December 5, 2024

Diversity and Air Traffic Control

This brief focuses on the Federal Aviation Administration’s (FAA) efforts to increase the number of female and minority air traffic controllers and the potential impact the initiative may have had on air travel safety. The FAA’s diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) initiative is the subject of a lawsuit filed by individuals who claim they would have been hired if the FAA had not changed its hiring criteria. These individuals also claim that the FAA’s initiative made air travel less safe. Everything Policy’s analysis focuses primarily on the second claim: did emphasizing DEI compromise air safety?
November 20, 2024

Where Do Migrants Live?

Millions of migrants have entered the United States across its southern border since 2021. Some reports describe these entrants as overwhelming communities throughout the country because of increased crime or demands for bilingual education, medical care, housing, or other social services. Where in other regions, such as those which employ a higher number of lesser-skilled farm, non-credentialed home healthcare, and hospitality-related labor, migrants are filling otherwise less desirable or unwanted jobs with lower wages that are satisfying the needs of local employers. For all the media attention, we know very little about where these migrants actually live. Are they settling in high-population urban areas, near the southwestern border, or throughout the country? Which communities might be finding it difficult to deal with larger migrant populations, either in absolute terms or relative to their population?
November 14, 2024

Medicaid Cost and Efficiency

An enormous sum of money is spent on America’s healthcare system: 4.5 trillion dollars in 2023 (nearly 14 thousand dollars per person). This per-capita cost is almost double the average in other industrialized nations. At first glance, these costs suggest that healthcare in America is beset by waste and inefficiency. However, it is also possible that these higher costs reflect decisions about the kinds of care that will be made available, both to people with private health insurance and those who receive care through a government program. This brief begins to address these complex questions. We focus on the Medicaid program, a partnership between the federal and state governments that provides health care to over 70 million Americans. Medicaid has an annual budget of over 800 billion dollars in 2024 (1 out of every 6 dollars spent on healthcare in America). We ask two questions: what is this money spent on, and are the program’s per-recipient costs in line with private-sector health insurance providers?