New America on Economic Growth

Easy Access to Our Work and Experts on This Issue

The United States could help drive a new era of rising global prosperity and rapid economic growth -- fueled by new technologies and production processes -- that in turn could help alleviate many of the most daunting problems we face domestically and internationally. Yet inadequate investment in public infrastructure, the skills of our workforce, and research and development, combined with an unsustainable level of consumer debt, undermine our ability to promote sustainable economic growth. New America is developing an integrated strategy and specific policy proposals to overcome these problems and promote widespread growth and prosperity.

Recent New America articles, events, policy papers and press coverage on this topic are available below, as is information on our staff and fellows with expertise in this area. To learn more about New America's ideas, proposals and activities, please see our Economic Growth Program home page.

Policy Papers

New America's latest official publications on this issue are featured below.

Financing the Productive Economy: The Heartland Development Bank

Infrastructure and Economic Opportunity

Throughout American history, infrastructure investment has played a critical role in economic development. As the nation moved west, the building of canals and turnpikes, followed by construction of railroads, expanded the field of economic opportunity. Later, investment in electricity and telephone networks facilitated the development of vast expanses of the American landscape that had previously been left behind. More recently, the national interstate highway system and now the continuing build-out of broadband telecommunications networks have enabled the de-clustering of many business endeavors that were once… more

Joel Kotkin | September 18, 2008

Promises, Promises: A Fiscal Voter Guide to the 2008 Election

The United States faces serious fiscal challenges. Large budget deficits have returned, and shifting demographics along with growing health care costs are putting intense pressure on the long-term federal budget outlook. Over time, sustained deficits will weaken the economy and adversely affect the American standard of living.

The two major political parties' presidential candidates are campaigning on a lengthy list of policy initiatives, most of which would have significant impact on the federal budget. While not all of these proposals will… more

Marc Goldwein, Maya MacGuineas | August 21, 2008

Redressing America's Public Infrastructure Deficit

Chairman, Oberstar, Representative Mica, and Members of the Committee, thank you for inviting me to testify today on the question of "financing infrastructure investments."

Over the past several decades, we have accumulated a sizeable public infrastructure deficit. As a result, a variety of infrastructure bottlenecks-traffic congested roads, clogged ports, and an antiquated air traffic system, to mention just a few-have begun to undercut our economy's efficiency and undermine our quality of life.

One of the reasons for this infrastructure deficit is that our system… more

Bernard L. Schwartz | June 19, 2008

Sovereign Wealth Funds: Foreign Policy Consequences In an Era Of New Money

Over the past several months, few issues in international finance have generated as much discussion and comment as have Sovereign Wealth Funds (“SWF”s). This Committee deserves enormous credit for recognizing the potentially significant foreign policy consequences of the rapid accumulation by foreign governments of enormous, growing pools of capital. These large concentrations of government controlled wealth raise complex issues that transcend traditional boundaries between foreign policy, financial markets, international economics and national security.

It is my belief, however, that too much… more

Douglas Rediker | June 11, 2008

Smart Globalization Policy Agenda

The policy ideas that would make up the Initiative's competitiveness and growth strategy would fall under two main pillars of the Initiative. As noted earlier, the first pillar would consist of an international strategy to balance and respond to the economically dysfunctional practices of other economics and to create a supportive global economic environment for strengthening America's productive economy. The second pillar would entail policies to enhance America's competitiveness and promote domestic economic development through policies geared towards the maintenance and generation of higher-value added jobs.

1.… more

Public Comments on the Proposed Regulations On Foreign Investment Into the U.S.

The Honorable Nova Daly Deputy Assistant Secretary U.S. Department of the Treasury

Dear Mr. Daly:

We are pleased to submit these comments with respect to the recently proposed regulations regarding the implementation of the Foreign Investment and National Security Act of 2007 (“FINSA”) amendments to Section 721 of the Defense Production Act of 1950 (“Exon-Florio”).

