Government Intervention

Government Intervention

Using the EBSCOhost, or ProQuest data bases, locate up to three different articles/publications and/or use The Economist Online to examine one case of significant
government intervention as it relates to your current industry of employment(your choice) or an industry in which you are interested in working(your choice). You may
access EBSCOhost, ProQuest or The Economist Online:
Click on either EBSCOhost or ProQuest.
Click on Economist.com.
Examples of intervention programs you may select, but are not limited to:
US agriculture support programs
Low income support programs (Food Stamps, Earned Income Tax Credit, Child Tax Credit, and Temporary Assistance to Needy Families)
Medicaid, Children’s Health Insurance Program, The Affordable Care Act (Obamacare)
Low-income rent controls and housing vouchers
Government promotion of renewable energy sources to discourage use of fossil fuels such as coal and oil
Unemployment Insurance
Bailout of U.S. banks and other financial institutions during the Great Recession
Bailout of U.S. auto makers during the Great Recession
Social Security retirement benefits
Develop a minimum 10-slide Microsoft® PowerPoint® presentation including detailed speaker notes including the following:
Describe the intervention and detail its history.
Analyze the arguments for government intervention as opposed to arguments for market-based solutions. Hint: See the information in our course textbook on market
failures.
Examine who may be helped and who may be hurt by the selected government intervention.
Examine externalities and/or unintended consequences of such intervention.
Determine the cost trend of the intervention program since its implementation including whether costs are increasing, decreasing, or vary with the state of the
economy.
Evaluate the success or failure of the intervention in achieving its objectives and develop conclusions.
Recommend whether the program should be continued as is, discontinued, or modified and defend your recommendation.
Note: The use of tables and/or charts to display economic data over the time period discussed is highly encouraged. However, if your source includes the copyright
symbol, which looks like this: ©, then you should not copy any table and/or charts from that source. You could use, but are not required to use, charts/graphs
retrieved from the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis FRED web site as long as the data sources used by FRED to create those charts are government sources such as the
Bureau of Economic Analysis or the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Cite a minimum of three scholarly, peer-reviewed references.
Format your paper consistent with APA guidelines.

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