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Get the latest news and research from Badger Institute
- The truth about MPS, who makes it to graduation and who doesn’t
- Wisconsin’s retirement income exclusion will shift tax burdens to working families over time
- Taxpayers getting jobbed
- Cursing the rain — and tax cuts — cuz everyone benefits
- Much to like in Republicans’ tax plan
- End to federal public TV subsidies would save $2 million in Milwaukee
- Without legislative change, dwindling ranks of young accountants will flee Wisconsin
- Courage on Medicaid in the past helps Wisconsin now
Browsing: Economy
Why would a citizenry want its government to require, by law, higher prices? At anytime, it’s a good question but, as veteran journalist Ken Wysocky points out, at a time of raging inflation, it takes on a new urgency.
In a joint brief with the Wisconsin Institute for Law and Liberty, we lay out the problems with occupational licensing in Wisconsin and what meaningful reforms can be enacted.
A statewide and county-by-county analysis
What is occupational licensing, how does it affect employment and consumer costs, and what options exist for reform?
(and the real-world stories of Wisconsinites cheated out of their livelihoods)
Research and stories show the need for occupational licensing reform in Wisconsin. Authors include Ike Brannon, Logan Albright, Scott Niederjohn, Mark Schug and Jan Uebelherr.
Wisconsin conservatives or Minnesota liberals?
Report compares the growth and distribution of Income in Wisconsin and Minnesota after the Great Recession.
As Wisconsin’s population ages, we will need immigrants in our future workforce to keep our economy vibrant.
As Wisconsin’s debt load continues to grow, the tax burden for Wisconsin families and businesses will grow right along with it
Why you’ll pay more at the pump
Wisconsin should be careful when it comes to limiting new technology
The impact of state taxes
Encouraging Growth Companies in Wisconsin
Education and training under Wisconsin Works
Why building a “new” Milwaukee economy matters to Wisconsin
When then Wisconsin Governor Tommy Thompson introduced the Wisconsin Works (W-2) proposal in November of 1994, he cited this principle…
The 1990s were growth years for the United States and for Wisconsin. The Wisconsin economy added 461,748 jobs, growing by a remarkable 21 percent over the 1991-1999 period, far surpassing the U.S. growth rate of 13 percent. Unfortunately for some, growth was not uniform across all areas of the state. Employment in Brown County (Green
Over the next several years, there may be no more important issue in Wisconsin than the rebuilding of the Marquette Interchange
Who is leaving the state? Where are they going?
We know that in 1990 there were over 96,000 women on AFDC in Wisconsin. Today, there are less than 8,000.
Wisconsin’s Regional Employment Growth The Wisconsin economy in the 1990s benefited from the long period of growth experienced by the…