The Mercatus Center is an American
libertarian,
free-market-oriented non-profit
think tank.[2][3] The Mercatus Center is located at the
George Mason University campus, however the organization is privately funded and its employees are independent of the university.[4] It is directed by Daniel M. Rothschild and its board is chaired by American economist
Tyler Cowen. The Center works with policy experts,
lobbyists, and government officials to connect academic learning with real-world practice. Taking its name from the Latin word for market, the center advocates free-market approaches to public policy. During the
George W. Bush administration's campaign to reduce government regulation, The Wall Street Journal reported, "14 of the 23 rules the White House chose for its 'hit list' to eliminate or modify were Mercatus entries".[5]
The Mercatus Center was founded by
Richard Fink as the Center for the Study of Market Processes at
Rutgers University. After the Koch family gave more than $30 million to George Mason University,[9] the Center moved there in the mid-1980s. It took its current name in 1999.[9]
In 2001, the
Office of Management and Budget asked for public input on which regulations should be revised or killed. Mercatus submitted 44 of the 71 proposals the OMB received.[8]
In 2010, the center collaborated with EconStories to produce a parody rap video about the conflict of ideas between
F. A. Hayek and
John Maynard Keynes.[10] A sequel, "Fight of the Century", was produced in 2011.[11]
In 2012, Mercatus scholar
Charles Blahous released a study saying that the
Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) would worsen the federal deficit, contrary to the official
Congressional Budget Office forecast.[12] The study was generally criticized by supporters of the PPACA.[13][14]Jeanne Lambrew, deputy assistant to the president for health policy, wrote, "This new math fits the old pattern of mischaracterizations about the Affordable Care Act when official estimates show the health care law reduces the deficit."[15] Blahous defended the findings of his research.[16]
Later that year, the Mercatus Center established the
F.A. Hayek Program for Advanced Study in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics run under the supervision of
Peter Boettke and
Christopher Coyne and launched Marginal Revolution University, an online platform for teaching economics, run by
Tyler Cowen and
Alex Tabarrok.[17]
In 2015, Mercatus launched its annual Ranking of the 50 States by Fiscal Conditions[18] and started its Program on Monetary Policy.[19]
In 2016, Mercatus launched its Program on the American Economy and Globalization,[20] run by
Daniel Griswold, which aims to help "the public and policymakers understand the benefits of an economy free from
protectionist barriers against the international movement of goods, services, capital, ideas, and people."[21]
In 2018, Mercatus announced that it "sponsored the development of a
futures market based on [nominal gross domestic product] contracts with
Hypermind, a UK-based
prediction market." As explained in the announcement: "Mercatus Center's
Scott Sumner and David Beckworth have made the case that an alternative
monetary policy approach, nominal gross domestic product (NGDP) level targeting, is superior to
inflation targeting. NGDP is essentially the nation's total income. According to Sumner and Beckworth, instead of targeting inflation (general prices), the
Federal Reserve's monetary policy should target the rate at which the nation's total income is expected to grow. NGDP level targeting will ensure that the right amount of money supply is provided to meet the economy's needs."[22]
Mission
The organization describes itself as "the world's premier university source for market-oriented ideas" and says it aims to bridge "the gap between academic ideas and real-world problems."[9] By advancing knowledge about how markets can work to improve lives and individual freedoms, by training graduate students, conducting research, and applying economic principles, they hope to offer solutions to society's most pressing problems.
Mercatus currently runs the following research programs: The Project for the Study of American Capitalism; Technology Policy Project; State and Local Policy Project; Spending and Budget Initiative; Program on the American Economy and Globalization; Program on Monetary Policy; Program on Financial Regulation; and Program for Economic Research on Regulation.[21]
Rob Stein, a Democratic strategist, has called Mercatus "ground zero for
deregulation policy in Washington."[9] The Wall Street Journal has called the Mercatus Center "the most important think tank you've never heard of".[9]
The Mercatus Center is a
501(c)(3) non-profit and does not receive support from George Mason University or any federal, state, or local governments.
Organizational structure
The Mercatus Center is located on George Mason University's
Arlington Campus, and is affiliated with GMU's Economics department. The Provost of George Mason University has the power to appoint a faculty director to head the Mercatus Center.
Scholars affiliated with the Mercatus Center have published hundreds of journal articles and research papers, with topics including
government transparency,
subsidies, taxation, regulation, corruption, and
Austrian School economics. They have also provided more than 100 testimonies to Congress.[24] Notable studies performed and books published include:
"
Tyranny Comes Home," published in 2018, assesses how, under certain conditions, U.S. policies, tactics, and technologies deployed abroad via military interventions "are re-imported to America, changing the national landscape and increasing the extent to which we live in a police state."[25] The authors "examine this pattern―which they dub 'the boomerang effect'―considering a variety of rich cases that include the rise of state surveillance, the militarization of domestic law enforcement, the expanding use of drones, and torture in U.S. prisons."[25]
"
Permissionless Innovation," a book by scholar Adam Thierer, which argues that if "the
precautionary principle," trumps "permissionless innovation" with regards to government's approach to technological innovation, then "the result will be fewer services, lower-quality goods, higher prices, diminished economic growth, and a decline in the overall standard of living."[26]
"
How Are Small Banks Faring under Dodd-Frank?," a 2015 survey of approximately 200 small U.S. banks serving mostly rural and small metropolitan markets. The survey "included questions about specific regulatory and compliance activities, interactions with regulators, effects of particular regulations, changes in fees and revenue, and business strategy decisions since the passage of
Dodd–Frank."
"Annual Performance Report Scorecard" (2000–2009):[27] Produced by the Mercatus Center's Government Accountability Project, these publications assess the annual reports released by the 24 federal agencies covered by the
Chief Financial Officers Act. The reports, required by the
Government Performance and Results Act of 1993 are rated for their demonstration of "transparency, public benefits, and leadership."[28] The most recent publication, covering the 2008 fiscal year, ranked the reports from Labor, Veterans Affairs, and Transportation departments as the best, and those from SBA, Defense, and HUD as the worst. Only 13 of the departments' reports received a "satisfactory" score in this 2009 publication, which notes that agencies "whose policy views were evaluated as more liberal ... seem to score slightly better."[28]
"Freedom in the 50 States: An Index of Personal and Economic Freedom" ranks states according to how well they meet the Center's ideals of personal and economic freedom. The 2011 rankings regarded New Hampshire, South Dakota, and Indiana as the freest, and New York, New Jersey, and California as the most restrictive.[29] The 2013 rankings regarded North Dakota, South Dakota, and Tennessee as the freest, and New York, California, and New Jersey as the most restrictive.[30] This index was later transferred to the
Cato Institute.[31]