• Sites’ Purpose
  • Contact
  • Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer

Principles Of Government

All material on this site is for educational purposes only.
This site is designed to generate ideas for a supplementary section on think tank websites.
An online subscription to the Wall Street Journal is required get full use of this site.
(A) Articles are foundational content and (B) Articles are urgently important but may be replaced as they become dated
  • Home
  • ARTICLES
  • Characteristics of Government
    • INTRODUCTION
    • SOCIALISM
    • COMPETITION
    • DEMOCRACY AND VOTING
    • SOCIAL POLICIES EFFECTS ON DEMOCRATIC GOVERNMENT
    • GOALS OF PROGRESSIVISM AND THE MODERN LEFT
    • EVOLVING IDEOLOGIES
    • DEMOCRACIES AND NATIONAL DEFENSE
  • Principles of Government
    • INTRODUCTION
    • CITIZENSHIP
    • BELIEF SYSTEM
    • GOVERNMENT STRUCTURE AND POLITICAL SYSTEM
    • FISCAL POLICIES
    • SOCIAL POLICIES
    • FREE MARKETS AND REGULATION
    • SOUND MONEY
    • THE RULE OF LAW
    • DEFENSE AND FOREIGN POLICY
    • Conservation and Environment
  • Resources
    • Featured Articles
    • ARTICLES
    • BOOK REVIEWS
    • Books
    • Major Think Tanks
    • CIVIC EDUCATION WEB RESOURCES
    • Important Conservative Organizations
    • Conservative American Colleges and Universities
    • Print Resources
    • COMMENTARY
Print This Page

(A) SOCIAL POLICY, TRANSFERS AND ENTITLEMENTS

    •   Back
    • Education, Culture, Ideology
    • (A) Politics, Political Parties, Election Regulations
    • (A) Social Policy, Transfers and Entitlements
    • Immigration
    • (A) Monetary Policy
    • (A) Fiscal Policy
    • (A) Science, Technology and Innovation
    • (A) Constitutional Issues, Federalism, Federal Agencies and Administrative Law
    • (A) Energy and Environmental Policy
    • (A) National Defense and Foreign Policy
    • (B) Social Policy, Transfers and Entitlements
    • (B) Politics, Political Parties, Election Regulations
    • (B) National Defense and Foreign Policy
    • (B) Fiscal Policy
    • (B) Monetary Policy
    • (B) Constitutional Issues, Federalism, Federal Agencies and Administrative Law
    • (B) Science, Technology and Innovation
    • (B) Energy and Environmental Policy
    • (A) Education
    • (B) Culture and Ideology
    • (A) Culture and Ideology
    • (B) Education
    • Russia and Europe
    • Middle East
    • China and the Far East
    • Latin America

The Trade Secret of Intellectual Trumpism

By Joseph C. Sternberg - The truth is much more complex, and politically challenging: While some other economies suppress domestic consumption and subsidize export production, Americans choose to do almost exactly the opposite. Through political choices such as suppressing energy production and distribution, or permitting red tape and the like, or any number of other policy foibles, we make it much harder than it otherwise would be to produce things in the U.S. Meanwhile, you can’t take a step in America without tripping over a consumption subsidy. Most glaring, though, are our entitlements. Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, not to...

Read More

Welfare Is What’s Eating the Budget AA

By Phil Gramm and Jodey Arrington - Means-tested social-welfare spending totaled $1.6 trillion in 2023. Welfare spending now absorbs an astonishing 72.6% of unobligated general revenue (total revenue net of Social Security and Medicare payroll taxes and premiums and mandatory interest on the public debt) and is larger than the claims against unobligated general revenue by Social Security (4.1%), Medicare (23.5%) and defense (37.2%) combined. Read More

Read More

Higher Ed Has Become a Threat to America AA

By John Ellis - Our corrupt, radical universities feed every scourge from censorship and crime to antisemitism. America faces a formidable range of calamities: crime out of control, borders in chaos by design, children poorly educated while sexualized and politicized against parental opposition, unconstitutional censorship, a press that does government PR rather than oversight, our institutions and corporations debased in the name of “diversity, equity and inclusion”—and more. To these has been added an outbreak of virulent antisemitism. Every one of these degradations can be traced wholly or in large part to a single source: the corruption of higher education...