Background

As a general matter, we believe that U.S. and global economic health are strengthened by the free flow of investment capital and by the increased liquidity that open… more

Financing America’s Infrastructure

America’s basic infrastructure is outdated, worn, and in some cases, failing. Most experts agree that it is inadequate for meeting the demands of the 21st-century global economy. If we are to remain competitive, we must invest in capital assets like roads, ports, bridges, mass transit, water systems, and broadband infrastructure. Many other countries -- both rich and poor -- see investing in infrastructure as imperative for economic survival and success in an increasingly competitive economic environment. But the United States… more

How Much Does the Federal Government Spend To Promote Economic Mobility, And For Whom?

In an economically mobile market economy, individuals and families are able to raise their private incomes, wealth, and ability (sometimes referred to as human capital) over time and across generations. In the United States, many associate economic mobility with the pursuit of the American Dream. Education, work experience, and saving enhance the opportunity for upward economic mobility. To this end, many federal spending and tax expenditure or tax subsidy programs aim to enhance economic mobility. But exactly how much does the… more

Adam Carasso | April 17, 2008

Taking Back Our Fiscal Future

The authors of this paper are longtime federal budget and policy experts who have been drawn together by a deep concern about the nation’s long-term fiscal outlook. Our group covers the ideological spectrum. We are affiliated with a diverse set of organizations. We have been meeting informally for over a year, under the auspices of The Brookings Institution and The Heritage Foundation, to define the dimensions and consequences of the looming federal budget problem, examine alternative solutions, and reach… more

Maya MacGuineas | April 2008

Rethinking Social Insurance

The single greatest threat to the fiscal health of the United States is the runaway growth of the nation’s major retirement and health care entitlement programs. Social Security and Medicare are projected to grow from 7.5 percent of GDP today to almost 13 percent of GDP by 2030. Already, the two programs consume over a third of the federal budget. The total present value of costs that will exceed earmarked revenues of Social Security and Medicare over the next 75 years is $41 trillion, or,… more

Maya MacGuineas | February 19, 2008

Do Sovereign Wealth Funds Make the U.S. Economy Stronger or Pose National Security Risks?

By way of introduction, I spent most of the last seventeen years working as an investment banker and private equity investor based primarily in London, England. This experience, I believe, gives me a somewhat different perspective on Sovereign Wealth Funds and the role that they play in today’s international capital markets. Currently, I co-direct the Global Strategic Finance Initiative at the New America Foundation. The New America Foundation is a non-profit, post-partisan public policy institute in Washington D.C.

Over the past several months, few issues in international finance have generated… more

Douglas Rediker | February 13, 2008

As the Stimulus Negotiations Continue...

While we believe that fiscal stimulus done right would be likely to help the economy, we also believe that a good stimulus package is hard to come by. We have expressed concern that fiscal stimulus might come too late to help the stalling economy and that a package might be loaded up with costly and unrelated items.

Initially, we were gratified as negotiations between the White House and the House of Representatives led to what we found to be a… more

Maya MacGuineas | February 4, 2008

Fiscal Stimulus: Do It Right or Don't Do It At All

Congress appears poised to move forward with a fiscal stimulus package. In theory, a mixture of monetary and fiscal policy is generally most appropriate to help a slowing economy; in practice however, fiscal policy becomes politicized so easily that it is often ineffective, and is sometimes even counterproductive. Too often in the past, stimulus bills have been poorly timed, poorly targeted, and larded up with unrelated items. If Congress moves forward with a stimulus package, the Committee for Responsible Federal… more

Maya MacGuineas | January 22, 2008

Back to Basics: A Pro-Growth Public Investment Strategy

For more than a decade, rising asset prices have driven the economy, benefiting the wealthy but doing relatively little to improve either the economic status of the majority of Americans or the country’s overall competitiveness. Rising stock and housing prices created staggering short-term increases in wealth for some, but did little to bolster the nation’s preeminence in technology, industry, or agriculture.

