Government can do things markets can’t or won’t. View this in your browser and share with your friends. <[link removed]>
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The Lessons of COVID-19
Uniquely ill-equipped for the coronavirus pandemic aftersteep funding cuts <[link removed]>, the US is learning anew why public investment and worker protections matter. “In the absence of paid sick leave, many infected workers already struggling to make ends meet will show up to work anyway. And in the absence of adequate health insurance, they will be reluctant to seek tests and treatment, lest they be hit with massive medical bills,”Roosevelt Chief Economist Joseph Stiglitz writes for Project Syndicate <[link removed]>. As Omidyar Network Principal Joelle Gamble explains in The Nation <[link removed]>,payroll tax cuts <[link removed]>and other quick-"fix" efforts are inadequate for the task at hand. “If we treat the economic symptoms only through short-term stimulus without fixing the structural diseases in our economy, we’ll be just as susceptible in the future as we are today.”
- EconCon 2020 is postponed: “The COVID-19 crisis is a health crisis that must be responded to and managed as effectively as possible by governments, organizations, and each of us as individuals—and we’re postponing this conference to do our part in that. But it is also exposing many of the deep flaws in our economy that we had been planning to work together to tackle at EconCon 2020.” Read more from EconCon’s organizers. <[link removed]>
- On the Hill: Congress is set to vote today on legislation that includes free virus testing, 14 days of paid sick leave, and federal funds for Medicaid, as reported in the New York Times. <[link removed]> For reference, “one in four workers has no access [to paid sick leave], according to <[link removed]> Labor Department data. That includes 6 percent of the highest earners and two-thirds of the lowest earners. Forty percent of workers in service jobs, like those in restaurants, shops or child care centers, have no paid sick time.” Read more from the NYT’s Claire Cain Miller. <[link removed]>
The Greatest Mobilization Since WWII
Just as the coronavirus requires measured coordination at the national and international levels, so too does theclimate crisis <[link removed]>. As history shows, we have experience acting en masse against existential challenges: “[T]he New Deal and World War II mobilizations offer literal, instructive policy precedents for the job before us,” Roosevelt Climate Policy Director Rhiana Gunn-Wright, Roosevelt Fellow Bracken Hendricks, and Center for American Progress Senior Fellow Sam Ricketts write for Democracy.Read on. <[link removed]>
- More public spending is a feature, not a bug: As Roosevelt Fellow J.W. Mason writes for the same issue, a Green New Deal is essential to tackle the climate crisis. “But just as important from an economic perspective, it will pump needed dollars into our stagnant economy, boosting demand and raising wages. Just as World War II mobilization pulled the United States and other advanced countries out of the Depression, rapid decarbonization could pull us out of today’s secular stagnation.”Read more. <[link removed]>
Wells Fargo and the Perils of Shareholder Primacy
Before the House Financial Services Committee,Wells Fargo CEO Charles Scharf <[link removed]>and(former) board members <[link removed]>testified aboutlax corporate governance and consumer abuses <[link removed]>; for the blog, Roosevelt Director of Advocacy and Policy Katy Milanianalyzes Wells Fargo’s recent 10-K filings <[link removed]> and finds that the bank’s stock buyback and dividend expenditures jumped from $12.5 billion in 2016 to $30.2 billion in 2019. Moreover, CEO pay at Wells Fargo rose over 40 percent from 2016 to 2018, exceeding median worker pay300-fold <[link removed]>. Watch Rep. Jesús “Chuy” García (D-IL)cite Milani’s research <[link removed]>during Wednesday’s hearing.
- Another angle: Though Scharf is the third Wells Fargo CEO to testify about the scandals in the last 3.5 years, the bank has largely skirted full legal culpability. “. . . the DOJ basically caught a gang of thieves and let them scoot right back to their den with most of the loot. Worse still, criminal prosecutions—for a bank that openly admits it stole money from its own customers—are off the table for now,” Maria Bustillos writes for Slate. “Shareholders, all of them shielded from direct liability, also benefited, as millions of Wells Fargo’s own customers—and employees—were persistently fleeced and abused.”Read more. <[link removed]>
How Women’s Access to Higher Education Changed America
“Amidst the primary debate chatter, you have probablyheard arguments <[link removed]>that the student debt crisis is undermining the higher education system’s ability to fuel economic mobility. But this Women’s History Month, it’s worth noting that the debt crisis is also undermining one of the most historically unique elements of American higher education: [I]ts role as a force for gender equity,” Suzanne Kahn—deputy director of the Great Democracy Initiative and a Roosevelt Institute expert on education initiatives—writes for TIME. “Early public investments in higher education made higher education accessible to women. That investment not only helped fill an intended social need by training thousands of teachers, but also helped foster social change in unanticipated ways.”Read on. <[link removed]>
The Pillars of New Progressivism
In a piece on Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s presidential campaign exit, the New Yorker’s John Cassidy examines the former candidate’s policies and impact using thefour pillars of new progressivism <[link removed]>coined by Roosevelt President & CEO Felicia Wong: “To return to Wong’s terminology, Warren isn’t just a new structuralist. In advocating for policies like universal child care and the establishment of a post-office bank that would offer basic banking services cheaply, she is also a public provider,” Cassidy writes. “In proposing big public investments in green energy and conservation, she is an economic transformer, too. And in making one of her top priorities a comprehensive anti-corruption plan, which she claims would ‘end lobbying as we know it,’ she is an economic democratist.”Read on. <[link removed]>
What We’re Reading
How Working-Class Life Is Killing Americans, in Charts <[link removed]> - New York Times
Why the US Sucks at Building Public Transit <[link removed]> - Vice
Coronavirus Shows Us America Is Broken <[link removed]>- New York Magazine
Climate Change Has Lessons for Fighting the Coronavirus <[link removed]> - New York Times
Gig Economy Workers Are Our Newest First Responders <[link removed]> - Slate
Why Women May Face a Greater Risk of Catching Coronavirus <[link removed]> - New York Times
Harriet Tubman’s Economic Empowerment Legacy <[link removed]> - Essence
From Resistance to Governing <[link removed]> - The Nation
This Is Not the Moment for Progressives to Despair <[link removed]> - New York Times
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