Read More

The Democrats’ Refounding of America AA

By Christopher Caldwell - ...In this view, the civil rights movement wasn’t just a reform but a refounding....The real political legacy of the 1960s comes from the Civil Rights Act of 1964....…The new law cut constitutional corners, constraining freedom of association, ... drawing the federal government into the running of local elections. It opened the door to new kinds of lawsuits: The U.S. attorney general, for instance, could now file discrimination suits against local school districts. It imposed a degree of federal management on all institutions that received federal money. And it created a vast investigative infrastructure through the Equal...

Read More

Opening Our Borders Would Overwhelm America A

By Dave Seminara - Rolling surveys conducted by Gallup ... estimated that 640 million people wanted to emigrate, with the U.S. being the desired destination for 150 million. ...If the U.S. loosened visa restrictions... we’d see the largest mass movement in human history. It would be an epic economic and environmental catastrophe. Read More

Read More

It’s the Entitlements, Stupid A

By The Editorial Board - The Wall Street Journal - Sen. Joe Manchin’s public support Sunday for at least $2 trillion in new spending in a partisan budget bill is a huge win for the political left. This means a giant tax-and-spend bill this year is likely, and the biggest expansion of the entitlement state since the 1960s is now possible. The entitlements are by far the biggest long-term economic threat from the Biden agenda. Tax increases can be repealed by a future Congress. Spending on infrastructure will slow as funding falls. The courts may block his racial preferences. But...

Read More

Entitlements Always Grow and Grow A

By John F. Cogan - The seven-decade-long growth of entitlements and the pandemic response are the product of expansionary forces that operate on Congress regardless of who is in charge. Throughout history, the most potent force has been the equally worthy claim. The claim originates from a well-meaning impulse to treat all similarly situated persons equally under the law. Here’s how it works. When first enacted, entitlement benefits are usually confined to a narrow group of worthy individuals. As time passes, groups of excluded individuals claim that they are no less deserving of aid. Pressure is brought by, or on...

Read More

Income Equality, Not Inequality, Is the Problem A

By Phil Gramm and John Early - Real government transfer payments to the bottom 20% of household earners surged by 269% between 1967 and 2017, while middle-income households saw their real earnings after taxes rise by only 154% during the same period. That has largely equalized the income of the bottom 60% of Americans. This government-created equality has caused the labor-force participation rate to collapse among working-age people in low-income households and unleashed a populist realignment that is unraveling the coalition that has dominated American politics since the 1930s. Read More

Read More

Incredible Shrinking Income Inequality A

By Phil Gramm and John Early - The refrain is all too familiar: Widening income inequality is a fatal flaw in capitalism and an “existential” threat to democracy. From 1967 to 2017, income inequality in the U.S. spiked 21.4%, and everyone from U.S. senators to the pope says it’s an urgent problem. Yet the data upon which claims about income inequality are based are profoundly flawed. We have shown on these pages that Census Bureau income data fail to count two-thirds of all government transfer payments—including Medicare, Medicaid, food stamps and some 100 other government transfer payments—as income to the recipients. Furthermore,...

Read More

What the Child Poverty Rate Is Missing AA

By Phil Gramm and John Early - The Census Bureau fails to count two-thirds of all government transfer payments to households in the income numbers it uses to calculate not only poverty levels but also income inequality and income growth. In addition to not counting refundable tax credits, which are paid by checks from the U.S. Treasury, the official Census Bureau measure doesn’t count food stamps, Medicaid, the Children’s Health Insurance Program, rent subsidies, energy subsidies and health-insurance subsidies under the Affordable Care Act. In total, benefits provided in more than 100 other federal, state and local transfer payments aren’t...

