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February 23, 2006
Wall Street Journal: We Must Change Policy Direction

Local Initiatives Support Corporation: Media Center: Wall Street Journal: We Must Change Policy Direction

In a Wall Street Journal op-ed piece, LISC Chairman Robert E. Rubin advocates new economic policies designed to make America more solvent and competitive.

An Excerpt:

Our strategy should reaffirm market-based economics as the most effective organizing principle for economic activity, while recognizing the critical role of government in providing the many requisites for economic success that markets, by their very nature, will not provide.

Broad participation in economic well-being and growth is critical, both as a fundamental value and to realize our economic potential. Enabling all citizens to obtain adequate housing, nutrition, education, health care and much else will best promote productivity.

Broad-based participation is also the best antidote to protectionism, and to pressures for undue restrictions on our economic flexibility and immigration. For these same reasons, measures to increase security for the growing number of people dislocated in our rapidly changing economy may well be wise economically.

This can be done without creating the rigidities and excessive social benefits that have led to chronically slow growth and high unemployment in Continental Europe.

The seeming inertial tendency of our economy toward less and less broad-based participation is startling and too little discussed.

Median real wages, household incomes and family incomes have increased relatively little over the last 30 years, except during the last five years of the '90s. Thus, a study showed that in 1979 it took 44 people with average earnings in the bottom half of the population to equal each person in the top 0.1 of 1%, while in 2001, the last year in that study, that number was 160.

Our economy is not working for too many of our people, and that is a problem for all of us.

Posted on February 23, 2006 04:14 PM



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Key Human Services Sites

Center for Budget and Policy Priorities
Center on Law and Social Policy
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Urban Institute
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