In order to retool the economy and generate balanced, robust job growth, the government should focus… more

Joel Kotkin | November 2007

The Macroeconomic Considerations of a Public Investment Strategy

When you arrive at Shanghai’s Pudong International Airport, now about a decade old, you find yourself at the terminus of the world’s fastest train, a magnetic levitation marvel designed in Germany that takes you downtown at speeds briefly touching 450 kilometers an hour. There is little vibration, not much noise. Only a monitor in the car and the landscape rushing past your window lets you know just how fast you are moving.

Similarly, at the Amsterdam, Paris, or Zurich… more

October 2007

Foreign Investment and Sovereign Wealth Funds

The amount of money now held by governments around the world both in reserves and through sovereign wealth funds (“SWFs”) represents the largest concentration of investment capital the world has ever known. Their sheer size and expected rate of growth raise important issues regarding both the origin of this wealth and how it is to be invested. The origin of these funds rests on two main factors: the global imbalances between debtor nations (like the U.S.) and surplus nations… more

No Worker Left Behind

Why aren’t Republican presidential candidates talking more about job training?

Wherever they go on the campaign trail, candidates are asked about off-shoring, layoffs, and wages. Despite the strong U.S. economy and near full employment, middle class anxiety is real.

Hardly a day goes by that some Democratic candidate doesn’t speak about the struggles of the middle class family in the age of globalization.Democrats campaigned last November on responding to working family angst through a minimum wage increase. Republicans often respond… more

David Gray | June 15, 2007

A Capital Budget for Public Investment

Click here for a brief video discussion of this idea.

The federal budget needs to prioritize spending that will make our economy more productive in the future. Yet, over the last several decades, the portion of the federal budget going to current consumption has increased, while that devoted to public investment has declined. As a result, the federal government does not adequately fund either… more

Sherle R. Schwenninger | February 1, 2007

Articles & Books

Recent New America-authored articles, op-eds and books on this topic are featured below.

Free Traitors

Jagdish Bhagwati is a humble man. He will tell you so himself. Describing the effect of his book In Defense of Globalization during a speech at the John Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) last fall, the Columbia economist politely refused credit for single-handedly dampening growing concerns about the fallout from free trade. Fears of trade are "low-key," he said. "I won't say it's because of my book. I have colleagues who would say that. ... People believe I have a large claim to fame, so I… more

Christopher Hayes | October 8, 2008 | The New Republic

Mailing Our Way to Solvency

America's financial landscape is changing before our eyes. The absorption of major Wall Street investment banks by commercial banks threatens to create colossal universal banks that are too big to fail and might need to be bailed out in the future. Meanwhile, the structure of public and private finance in the United States chronically fails to address four problems: the almost 10 percent of Americans without a bank account; the concerns of all Americans about the security of their savings; the growing indebtedness of the country to… more

Michael Lind | October 6, 2008 | The New York Times

Is There a Better Way Forward and a Better Way to Persuade the Public, Fear Itself Having Failed?

A better way forward is a different way forward. The Axis of Arrogance--the Wall Street-Washington bipartisan alliance--seems determined simply to bludgeon the American people into supporting the bailout. President Bush was at it again, just this morning in the White House, bludgeoning away once again. What’s that old adage? If at first you don’t succeed, try, try, banging your head against the wall even again.

It’s a rare time in history that the elites are actively badmouthing the economy in order to win a policy dispute. But… more

James Pinkerton | September 29, 2008 | Politico

The Financial Crisis: What Drucker Would Have Said

Peter Drucker didn't have a whole lot of nice things to say about those on Wall Street, at one point likening them to "Balkan peasants stealing each other's sheep."

Given the magnitude of the latest crisis to grip Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, American International Group, Lehman Brothers, and their friends, one can only imagine what kind of acid analogy he might have used today.

Or perhaps he would have simply said, "I told you so." After all, so much of the trouble that has befallen… more

Rick Wartzman | September 26, 2008 | BusinessWeek

The Joneses and the Joads

After storms ravaged Iowa last summer, devastation wasn't the only thing that people found amid the flood waters. Scores of out-of-work electricians from Michigan, hard hit by auto industry cutbacks, spied opportunity. Trekking hundreds of miles from home, where the unemployment rate of 8.5% is the highest in the U.S., they were eager to scoop up jobs rewiring Cedar Rapids -- even if it meant sleeping in a tent for weeks on end.