Read More

Ex-Liberal Fred Siegel Saw New York Fall and Rise – Steven Malanga A

By Steven Malanga - As a New Yorker, Siegel had witnessed the city’s rapid deterioration under … a vast expansion of crime and social disorder. Siegel and other conservative intellectuals at the Manhattan Institute argued that the sharp rise in urban chaos wasn’t inevitable or irreversible…In fact, disorder was a choice. By cutting police and sanitation budgets to boost welfare spending, …The worse things got, the more the city invested in addressing the supposed underlying causes of crime rather than re-establishing order. Siegel … called this “rewarding failure.”...The “riot ideology” that Fred Siegel described in his 1997 book, “The Future...

Read More

Battle Over Critical Race Theory A

By Christopher F. Rufo - Critical race theory is the latest battleground in the culture war. … key concepts, including “systemic racism,” “white privilege,” … have become ubiquitous in America’s elite institutions. Progressive politicians have sought to implement “antiracist” policies to reduce racial disparities, such as minorities-only income…  Read More

Read More

Reforming the US Immigration System to Promote Growth A

By Daniel Griswold - While illegal immigration dominates the discussion of immigration reform in Washington, it is only part of the larger challenge of reforming America’s system of legal entry and immigration. The US immigration system is poorly designed to meet the needs of a 21st century economy. In particular, the current system fails to provide adequate opportunities for well-educated and highly skilled immigrants to join the US workforce to spur innovation, output, and job creation. Read More

Read More

Irving Kristol’s Reality Principles AA

By Irving Kristol - WSJ - A great mind exposes ideological illusions, while thinking through better alternatives. The following are excerpts from essays that appeared in The Wall Street Journal by Irving Kristol, who died yesterday at age 89. An editorial on his legacy appears nearby. Read More

Read More

Congress Can’t Enact a Chicken A

By Andy Kessler - A superb short lesson in basic economics Read More

Read More

A Plan to Save America’s Finances A

By Paul Ryan - U.S. fiscal policy is on a collision course with monetary policy. The economic devastation resulting from a debt and currency crisis could inflict enormous—possibly irreparable—damage. Predicting precisely when a huge debt and high deficits will unleash economic disaster is difficult. The dollar’s status as the world’s reserve currency gives the U.S. unique advantages, but no country can defy the laws of economic gravity forever. The U.S. has run up large budget deficits and debts before, but those moments of national emergency, such as world wars or global financial crises, were usually—at least until recently—followed by periods...

Read More

An Age of Agency Awaits Us B

By Ian Rowe - There is a third way: a view of human opportunity simultaneously more practical and more optimistic than our current alternatives. I call it agency.… agency goes beyond one’s capacity simply to do or achieve …Agency is not free will alone, it is the force of your free will, guided by moral discernment. Agency is the character-based strength that young people can tap into as a source of morally directed power, and our children do not achieve this by themselves. … they need social support from vibrant, well-functioning, families, schools, houses of worship, nonprofit organizations, and community groups.  Read...

Read More

Footer

Characteristics of Government

  • INTRODUCTION
  • SOCIALISM
  • COMPETITION
  • DEMOCRACY AND VOTING
  • SOCIAL POLICIES EFFECTS ON DEMOCRATIC GOVERNMENT
  • GOALS OF PROGRESSIVISM AND THE MODERN LEFT
  • EVOLVING IDEOLOGIES
  • DEMOCRACIES AND NATIONAL DEFENSE

Principles of Good Government

  • INTRODUCTION
  • CITIZENSHIP
  • BELIEF SYSTEM
  • GOVERNMENT STRUCTURE AND POLITICAL SYSTEM
  • FISCAL POLICIES
  • SOCIAL POLICIES
  • FREE MARKETS AND REGULATION
  • SOUND MONEY
  • THE RULE OF LAW
  • DEFENSE AND FOREIGN POLICY
  • Conservation and Environment

Resources

  • Featured Articles
  • ARTICLES
  • BOOK REVIEWS
  • Books
  • MAJOR THINK TANKS
  • CIVIC EDUCATION WEB RESOURCES
  • Important Conservative Organizations
  • Conservative American Colleges and Universities
  • Print Resources

Copyright © 2025 · Principles of Government