Defending the Pittsburgh area taxpayers and businesses against the burdensome taxation and regulation of Big Government

Mission Statement

The Allegheny Institute is a non-profit research and education organization. Our mission is to defend the interests of taxpayers, citizens and businesses against an increasingly burdensome and intrusive government. To that end, we will formulate and advocate public policies that roll back the size and scope of local government as well as create a more accountable government. Our efforts will be guided by the principles of free enterprise, property rights, civil society and individual freedom that are the bedrock upon which this nation was founded.
Introduction: Less than three months after signing Pennsylvania’s long overdue 2025-26 budget into law, on Feb. 3, Gov. Josh Shapiro delivered his 2026-27 budget presentation to the General Assembly. This Brief analyzes some key spending and policy proposals included in the sprawling 777-page document. General fund The general fund is...

Latest from AI

Accomplishments

Policy Briefs

vol26
No: 11

Introduction: Less than three months after signing Pennsylvania’s long overdue 2025-26 budget into law, on Feb. 3, Gov. Josh Shapiro delivered his 2026-27 budget presentation to the General Assembly. This Brief analyzes some key spending and policy proposals included in the sprawling 777-page document.

vol26
No: 10

This Policy Brief examines eight Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs) across the country in terms of changes in three measures—population, private-sector employment and public-sector employment over the 10-year period 2015 to 2025.

Jobs in both private and public sectors are shown in relation to the MSA population.  The analysis was undertaken to determine if different MSAs had substantially different changes in per capita employment and whether the level of government jobs had any relationship to private-sector gains.

Colin Mcnickle At Large

Op-Ed

Shapiro’s DOA tax-&-spend Pa. budget

vol26
No: 11

Indeed, “dead on arrival” would be the most apropos way to characterize the chances of Gov. Josh Shapiro’s proposed fiscal 2026-27 Pennsylvania budget being adopted by the General Assembly. For it is far more remarkable for the economic fallacies it promulgates than sound fiscal stewardship, concludes an analysis by the Allegheny Institute for Public Policy.

Another way PPS can save money

vol26
No: 06

Pittsburgh Public Schools, facing a multimillion-dollar deficit that will force it to draw down precious emergency money from its reserve fund, could find partial relief by overhauling its contracting processes, concludes an analysis by the Allegheny Institute for Public Policy.

In The News

Big dreams: Pittsburgh Riverhounds owner remains committed to $175M Highmark Stadium expansion
As the Pittsburgh Riverhounds seek to repeat as champions of the United Soccer League Championship, the team is seeking a $7 million state grant as part of its effort to...
Pittsburgh Regional Transit CEO Katharine Kelleman gets $55K bonus
Pittsburgh Regional Transit CEO Katharine Kelleman is getting a $55,000 bonus.  The transit agency’s board on Friday unanimously approved the performance bonus with no discussion.
Report: Pittsburgh metro job growth lags behind right-to-work regions
Pittsburgh and its eight surrounding counties reported marginal job gains over the last 25 years, according to a new report from the Allegheny Institute for Public Policy.

Blog

PPS contracting reforms

ByAllegheny Institute |

Downtown Pittsburgh Office Vacancy Rate (Q3 2025)

ByAllegheny Institute |

Pittsburgh Land Bank

ByAllegheny Institute |

Pennsylvania’s Electricity Generation

ByAllegheny Institute |

Pennsylvania Transportation Funding

ByAllegheny Institute |

Pittsburgh’s Paid Sick Leave Policy

ByAllegheny Institute |