To some observers, the desperate scene evoked an unmistakable image. "The Joads leaving… more

Rick Wartzman | September 16, 2008 | Los Angeles Times

Put a Cap on CEO Pay

For a guy whose astute counsel helped to make so many CEOs rich, Peter Drucker had an intense loathing of exorbitant executive salaries.

He hated high CEO pay on every level: what it said about the individual as a leader, how it undermined the smooth functioning of the organization, and the way it tore at the fabric of society as a whole.

Drucker's strong feelings on the subject—he once termed sky-high CEO compensation "a serious disaster"—are well worth revisiting in light of the news that… more

Rick Wartzman | September 12, 2008 | BusinessWeek

These Are the New Middle Ages, Not a New Order

We are entering -- for those keeping track -- the new new, new new world order. President George Bush Snr's world order of multilateral cooperation was embarrassed by Somalia, Rwanda and Bosnia. Pax Americana, rebranded as globalisation under Bill Clinton, was shattered by 9/11. For the past seven years we've been living under the "war on terror" world order paradigm, creating more cleavages than it has healed.

But this time the conditions are very different. The world has stopped waiting for the US - and its next… more

Parag Khanna | September 12, 2008 | The Guardian (London)

Renewing America's 'Contract With the Middle Class'

Not all that long ago, America's prominent business and government leaders widely believed that our nation's prosperity depended on a strong middle class growing from the bottom up. Workers were rewarded for their hard work with fair wages, benefits and advancement opportunities -- and our economy and our national security were much stronger for it. Henry Ford certainly knew this, and often said that his company would prosper only if his workers earned enough to buy the Fords they produced. And in 1953, when General… more
Leo Hindery | September 1, 2008 | Los Angeles Times

Covered Bonds Can Rebuild America

Monday's embrace of covered bonds by U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and senior representatives of the Fed, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and the country's largest banks to help thaw the U.S. mortgage market is a laudable step, appealing to market proponents and skeptics alike. Introducing covered bonds to the U.S. is a great idea. In fact, covered bonds can help more than just the mortgage market. At its most basic, a covered bond is a bond issued by a bank and backed by… more

When 2008 Feels Like 1968

It's been a bummer of a summer, hasn't it?

At the gas station the other night, I found myself staring in disbelief—as I have for weeks—while the numbers on the pump kept spiraling higher and higher. The total: $67.83 to fill my Passat. I hopped back in my car and flipped on the radio, figuring a little music might take my mind off the lightness of my wallet, but the news came on instead: Fannie Mae (FNM) and Freddie Mac (FRE) were reeling. Nervous depositors… more

Rick Wartzman | July 17, 2008 | BusinessWeek

Don't Pick On Sovereign Wealth

Under pressure from the U.S., Europe and the IMF, representatives of 25 sovereign wealth funds managing about $3 trillion in assets met last week in Singapore to discuss how to allay fears about their investments. These large pools of government-controlled wealth are investing in everything from Barclays and Citigroup to New York's Chrysler Building. As they transcend traditional boundaries between foreign policy, financial markets and national security, it is natural that Western capitals are worried.

However, shining the spotlight too brightly on sovereign wealth funds (SWFs) may… more

Which Way, Latin America?

Angelo Rivero Santos, the deputy chief of mission of the Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, and Andrés Martinez, senior fellow at the New America Foundation, discuss recent political and economic trends in South America: Are Latin American nations moving toward neo-liberal free markets or a 21st century form of Bolivarian socialism? Why are relations between Venezuela and the U.S. perceived as being so bad?  How might U.S. relations with South and Central American nations change after Barack Obama or… more

Leveraging the Strengths Of the Disabled

When the House passed legislation in late June that expanded protections for disabled people, it marked an important step forward on an important issue. But what the workplace needs, even more than a new law, is an old insight -- one first offered by Peter Drucker more than 40 years ago.

