From Roosevelt Institute <[email protected]>
Subject Roosevelt Rundown: The New Industrial Policy
Date March 3, 2023 10:15 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
CHIPS for America

The Roosevelt Rundown features our top stories of the week.
View this in your browser and share with your friends. ([link removed])
[link removed]


** Biden’s Semiconductor Plans Represent a New Vision for Our Economy
------------------------------------------------------------

This week, the Department of Commerce announced new requirements for companies applying for funding under the bipartisan CHIPS and Science Act—aimed at boosting US semiconductor research and manufacturing—including not using funding for stock buybacks, complying with environmental permitting, and submitting plans to provide childcare for their workers.

These conditions signify an important shift toward federal policy that centers workers, families, and communities, Roosevelt president and CEO Felicia Wong explained ([link removed]) this morning on Marketplace: “It represents government spending real money to crowd in private investment in sectors that they actually want to see grow.”

And as Roosevelt’s Todd N. Tucker and Lenore Palladino write ([link removed]) in The Nation, the plan demonstrates the “critical realization that manufacturing doesn’t exist in a bubble; in order to be competitive, it must rely on fundamental worker protections such as collective bargaining and service-sector xxxxxxs such as subsidized child care and family leave.”

In particular, the first-of-its-kind ([link removed]) childcare requirement will make it easier for women and parents to join the workforce, boosting labor force participation—which, as Roosevelt’s Mike Konczal explains ([link removed]) , our economy needs to continue to grow.

“Just as we need physical infrastructure like roads to get workers to factories, we need social infrastructure—like childcare—that supports workers, too.” Konczal writes. “Solving these kinds of investment and coordination problems is where the government plays an important role.”

Read more in "To Increase the Supply of Workers, Our Economy Needs Childcare ([link removed]) ."


** What the Economy Needs for a Soft Landing
------------------------------------------------------------

During the post-pandemic economic recovery of the past two years, we’ve seen the strongest labor market in half a century—and higher-than-predicted inflation.

As the Fed reckons with elevated prices, the question remains: What will happen with inflation next? In Vox, Konczal outlines ([link removed]) three potential scenarios for the economy: a “hard landing,” a “soft landing,” or no landing at all.

“The soft landing scenario is the one policymakers would most like to see,” Konczal explains. “It would mean the US brought down inflation while ensuring a strong labor market.”

But what needs to happen for us to get that soft landing in 2023? For one, “the Fed needs to acknowledge the trade-offs it’s facing,” Konczal writes. “As the Fed wants to bring down inflation, it should ask itself how quickly and at what cost.”

Read more about what we need for a soft landing in “How the US Can Stick the Landing, Beat Inflation, and Avoid a Recession ([link removed]) .”


** What We’re Reading
------------------------------------------------------------

Labor’s Struggle With Anti-Monopoly ([link removed]) - The American Prospect

Cancer Alley in Louisiana: What Is It, and How Can Legislation Address Environmental Injustice? ([link removed]) - Teen Vogue

The Supreme Court Really Doesn’t Like Biden’s Student Debt Relief Plan ([link removed]) - The New Republic

Why the Gender Pay Gap Has Persisted for Two Decades ([link removed]) - Time

============================================================
** Twitter ([link removed])
** Facebook ([link removed])
** Vimeo ([link removed])
** Website ([link removed])
If you are interested in supporting the Roosevelt Institute, ** click here ([link removed])
.

If you would like to unsubscribe from this list, ** click here ([link removed])
.

Copyright © 2023 Roosevelt Institute, All rights reserved.
** RooseveltInstitute.org ([link removed])
570 Lexington Ave, 5th Floor
New York, NY 10022
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis