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Tom Giovanetti

President

Tom Giovanetti is president of the Institute for Policy Innovation (IPI), a conservative, free-market public policy research organization based in Dallas, Texas.

In addition to his administrative duties, Tom writes for IPI and for leading publications on a variety of policy topics including taxes and economic growth, self-government and the Founders' design, civil liberties and constitutional protections, judicial supremacy, intellectual property, Social Security personal accounts, technology and Internet policy, and out-of-control government spending.  In addition to being regularly published in major outlets including the Wall Street Journal, Washington Times, FoxNews.com and The Dallas Morning News, Tom has a regular column in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. Tom frequently appears in the media and is a fill-in host for the Mark Davis Show in the Dallas-Fort Worth market. 

Tom's passion is encouraging conservative voters and organizations to remain skeptical of Big Government, maintain faith in markets, and defend individual liberty as the best means of achieving human flourishing. His most recent work has focused on free-market solutions to the student debt issue, preserving freedom of speech online, and persuading state legislatures to override local and municipal policies that restrict economic liberty.

Mr. Giovanetti has represented IPI at many national and international organizations, including the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO), the Internet Governance Forum (IGF) the World Health Organization (WHO) and represented IPI during trade agreement negotiations on the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP).

Mr. Giovanetti is a popular speaker and writer, and also testifies before state and federal legislative committees on a variety of topics.

Follow Tom on Twitter at @tgiovanetti

February 28, 2005

Design Principles For Strengthening Social Security Through Personal Accounts

The public debate about Personal Retirement Accounts has been clouded by a smokescreen of false arguments from critics, and by a confusing array of options from reformers. Everything, it seems, is "on the table," except true Social Security reform based on personal accounts.

In an attempt to bring clarity and guidance to the debate, the Institute for Policy Innovation (IPI) submits these Design Principles for Social Security reform.
July 19, 2004

Social Security Personal Savings and Prosperity

The Social Security Personal Savings and Prosperity Act of 2004 has been introduced by Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.). The bill closely follows the proposal authored by IPI Senior Fellow Peter Ferrara, published by IPI in June of 2003. The bill's reforms would ultimately provide for a dramatic increase in the personal prosperity of working people in America. It would be the most sweeping change in America's social and economic policy since the New Deal.
September 20, 2003

The Social Security System: A Catastropic Problem, A Transforming Solution

This is the PowerPoint presentation given by IPI president Tom Giovanetti on 9/20/2003 at Congressman Pete Sessions' town hall meeting on Social Security. Click on the link at top right that says "Full Text".

June 10, 2003

Equity Towards Excellence: A Proposed Framework for Funding Public Education in Texas

Texas has an education problem, not just an education-funding problem. The current “Robin Hood” school finance system is but one fact of Texas’ education problem.

December 4, 2002

Perspective: A tech tool for future tyrants?

It is a fact that the worst violators of Web site privacy policies are federal government Web sites. To those who say it will be impossible to use the database to violate the privacy of citizens, well, it's just a matter of who is sitting at the console.

August 28, 2002

Why Intellectual Property is Important

Although people often can get free use of someone’s intellectual property, that doesn’t make it right—or legal. Does it really hurt anyone? Is intellectual property really all that important?

November 15, 2001

A Quick Fix is No Fix for the Economy and other articles

The November-December 2001 issue of IPI Insights, our 8-page, full-color policy newsletter. In Adobe Acrobat PDF format only.
August 18, 2000

New Ideas for The Information Economy

The information economy forces us to throw out some old, outdated ideas (such as the Phillips curve, antitrust regimes, etc.) and consider new ideas for public policy, according to economist Michael Cox of the Dallas Federal Reserve Bank, journalist James K. Glassman, and Majority Leader of the U.S. House of Representatives Dick Armey (R-TX). IPI Center for Technology Freedom Director Bartlett Cleland moderated the event.
August 15, 1999

IPI Impact: 2nd Quarter 1999

Summary of IPI's impact in the media and on Capitol Hill during the second quarter of 1999. Includes newsclips, photographs, video captures, and a letter from the president. Available only in Adobe Acrobat PDF format. Large file (1.9 MB). Of interest primarily to supporters and those considering support.

Total Records: 713