"To make strength productive is the unique purpose of organization," Drucker wrote in his 1967 classic, The Effective Executive. "It cannot, of course, overcome the weaknesses with which each of… more

Rick Wartzman | July 3, 2008 | BusinessWeek.com

Drucker's Take On Making Mistakes

Lyndon Johnson occupied the White House when KeyCorp first began raising its dividend. The Beatles topped the pop charts. Martin Luther King Jr. led tens of thousands of civil rights marchers through Alabama.

For 43 straight years, the company's annual payout climbed, "a record we were extremely proud of," in the words of KeyCorp Chief Executive Henry Meyer. That is, until earlier this month. The Cleveland bank, slammed by the weak housing market and an adverse tax ruling, announced that it… more

Rick Wartzman | June 19, 2008 | BusinessWeek.com

The Seven-Year Rich

After the brutal bust of 2001, we didn’t expect new masses of multimillionaires to reappear around here quite so fast. But they did -- and this time, no recession will send them packing. A 2008 field guide to a new, super-driven kind of upper class -- whose motives and morés, like it or not, are now part of our DNA.

I. The Penthouse View

On a recent Friday morning, at the end of a week in which the dollar has continued to… more

Conditioning the Corporate Athlete

Thirty-five years ago, in his classic Management: Tasks, Responsibilities, Practices, Peter Drucker declared that the means by which most people had long run their organizations -- through a mix of perks and punishment, rewards and reprimands -- was all but dead.

"The basic fact," Drucker wrote, "is that the traditional... approach to managing, that is the carrot-and-stick way, no longer works."

It was striking, then, to read a few weeks ago of Whirlpool's decision to suspend 39 workers who had claimed to… more

Rick Wartzman | May 22, 2008 | BusinessWeek.com

Exxon Mobil Needs a Longer View

John D. Rockefeller has been described in many different ways: as greedy and cutthroat, as munificent and caring, as "solitary, taciturn, remote, and ascetic," in the words of author Daniel Yergin. But as a manager, perhaps Rockefeller's most indispensable quality was this: He was uncompromisingly forward-looking.

It was Rockefeller, more than any single figure, who helped revolutionize the way people in the 19th century illuminated their homes, hastening the shift from costly whale oil to kerosene -- a fuel that was,… more

Throw Out the Tax Code

Politicians don't like to talk about taxes except to brag about cutting them. But with California's widening budget deficit threatening deep cuts in education and other public services, it's difficult to avoid discussions about raising taxes.

Unfortunately, what's likely to be lost in the upcoming partisan melee over whether new taxes are needed to close the $16-billion gap is an equally important tax issue -- California's aging and often unfair tax system needs to be overhauled.

The goal of tax… more

Mark Paul | April 20, 2008 | Los Angeles Times

Don't Spend Your Tax Rebate!

The IRS was so confident in the legendary observation of Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. that “taxes are the price we pay for a civilized society” they chiseled it above the entrance to their Washington D.C. headquarters. Still each year Tax Day makes incumbent politicians uneasy -- especially at times when recession fears mount and fall elections loom. This year this perilous combination spurred them on to take prompt and bipartisan action. Who wants to be accused of sending families their… more

Peter Drucker's Winning Team

In the summer of 1985, an executive named Peter Bavasi pored over a Harvard Business Review article by Peter Drucker in which the great management thinker described the "widow maker" -- a job so inherently impossible that it was apt to defeat even the best and brightest.

Drucker's warning, "Any job that ordinarily competent people cannot perform is a job that cannot be staffed," was especially ominous for Bavasi. He had, you see, just become president of the Cleveland Indians, a… more

Rick Wartzman | April 10, 2008 | BusinessWeek.com

Events

Related New America events, both recent and upcoming (if any), are featured below.

