Economic Growth

The Sidebar: Millenium Development and the Challenges of Wartime Aid Efforts

March 2, 2012
Rosa Brooks and Charles Kenny discuss the challenges facing the US military in Afghanistan after reports of Korans being burned, the role of humanitarian aid in conflict zones, and the status of the UN’s Millennium Development Goals. Pamela Chan hosts.

Returning to the Nest Has Costs

  • By
  • Reid Cramer
February 29, 2012
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Has the Great Recession changed the way we live? Given the severity of the economic downturn and the slow recovery, it’s a good question to ask. The experience has certainly given pause to those previously expected to be purchasing homes. Home values remain depressed in many markets as supply continues to outstrip demand, which has been dampened by declining incomes and scarce job opportunities. All of which has contributed to a noticeable “return to the nest” phenomenon, where grown children are moving back in with their parents in increasing numbers. If the housing market and economy don’t improve, they may stay there for a while.

The Census Bureau reports that since the Great Recession began, 7 million more American are living in doubled up arrangements. The trend for young adults was particularly dramatic. For persons ages 25 and 34, their rate of living doubled up has increased over 25%. Not surprisingly, this group has fared poorly in the current economy. In 2010, their incomes declined over 9%, the worst performance of any demographic group. When they live in households with other working adults, most are not counted as poor, but if their own income status were considered, over 45% would have incomes below the poverty threshold. On top of that, it’s likely that many are saddled with debt, including rising levels of student loan that they can’t repay until they start work and begin to generate earnings. It’s been pretty tough out there for recent college grads.

We're All the 1 Percent

  • By
  • Charles Kenny,
  • New America Foundation
February 28, 2012 |

After 30 years of greed being good and rising tides lifting all boats, inequality -- or "class warfare," if you prefer -- is back on the political agenda.

Bi-Sectoralism: It's the Economy Stupid II

February 27, 2012

This piece is coauthored by Bruce Jentleson, Professor at Duke University, and Jay Pelosky, Principal of J2Z Advisory. It originally appeared on the Huffington Post.

Asset Building News Week, Feb 20-24

  • By
  • Hannah Emple
February 24, 2012
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The Asset Building News Week is a weekly Friday feature on the The Ladder, the Asset Building Program blog, designed to help readers keep up with news and developments in the asset building field. This week's topics include savings products and financial behavior, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, income inequality, and housing. 

The Sidebar: China's Global Influence and Iran's Nuclear Ambition

February 23, 2012
Afshin Molavi and Sam Sherraden discuss The tensions surrounding Iran’s nuclear development program, the state of manufacturing jobs in the US, and how China’s growing influence is affecting economic and political relations around the world. Pamela Chan hosts.

Obama's Worst Year

  • By
  • Noam Scheiber,
  • New America Foundation
February 13, 2012 |
Shortly after four o’clock on the afternoon of Wednesday, April 13, 2011, U.S. Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner walked down the hallway near his office toward a large conference room facing the building’s interior. He was accompanied by a retinue of counselors and aides. When they arrived in the room—known around Treasury simply as “the large”—four people were seated at a long walnut table on the side near the door.

Why Thrift Matters!

  • By
  • Reid Cramer
February 8, 2012
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The rise of America’s debt culture has fueled impressive levels of consumption but proven to be unsustainable. Combined with poor oversight of risky credit products, including mortgages and credit cards, it played a role in the advent of the Great Recession. A group of scholars have been convened by the Institute for American Values to consider the question of what comes next. What’s the upside to welcoming the return of a culture of thrift?

In their new report, they remind us that “thrift is the ethic of wise use. The root of thrift is thrive.” There are some values at play here, such as industry, frugality, and stewardship, which may generate collective benefits if adopted widely. As the authors of the report write:

Indeed, for much of our history, thrift has provided a way forward for aspiring Americans of every rank and description. It has pointed the way to saving and security… It has urged us all to conserve, repurpose, save, act as good stewards of small amounts and sums, and protect our natural environment… For generations, thrift was a core value in creating a wiser citizenry and a more broadly shared prosperity.

In making the case for thrift, the report lays out 20 propositions that paint the picture of what a new thrift culture can do for our families, our neighborhoods, our economy, and our planet. Here they are below in brief, but check out the book for a fuller discussion and be sure to glance at the long and diverse list of signatories (of which I am but one).

The Economic and Geo-Political Implications of China-Centric Globalization

  • By
  • Thomas Palley,
  • New America Foundation
February 8, 2012

The last 30 years have witnessed the era of globalization which has been marked by the creation of an integrated global economy. Globalization has been the product of both policy and market forces, and U.S. policymakers have persistently been in the vanguard. However, what began as a project of globalization has been transformed with little explicit public discussion into a project of China-centric globalization.

America's Waning Influence

  • By
  • Rosa Brooks,
  • New America Foundation
February 1, 2012 |

Is America in decline? Is our global influence waning?

Expect that question to get plenty of airtime as the presidential campaign heats up. According to the Republicans, President Obama's fundamental foreign policy problem is that he thinks America is a fading power and all we can hope for is to "manage the decline."

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