How policy can help new labor market entrants. View this in your browser and share with your friends. <[link removed]>
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A Gen Z Policy Agenda
“We're a long way from a full recovery," Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said this week.
That checks out. One year into the pandemic, a US economy that’s already lost nine million jobs since last winter is slowing again <[link removed]>.
“Growing at November’s pace of 245,000 new jobs, it will take 40 months to regain jobs lost since the start of the pandemic . . .” Adam S. Hersh and Roosevelt Fellow Mark Paul wrote <[link removed]> for Groundwork Collaborative last month. Even that pace “would still leave jobless new entrants to the labor force and those in disguised unemployment.”
And that was before we learned 140,000 jobs <[link removed]> were shed in December, with Black and Latina women experiencing the steepest losses.
Entering the labor market during a pandemic-driven double-dip recession is the height of bad luck. And as the Great Recession taught us <[link removed]>, graduating into a recession can harm wealth and earning potential well after an immediate crisis ends.
To ensure that bad luck doesn’t follow Gen Z for a lifetime, we must act now. As Roosevelt Managing Director of Research and Policy Suzanne Kahn explains in a new report, revamping our social insurance system can:
- reduce the long-term effects of recessions on new labor market entrants;
- increase these workers’ long-term attachment to the labor market overall;
- stimulate the economy; and
- address racial and educational disparities.
Learn how in Building Wealth for Generation Z: How Policy Can Help New Labor Market Entrants. <[link removed]>
A complementary solution: student debt cancellation. For a primer on its many benefits, read Roosevelt’s new fact sheet: Unburdened: How Canceling Student Debt Can Boost Growth, Equity, and Innovation <[link removed]>.
Climate-Forward
“Today is climate day in the White House, which means today is jobs day at the White House,” President Biden said <[link removed]> while unveiling a suite of climate-focused executive actions <[link removed]> on Wednesday.
After years of costly backslide, these policies—and the explicit linkage of climate change mitigation and economic gain—are a welcome course correction.
But the magnitude of this moment demands deeper investment and swifter transformation. Two new Roosevelt fact sheets capture the economic and human potential.
- Climate-Forward: How Green Investment Can Stimulate Our Economy Today and Sustain Long-Term Growth <[link removed]>
- Fiscal Policy Is Climate Policy: How Curbing Corporate Power Can Address the Climate Crisis <[link removed]>
What We’re Reading and Listening to
The GameStop Reckoning Was a Long Time Coming <[link removed]> - New York Times
Freedom from Markets [podcast feat. Roosevelt’s Mike Konczal] <[link removed]> - The Weeds
America Has Forgotten How to Be Free [feat. Konczal] <[link removed]> - The Week
The Mirage of the Black Middle Class [feat. Roosevelt’s William Darity Jr.] <[link removed]> - Vox
Protecting the ACA Is Only a Starting Point for Women’s Health Care [by Roosevelt’s Naomi Zewde] <[link removed]> - Ms.
America’s Next Great Economic Experiment: What if We Run It Hot? [feat. Roosevelt’s Mark Paul] <[link removed]> - New York Times
Here’s What Happens When Every Government Vehicle Is Electric [feat. Roosevelt’s Todd Tucker] <[link removed]> - New Republic
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