Experts

Steven Clemons

Steven Clemons

Steven Clemons directs the American Strategy Program at the New America Foundation, which aims to promote a new American internationalism that combines a tough-minded realism about America's interests in the world with a pragmatic idealism about the kind of world order best suited to America's democratic way of life. He… more

Reid Cramer

Reid Cramer

Reid Cramer is Research Director of the Asset Building Program at the New America Foundation, where he leads the program's policy research activities. The Asset Building Program aims to promote policies and ideas that expand savings and asset ownership, especially among lower-income families. His work has provided analytical support for… more

Heidi Crebo-Rediker

Heidi Crebo-Rediker

Heidi Crebo-Rediker is the Co-Director of the Global Strategic Finance Initiative. This initiative focuses on the relationship between global finance, capital flows, and foreign policy, with a specific emphasis on the role of the U.S. in a multi-polar financial world. Last year, Heidi returned to the US from Europe where she spent over 16 years… more

Patrick C. Doherty

Patrick C. Doherty

Patrick C. Doherty is Deputy Director of the American Strategy Program at the New America Foundation. The American Strategy Program aims to promote a new American internationalism that combines a tough-minded realism about America's interests in the world with a pragmatic idealism about the kind of world order best suited… more

T.A. Frank

As a California-based Fellow at the New America Foundation, T.A. Frank writes about law, criminal justice, and labor. With a robust technology sector, busy ports, and a changing economy, California is faced with new sorts of crime, such as terrorism, cybercrime, and financial fraud. Mr. Frank will explore issues such… more
Areas of Expertise: Criminal Justice, Economic Growth, Labor, Law

David Friedman

David Friedman

David Friedman was a New America Senior Fellow from March 2000 through March 2007.Friedman is an attorney, political scientist, economic development specialist, author, and columnist. In addition to his law degree, he holds a Ph.D. from MIT in international politics, where he won an award for the “Best… more

David Gray

David Gray

David E. Gray directs the New America Foundation's Workforce and Family Program, which researches and develops solutions to social and family issues and builds common ground between people across ideological, political and theological boundaries. He manages the program's various projects, including its Healthy Families and Religious Center Initiatives.

Rev. Gray speaks… more

Joel Kotkin

Joel Kotkin

Joel Kotkin is an internationally recognized authority on global economic, political, and social trends. He is the author of six books, including, The City: A Global History (Modern Library, 2005), as well as the bestseller, The New Geography: How the Digital Revolution Is Reshaping the American Landscape (Random House, 2002).… more

Michael Lind

Michael Lind

Michael Lind is the Whitehead Senior Fellow at the New America Foundation. He is the author, with Ted Halstead, of The Radical Center: The Future of American Politics (Doubleday, 2001). He is also the author of Made in Texas: George W. Bush and the Southern Takeover of American Politics (New… more

Barry C. Lynn

Barry C. Lynn

Barry C. Lynn is a business and political journalist, and an expert on global industrial systems, corporate organization, trade, energy, emerging technology, and the development of middle-income nations. He is the author of the groundbreaking work End of the Line: The Rise and Coming Fall of the Global Corporation (Doubleday,… more

Maya MacGuineas

Maya MacGuineas  

As President of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, which is housed at the New America Foundation, and the Director of the Fiscal Policy Program, Maya MacGuineas oversees the Foundation's efforts to bring accountability to the budget process, address the challenges presented by the nation's underfunded entitlements programs,… more

Afshin Molavi

Afshin Molavi

Afshin Molavi is the author of Persian Pilgrimages: Journeys Across Iran (Norton, 2002), which was nominated for the Thomas Cook literary travel book of the year and described by Foreign Affairs as “a brilliant tableau of today’s Iran.” A former Dubai-based correspondent for the Reuters news agency and a regular… more

Annette Nellen

nellen-sm.jpg

Annette Nellen is a professor in the department of accounting and finance at San José State University, where she teaches graduate-level tax courses. She speaks and writes frequently on tax policy matters, tax reform, tax accounting, and high-technology tax issues. In 2000, she served on the academic panel that advised… more

