Economic Inclusion

Friday, August 01, 2008 | Margy's Blog & Updates

For The Community Action New Narrative Initiative
August 2008


In a recent New York Times Magazine article, reporter David Leonhardt offers a useful summary and analysis of recent changes in our economy:

In some fundamental ways, the American economy has stopped working.

The fact that the economy grows — that it produces more goods and services one year than it did in the previous one — no longer ensures that most families will benefit from its growth. For the first time on record, an economic expansion seems to have ended without family income having risen substantially. Most families are still making less, after accounting for inflation, than they were in 2000. For these workers, roughly the bottom 60 percent of the income ladder, economic growth has become a theoretical concept rather than the wellspring of better medical care, a new car, a nicer house — a better life than their parents had.

Americans have still been buying such things, but they have been doing so with debt. A big chunk of that debt will never be repaid, which is the most basic explanation for the financial crisis. Even after the crisis has passed, the larger problem of income stagnation will remain. It’s hardly the economy’s only serious problem either. There is also the slow unraveling of the employer-based health-insurance system and the fact that, come 2011, the baby boomers will start to turn 65, setting off an enormous rise in the government’s Medicare and Social Security obligations.

Most of these problems aren’t immediate, which helps explain why they have gone unaddressed for so long. And the United States remains a fabulously prosperous country, relative to almost any other country, at any point in history. Yet Americans seem to realize that something has gone wrong. In recent polls, about 80 percent of respondents say the economy is in bad shape, and almost 70 percent say it’s going to get worse. Together, these answers make for the most downbeat assessment since at least the early 1980s, and underscore that the next president will be inheriting a set of domestic problems as serious as any the country has faced in a long time.

Leonhardt’s article is primarily an attempt to place Senator Obama’s economic policy on the political spectrum. The reporter focuses on the democratic nominee for President because “John McCain’s economic vision, as he has laid it out during the campaign, amounts to a slightly altered version of Republican orthodoxy….”

We recommend the article to readers who are interested in a review of the changes in the economy impacting communities and the labor market, and choices we will face when a new administration begins the job of proposing and promoting policies designed to strengthen our economy.

Finally, we note, with interest, the inclusive description of economic theory offered by Senator Obama when asked for a “bumper-sticker summary” by the reporter:

“…what we need to bring about is the end of the era of unresponsive and inefficient government and short-term thinking in government, so that the government is laying the groundwork, the framework, the foundation for the market to operate effectively and for every single individual to be able to be connected with that market and to succeed in that market.” [Our emphasis.]

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