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UK U-Warwick’s Benjamin Smith on Mexico’s Cartels & Drug Trade
/in Education, Featured, Learning Curve, News, Podcast /by Editorial StaffProf. Benjamin Smith, author of The Dope: The Real History of the Mexican Drug Trade, provides insights into various aspects of the Mexican drug trade, including its historical context and the evolution of illicit drug products over time. He discusses key cartels and their methods, the impact of the drug trade on Mexico’s murder rates, the immense financial scale of the trade, its effect on Mexico and the U.S., and the challenges law enforcement face in combating it. Smith explores the relationship among Mexican cartels, other foreign countries, and the illicit drug market in the U.S.
Medicaid’s Massive Miasma: Taming Beacon Hill’s Burgeoning Budget Beast
/in Featured, News, Podcast Hubwonk /by Editorial StaffMarc Joffe, a state policy analyst at the Cato Institute, talks about his research on Medicaid’s cost and size. They explore how Massachusetts can control spending growth while protecting other priorities.
Middlemen Pushing Up Retail Costs of Drugs
/in Blog, Blog: Healthcare, Blog: Healthcare Transparency, Blog: Medicaid, Featured, Health Care, Health Care Policy (Federal), Healthcare /by Gauri BinoyThe reality is that non-price factors, including several players, are causing net prices to decline and retail prices to increase. Those players include employers, health plans, and pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs), all of whom have continuously circumvented the system through loopholes and complicated systems of reimbursement that tend to hurt patients
Milton Shuts the Door
/in Blog, Blog: Economy, Economic Opportunity, Featured, Housing, Housing, Pioneer Research /by Eileen McAnnenyon Multifamily Housing Plans
The MBTA Communities Act, passed in 2021, provides that the 177 communities serviced by the MBTA must create multifamily zones to spur housing development close to public transportation. But the issue is an emotionally charged one, with passions high on both sides. And Milton residents in February rejected a plan to create such housing ‚ choosing a loss of some state funding over an approximately 25 percent increase in their housing stock, along with the possibility of greater congestion.
on Multifamily Housing Plans
DFER-MA’s Mary Tamer on MCAS & Teacher Strikes
/in Education, Featured, Learning Curve, News, Podcast /by Editorial StaffMary Tamer focuses on the historic impact of the 1993 Massachusetts Education Reform Act on the commonwealth’s students’ high achievement on national and international measures. She explores the politics of the Massachusetts Teachers Association advocating against the MCAS test as a graduation requirement. In closing, Ms. Tamer also discusses the rise of teacher strikes and their implications for education reform in the Bay State.