Len Nichols

Len Nichols

Len Nichols, a highly respected healthcare economist, directs the Health Policy Program at the New America Foundation, which aims to expand health insurance coverage to all Americans while reining in costs and improving the efficiency of the overall health care system. Before joining New America, Dr. Nichols was the Vice… more

Mark Paul

Mark Paul

Mark Paul is an award-winning writer, editor, and policy expert with wide experience in journalism and California state government and politics. He covered California for 24 years, first as Editorial Page Editor and National Editor of the Oakland Tribune, then as Deputy Editorial Page Editor and columnist for… more

Douglas Rediker

Doug Rediker is currently the Co-Director of the Global Strategic Finance Initiative at the New America Foundation. This initiative focuses on the relationship between global finance, capital flows, and foreign policy, with a specific emphasis on the role of the U.S. in a multi-polar financial world. Last year, he returned… more

Sherle R. Schwenninger

Sherle R. Schwenninger

Sherle Schwenninger directs the New America Foundation's Economic Growth Program and the Global Middle Class Initiative. He is also the former director of the Bernard L. Schwartz Fellows Program.

Mr. Schwenninger was Founding Editor of World Policy Journal from 1983 to 1992, and served as Director of the World Policy Institute… more

Bruce Stokes

Bruce Stokes Bruce Stokes is the international economics columnist for National Journal, a Washington-based public policy magazine. He is a member and former fellow of the Council on Foreign Relations, where he directed the Trade Program. He was also a member of President Clinton's Commission on United States-Pacific Trade and Investment Policy,… more

Rick Wartzman

Rick Wartzman Rick Wartzman is the director of the Drucker Institute at Claremont Graduate University. Before taking this post, he worked for two decades as a newspaper reporter, editor and business columnist. He began his career in 1987 at The Wall Street Journal, where he served in a variety of positions, including… more

Press

Press Release/Media AppearanceDate
Michael Lind in Asia Times Online | 'Financial Crisis Threatens US Influence'September 27, 2008
Ellen Seidman in Pro Publica | 'The Regulators Who Saw Crisis Coming'September 25, 2008
Ellen Seidman in The Minnesota Independent | 'Bachmann and Others Blame 1977 Fair-Lending Law for Adding to Economic Crisis' September 24, 2008
Douglas Rediker in The New York Times | 'A Fund to Rival Those of Other Governments'September 22, 2008
Parag Khanna in The San Diego Union Tribune | 'Foreign Oil Producers Have U.S. Over Barrel 'August 24, 2008
Doug Rediker on BizRadio | 'The Economic Contrarian' July 31, 2008
Big Ideas from New America: An Economic Recovery Program for the Post-Bubble EconomyJuly 30, 2008
Douglas Rediker in the Financial Post | 'Merrill Woes Could Spread'July 30, 2008
Sherle Schwenninger on Infrastructure Investment and the Bloomberg, Schwarzenegger, and Rendell Call to ActionJuly 25, 2008
Sherle Schwenninger in Las Vegas Sun | 'Measures Linked, Going Nowhere'July 7, 2008
Sherle R. Schwenninger in the National Journal | 'The Real Infrastructure Crisis'July 5, 2008
Douglas Rediker in MSN Money | 'Is America in a Permanent Decline?'July 2, 2008
Douglas Rediker in America.gov | 'How Welcome Is Investment by Sovereign Wealth Funds?'June 12, 2008
Financing America’s InfrastructureJune 9, 2008
Doug Rediker in Harvard Political Review | 'Sovereign Wealth and Private Equity Funds are Here to Stay' April 22, 2008
Doug Rediker in New York Times | Financier Aims to Buy Struggling Small BanksApril 17, 2008
Doug Rediker in National Journal | New Moves on Wealth FundsMarch 15, 2008
New America in The New York Sun | 'Bloomberg Decries Stimulus Plans'January 24, 2008
New America in The Hill | 'On stimulus, Sen. McCain, Bush divided'January 24, 2008
New America in US News & World Report | 'Candidates Push Economic Stimulus Plans'January 23, 2008