
IPFS News Link • Economy - Economics USA
Agenda for a Freer and More Prosperous America
• The Daily BellOne recent example of this is a lengthy "report" primarily prepared by Nobel Prize-winning economist, Joseph E. Stiglitz, for the Roosevelt Institute. Released in June 2015, Stiglitz and his co-authors present an agenda for Rewriting the Rules of the American Economy: An Agenda for Growth and Shared Prosperity.
The "Progressive's" Agenda for Bigger Government
Running for 100 pages, it is based on the premise that markets are inherently likely to be unfair when left on their own without pervasive government oversight and regulation, that income inequality must be cured through various fiscal and interventionist policies, that America's economic system is persistently biased against ethnic and related minority groups and that sustainable growth and stable financial markets require more intrusive government intervention, including making "full employment" a higher priority for the Federal Reserve in setting monetary policy.
In the grab bag of policy proposals are included federal laws restoring union power to control labor markets and hold businesses hostage to their wage and benefit demands, even heavier environmental regulations on business and industry in the name of saving the planet, higher marginal tax rates on the classified "rich" and increased capital gains and dividend taxes to pay for all the things the Roosevelt Institute authors think government should be doing more of.
Economic growth is to be fostered through massive government-funded infrastructure programs and expansion of "public transportation" as a tool for creating job access for low-income groups.
Stiglitz and his team also propose to raise the federal minimum wage, impose mandatory paid sick and family leave, subsidize child care for working mothers, increase government spending on all levels of schooling and education, including reducing people's financial responsibility for repaying loans for higher education, "universalizing" government-funded health care even more than it is already, have the government go more directly in to the home mortgage business at subsidized lending rates with below market-based credit worthiness and expand Social Security access and benefits.