Economic Growth Program

All Power to the Choice Architects

If we go by election results, and no better guide to our national mood exists, the years of conservative hegemony in the United States are over, at least for the foreseeable future.  Not only has the country elected a Democratic president and Congress, but conservative ideas, which once had seemed so innovative, are increasingly stale or non-existent.  Meanwhile, the Republican Party seems both directionless and leaderless. 

November 9, 2009

Landing a Job Like Getting into Harvard

The 650,000 jobs created or saved by the stimulus package so far make up only a small step toward correcting the gap between the tens of millions of unemployed people and the few openings that those people are fighting over.

Even the administration's goal of creating 3.5 million jobs is far below what the economy really needs. With an official unemployment rate of 10.2 percent, the gap between the number of full-time job openings and the number of people who are unemployed has widened.

Samuel Sherraden | CNN.com | November 6, 2009

Buffet Bets Big on Trains | The Takeaway

Joining us is Phillip Longman, Senior Research Fellow at the New America Foundation and author of “The Next Progressive Era: A Blueprint for Broad ...
Phillip Longman | November 3, 2009

Why Dilbert Is Doomed

Where are tomorrow's jobs going to come from? The question is more urgent than ever, with official unemployment hovering around 10 percent and with nearly one in five Americans unemployed, if you count part-time workers who want full-time jobs and people so desperate that they have given up looking for work entirely.

Michael Lind | Salon | November 3, 2009

Death by Renminbi

Over the last several weeks, the dollar's depreciation against the euro and yen has grabbed global attention. In a normal world, the dollar's weakening would be welcome, as it would help the United States come to grips with its unsustainable trade deficit.

But, in a world where China links its currency to the dollar at an undervalued parity, the dollar's depreciation risks major global economic damage that will further complicate recovery from the current worldwide recession.

Thomas Palley | Korea Times | November 3, 2009

The New 'Awkward Age' | Baltimore Sun

The New America Foundation recently estimated that America needs to create nearly a million jobs a year just to keep pace with population growth, ...
November 3, 2009

What Will Replace The American Consumer?

What will take the place of the American consumer is the biggest question hanging over the world economy. For the past decade and a half, U.S. consumption has been the principal driver of world economic growth, supplying demand for the fast-growing export economies of Asia, whose growth in turn increased demand for capital goods from Europe and Asia and for oil and commodities from Latin America, Africa, and the Persian Gulf. From 1997 to 2008, personal consumption as… more

October 27, 2009

The Tax Breaks That Ate America

Here's the latest bold new idea for reconciling the costs of national defense with the need to avoid adding to federal deficits or raising taxes. A bipartisan coalition of "New Democrats" and moderate Republicans has proposed buying weapons for the U.S. military through the IRS rather than the Pentagon. Here's how it would work. Instead of being paid to deliver planes, missiles and tanks, defense contractors would receive "weapon supply tax credits" (WSTC). The defense contractors would be

Michael Lind | Salon | October 26, 2009

Romer Predicts High Jobless Rate Through Election Year | Wall Street Journal

On Tuesday, White House economist Jared Bernstein took a more upbeat position in a talk before the New America Foundation. While he called the lack of job ...
October 22, 2009

The Jobs Deficit

The economy has lost 8 million jobs since the beginning of the recession.   But because the population is growing, we need to create over 9.6 million jobs.  Due to severe job loss and steady population growth, the unemployment rate has soared to 9.8%, nearly as high as during the early 1980s.

To read more, click on the slideshow below.

Samuel Sherraden | October 20, 2009