Phillip Longman is a
Senior Research Fellow, currently concentrating on health care policy,
including delivery system reform, environmental, and nutritional factors
affecting public health. His work has appeared in such publications as The Atlantic Monthly, Der Spiegel, The
Financial Times, Foreign Affairs, Foreign Policy, Harvard Business Review, The
New Republic, The New Statesman, The New York Times Magazine, The Wall Street
Journal, Washington Monthly, and Washington
Post.
His latest book, co-authored
with Ray Boshara, is entitled The
Next Progressive Era: A Blueprint for Broad Prosperity (Polipoint,
Spring 2009). Mr. Longman has been asked to testify before Congress on its
proposals for revamping America's
transportation system, which he also explained recently in a National Public
Radio interview broadcast nationwide. The book's proposals for reviving
small-scale banking were also highlighted in a recent broadcast of Dan Rather
Reports.
Mr. Longman's previous
book Best Care Anywhere,
published by Polipoint in 2007, chronicles the quality transformation of the
Veterans Health Administration and applies its lessons for reforming the U.S. health
care system as a whole. He is currently
at work on a second edition, while a Chinese language translation is also in
press. Mr. Longman has spoken widely on this subject, including appearances on
the Keith Olberman show, at the Wharton School of Business, Yale School of
Management, WorldVistA, MedImpact, The National Convention of the American
Legion, and at numerous VA facilities around the country.
His other books include The Empty Cradle: How Falling
Birthrates Threaten World Prosperity And What to Do About It,
published by Basic Books in 2004 and reissued in paperback in 2006. It examines
how the rapid yet uneven fall in birth rates around the globe is affecting the
balance of power between nations and influencing the global economy and
culture. Mr. Longman's speaking on this subject include appearances in the
documentary, "Demographic Winter" and addresses to PopTech, National War
College, the LongNow Foundation, World Congress of Families (Warsaw, Amsterdam),
the Standing Senate Committee on Banking, Trade and Commerce (Ottawa), and The St. Gallen Symposium (Switzerland) and the
Ford Hall Forum (Boston).
Mr. Longman is also the
author of Born to Pay: the
New Politics of Aging in America (Houghton Mifflin, 1987), in which
he accurately predicted the mounting strains on federal spending and economic
growth associated with the aging of the Baby Boom generation. In 1997, he
warned of the consequences excess debt and insufficient savings in his book, The Return of Thrift: How the Collapse
of the Middle Class Welfare State Will Reawaken Values in America
(Free Press, 1997).
Formerly a senior writer
and deputy assistant managing editor at U.S.
News & World Report, he has won numerous awards for his
business and financial writing, including UCLA's Gerald Loeb Award, and the top
prize for investigative journalism from Investigative Reporters and Editors. He
is a graduate of Oberlin College, and was also a Knight-Bagehot Fellow at Columbia University.