A growing economy creates jobs, raises living standards, maintains global competitiveness, and thus engenders positive attitudes and optimism about the future.
While many policymakers seem intent on focusing on either economic stimulus or austerity, IPI believes that the economy can grow consistently and at higher rates than we’ve experienced in the last decade, and we reject the idea that economic growth contains within itself the seeds of its own demise through inflation, the business cycle, and erroneous Phillips Curve assumptions. Therefore, economic growth should be elected officials’ primary policy goal at the federal, state and local levels, and it’s the organizing principle of our policy work at IPI.
Whatever limitations may exist on economic growth, they should not be self-imposed through counterproductive tax policy, overbearing regulations, ill-conceived monetary policy, trade protectionism, or hostility toward skilled and ambitious immigration.
A Tax Code for a Free Society
Halftime in America Shouldn't Mean a Handout in America
Please, No Politics in Vaccine Recommendations
Investing Earns You Additional--not Lower--Taxes
State of the Union: A Stunning Display of Big-Government Hubris
The policy agenda laid out by the president demonstrates the hubris of Big Government solutions better than anything any conservative could ever say or do.
Giovanetti: Obama Should 'Unchain Economy' in State of the Union
In tomorrow night’s State of the Union address, President Obama should put forward proposals to unchain the economy from high taxes, out-of-control spending, and burdensome regulations, said Institute for Policy Innovation (IPI) president Tom Giovanetti.
Next Up for Big Government - Raise Your Taxes, Destroy Tax Software Industry
The IRS blames tax preparation software for "tax gap"
I'm From the IRS and I'm Here to Help You
The IRS has a new idea to extract more tax dollars out of your pocket without having to pass a tax increase.
Medicare Plans Quash the Liberal Vision for Health Care
Liberals are expressing their disappointment that the mostly for-profit health plans have found a subtle way to attract healthier seniors.