Financial Crisis

Defeating the "Paradox of Thrift"

  • By
  • Justin King
May 22, 2012

Our work can be quickly summarized (though not perfectly captured) by saying that we're in the business of "promoting savings." There are a lot of reasons that's not a perfect summary, but those kind of shortcuts often come in handy.

The Sidebar: France's New President and Egypt's Democratic Transition

May 17, 2012

On this week's episode of The Sidebar podcast (available below) Leila Hilal discusses Egypt's first ever presidential debate and the emerging democratic process in the Middle East. Jeff Vanke talks about France's new president and the future of the Eurozone. Elizabeth Weingarten hosts.

Also, Leila Hilal spoke with us on camera to preview Egypt's upcoming elections:

White House Summit on Financial Capability and Empowerment

  • By
  • Pamela Chan
May 16, 2012
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Last Thursday, The White House hosted the first ever Summit on Financial Capability and Empowerment.  Did you hear all about it?  Probably not – it somehow slipped the evening news. 

New America NYC Event: Minimum Rage

May 8, 2012

Millennials are the first downwardly mobile generation in decades, staring down a host of economic challenges--student debt, the rise of low-wage jobs, and the ballooning cost of tuition, food, and rent. Media regularly serve up sobering statistics about twentysomethings, while Occupy Wall Street struggles to stay on message. How will the Great Recession affect Millennials longterm? And do they have what it takes to fight back?

Programs:

The Relationship Among Homeownership, the Federal Budget, and the Racial Wealth Gap

  • By
  • Aleta Sprague
April 12, 2012
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The Asset Building Program’s analysis of the President’s FY 2013 budget reveals two key trends about the accessibility of homeownership and its relationship to overall wealth over the past few years. First, the benefits of the2013 federal budget’s investment in homeownership, which are delivered primarily through tax deductions, accrue chiefly to those who already have high incomes and substantial assets. Second, the housing crisis disproportionately affected black and Hispanic families, significantly widening the racial wealth gap and creating further barriers to savings and economic mobility.

The Pain in Spain

April 10, 2012

The eurozone crisis has re-emerged with rising borrowing costs in Italy and Spain and increasing concerns about the prospects for growth.

Land of Promise

April 17, 2012

From one of America’s leading intellectuals comes a sweeping and original work of economic history, recounting the epic story of America’s rise to become the world’s dominant economy.

How the Rich Get Richer

  • By
  • Reid Cramer
March 27, 2012
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Over the last several years, we’ve taken a long look at the state of inequality in America and its changing dynamics. While many focus on the distribution of income, I think it’s instructive to also consider the distribution of wealth. Wealth, unlike income, can be inherited passively, but we also know that wealth actively generates income. And here a new article by Steven Rattner, former White House Auto Czar and New America board member, that focuses on how this is increasingly the way the rich are getting richer.

Drawing on a new analysis of tax returns by the esteemed economists Piketty and Saez, Rattner explains how an overwhelming amount of income gains since the Great Recession have been captured by the very top.

In 2010, as the nation continued to recover from the recession, a dizzying 93 percent of the additional income created in the country that year, compared to 2009 — $288 billion — went to the top 1 percent of taxpayers, those with at least $352,000 in income.

Still more astonishing was the extent to which the super rich got rich faster than the merely rich. In 2010, 37 percent of these additional earnings went to just the top 0.01 percent, a teaspoon-size collection of about 15,000 households with average incomes of $23.8 million. These fortunate few saw their incomes rise by 21.5 percent.

The bottom 99 percent received a microscopic $80 increase in pay per person in 2010, after adjusting for inflation. The top 1 percent, whose average income is $1,019,089, had an 11.6 percent increase in income.

What is particularly significant here is how this pattern diverges from past recoveries. During the expansion of the 1990s, 45 percent of income gains went to those at the top. This increased to 65 percent during the Bush recovery. And now we are up to 93 percent. It is an astonishing figure that undercuts our collective aspirations for shared prosperity.

Tax policy certainly plays a major role here and should get additional scrutiny. In 2001 and 2003, we lowered the tax rates at the top and on capital gains and dividends. This is how the very rich got to have significantly lower marginal tax rates than everybody else. It is why Warren Buffet's secretry got a shoutout in the State of the Union. But at the end of the year, these tax policies are scheduled to expire. If Congress does nothing, everything goes back to the Clinton-era levels. Given the partisan divide, perhaps the do-nothing scenario will come to pass, and remake both our tax rates and our fiscal policy outlook. But team Obama has proposed a reset only for the rich, and this is the kind of data that will undoubtedly strengthen their case to do so.

The Sidebar: Bilingual Speakers and The Richer Sex

March 23, 2012
Liza Mundy discusses her new book, "The Richer Sex" and Maggie Severns talks about whether or not bilingual speakers are smarter. Pamela Chan hosts.
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