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Note: The Roosevelt Rundown will be off next week for the Fourth of July holiday.
State Insurance Reforms and the Trade-Offs of a Public Option
If the first wave ever ended, the second has clearly begun: This past week saw the highest volume of coronavirus cases <[link removed]> since the pandemic began—and the nation’s heath care system remains unprepared. Per the Journal of General Internal Medicine, 18.2 million Americans <[link removed]> at risk of severe COVID-19 illness are uninsured or underinsured, a group that disproportionately includes Black, Latinx, and Indigenous people. With this Congress unlikely to expand coverage under the 10-year-old Affordable Care Act (ACA) <[link removed]>, states are exploring their own options—including a public option. In a new report, Roosevelt Fellow Naomi Zewde and Lafayette College’s Adam Biener analyze state-level efforts in New Mexico, Colorado, and Washington and explore the trade-offs policymakers face in balancing consumer affordability and market stability. One takeaway: “The more price savings realized, through reduced fees or administrative savings, the more disruptive a public option may be.” Read on. <[link removed]>
- The COVID-19 effect: “COVID-19 has both complicated these efforts and exacerbated the consequences of earlier inaction,” Roosevelt Editorial Manager Matt Hughes writes for the blog <[link removed]>. “Several states, including New York, have proposed Medicaid cuts <[link removed]> to balance strained budgets. Meanwhile, 14 states <[link removed]> have still not adopted the Medicaid expansions embedded in the ACA, depriving lower-income people of health care they desperately need and disproportionately harming Black people, who are more likely to live in these predominantly Southern states.”
- White supremacy is the preexisting condition: “The corrective to the racial wealth divide must come through structural change, not the actions of individuals,” Roosevelt Fellow Darrick Hamilton co-writes for Inequality.org <[link removed]>. In a new report prefaced by Hamilton; Dedrick Asante-Muhammad, Chuck Collins, and Omar Ocampo—all of the Institute for Policy Studies—outline eight post-COVID economic solutions <[link removed]> that can reduce the racial wealth gap, including Medicare for all and a federal jobs guarantee.
What Is Owed
In a New York Times piece <[link removed]>, Pulitzer Prize-winner Nikole Hannah-Jones draws on the work of Roosevelt Senior Fellow Sandy Darity and folklorist A. Kirsten Mullen to explain why reparations must be central in closing the racial wealth gap. “The process of creating the racial wealth chasm begins with the failure to provide the formerly enslaved with the 40 acres they were promised <[link removed]>,” Darity tells Hannah-Jones. “So the restitution has never been given, and it’s 155 years overdue.” In another NYT article <[link removed]>, Darity observes the political shifts in the last year: “It’s striking to me that people campaigning to be elected officials are mentioning the word at all . . . There seems to be a sea change.”
- The road to reparations: “As a prelude to a comprehensive program of reparations for Black Americans, a parallel commission should be mobilized to produce a report that details the case and a plan for restitution. HR 40 provides the opportunity to establish such a commission,” Darity and Mullen write in an op-ed for The Grio <[link removed]>. Read the latest coverage of their reparations work in The Guardian <[link removed]> and The Economist <[link removed]>, and listen to Darity on WBUR <[link removed]>.
A More Representative Senate
In a historic vote, the House voted today to approve statehood for Washington, DC, and overdue enfranchisement to around 700,000 people—about 45 percent of whom are Black <[link removed]>. Though it’s certain to fail in this Senate, the vote spotlights the structural racism <[link removed]> embedded in some of the nation’s democratic institutions. “The Senate entrenches white, male, rich rule, and will do so for a long time in the future. And that’s kind of by design,” Roosevelt Director of Governance Studies Todd Tucker tells HuffPo <[link removed]>. For the blog, Tucker explains another potential benefit of DC statehood: reminding Americans that our government institutions and Constitution are not immutable and have never been this static. Read more <[link removed]>, and revisit Tucker’s 2019 report Fixing the Senate: Equitable and Full Representation for the 21st Century <[link removed]>.
Worker Power and Voice in the Pandemic Response
In a report released this week, Harvard Law School’s Sharon Block and Benjamin Sachs expand upon their Clean Slate for Worker Power <[link removed]> framework and propose comprehensive COVID-19 policy interventions—in labor and beyond—to amplify worker voice, boost workplace equity, and dismantle systemic racism. “Economic issues are life-and-death issues” Block tells Annie Lowrey in an Atlantic exclusive <[link removed]>. “What COVID has done is illustrate the life-or-death nature of those economic issues in a very accelerated time frame.” Read the full report <[link removed]>.
What We’re Reading
The Second Great Depression <[link removed]> - The Atlantic
WTO Tobacco Industry Ruling Marks End of an Era [by Roosevelt’s Todd Tucker] <[link removed]> - Medium
In Praise of Polarization <[link removed]> - Vox
The Stock Market Feeds the Racial Inequality It’s Free to Ignore [feat. Roosevelt’s Lenore Palladino] <[link removed]> - Bloomberg
5 Big Ideas to Narrow the Racial Wealth Gap [feat. Roosevelt’s Sandy Darity, Darrick Hamilton, and Naomi Zewde] <[link removed]> - Forbes
What Economists Fear Most During This Recovery <[link removed]> - FiveThirtyEight
[Roosevelt’s] Stiglitz, Roubini and the Post-Pandemic Future of Capitalism <[link removed]> - Bloomberg
The Jobs We Need <[link removed]>- New York Times
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