of dollars each year. At the book's core is an insistence that we move beyond anecdotal reasoning and often-partisan opinion to measure the effectiveness of social programs using objective analysis and scientific methods. At the very least, the results of such analysis will, like this book, provide a sound basis for much-needed public debate.