Riassunto
Putting Government In Its Place: The Case for a New Deal 3.0 tells the story of the House that FDR Built. Responding to the Great Depression, President Franklin Roosevelt and his New Deal team most prominently, Frances Perkins created four new clusters of domestic policy. Those policy clusters (1) broad-based economic security guarantees, (2) means-tested welfare programs, (3) across-the-board market regulation, and (4) massive market manipulation emerged quickly during the original New Deal of 1933-1938 (Version 1.0). For the next 80 years, both Democrats and Republicans added dozens of new programs within the same four policy clusters, shaping today s New Deal writ large (Version 2.0). The model worked fairly well during the post-WWII era when the U.S. dominated the world economy and technology remained generally benign. But since the mid-1970s, the New Deal settlement has sputtered in the face of rising international competition and highly disruptive technology. For decades, we ve been stuck on a plateau of little-to-no progress at times, deterioration in economic security and market effectiveness. Putting Government In Its Place: The Case for a New Deal 3.0 explains the major gaps, flaws, and mistakes of the New Deal settlement. Equally important, the book spells out, in outline and detail, the fundamental and sweeping changes needed to revive the New Deal. The proposed New Deal 3.0 would guarantee far greater economic security for all Americans, make our market economy dramatically more productive, and enlarge the nation s wealth. The result: America s next birth of freedom.
Informazioni sull?autore
David Riemer s career defies stereotypes. A progressive Democrat, he has worked closely with both Democrats and Republicans to create path-breaking public policy at the state level and influence national policy.Employment and Income Helping American adults to achieve full-time employment and adequate incomes through work-based policy reform has been an enduring focus. Since 1989, Riemer has played a lead role in Wisconsin in drafting and enacting state legislation adopted with both Democratic and Republican support to create Transitional Jobs programs, launch the nation s first refundable Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) that adjusted for family size, and replace the state's welfare program with a work-focused substitute.As the founding Director and now Senior Fellow at the Community Advocates Public Policy Institute in Milwaukee, much of Riemer s anti-poverty activity has involved designing a comprehensive work-based policy package to cut the poverty rate in half. According to an independent analysis by the Urban Institute, the policy package would reduce poverty in the U.S. by 50% or more. Based on this work, U.S. Senator Tammy Baldwin, with co-sponsor Senator Cory Booker, introduced in 2016 the Stronger Way Act. This federal legislation, reintroduced in 2017, would create a national Transitional Jobs Program and substantially increase the federal EITC.Health Care Much of Riemer s work has involved health care. At the federal level, Riemer served as staff to Senator Edward Kennedy, where he helped draft bipartisan legislation to improve the nation s mental health policy.In Wisconsin in the late 1990s, he worked closely with Democratic and Republican legislators, former Wisconsin Republican Governor Tommy Thompson, and the Clinton administration to expand insurance coverage for working families via the BadgerCare program.From 2004 to 2007, as Director of the Wisconsin Health Project, he helped fashion two pieces of legislation that, if enacted, would have insured all Wisconsinites and controlled costs by creating an incentive-driven statewide health insurance exchange. Following the enactment of the Affordable Care Act in 2010, he co-authored three amicus briefs to the U.S. Supreme Court in support of the law s constitutionality Education Riemer has also played important roles at the state level in K12 education policy, both in promoting school integration and in defending school choice. His work included submission of amicus briefs to the Wisconsin Supreme Court and the U.S. Supreme Court on behalf of a variety of liberal and conservative policy-makers in support of properly constructed school choice program.Local and State Budgets Formulating sound governmental budgets has been a central theme in Riemer s work. From 1988 to 2001, he helped prepare over a dozen City of Milwaukee budgets that improved municipal services and kept property taxes under control. He subsequently helped to craft the 2003-3005 State of Wisconsin budget that closed a $3.2 billion deficit without raising taxes. Additional Background Since 2008, Riemer has worked at the Community Advocates Public Policy Institute in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, where he is currently a Senior Fellow.In 2003-2004, Riemer campaigned for Milwaukee County Executive. He received 101,000 votes, or 43% of the votes cast, in a race against County Executive Scott Walker (later Governor of Wisconsin, candidate for President, and recently defeated candidate for governor). In 2003, Riemer served as Budget Director for Wisconsin Governor Jim Doyle. From 1988 to 2001, he worked in several positions in the administration of Milwaukee Mayor John Norquist, including Budget Director, Administration Director, and Chief of Staff.From 1975 to 1988, Riemer was legal advisor to Wisconsin Governor Patrick Lucey; worked for Sen. Edward Kennedy s Subcommittee on Health and Scientific Research; developed health policy options for the Wisconsin Legislative Fiscal Bureau; prepared a report on Wisconsin s uninsured for the state Department of Health and Social Services; and worked on health care cost containment for Time Insurance Company.Riemer is the author of The Prisoners of Welfare: Liberating America's Poor from Unemployment and Low Wages (Praeger: 1988) and numerous articles on reducing unemployment, raising incomes, improving health insurance, and public administration. He is one of the co-founders of The New Hope Project. Riemer was an Atlantic Fellow in Public Policy in London and Oxford, England, in 2002. His research focused on supplementing low-income workers earnings through the tax system. He was an Eisenhower Fellow in Hungary in 1999. As a Rockefeller Foundation resident in Bellagio, Italy, in 2012, Riemer began work on Putting Government In Its Place: The Case for a New Deal 3.0.Riemer graduated from Milwaukee Public Schools Riverside High School (1966), received an AB degree from Harvard College in History and Literature (1970), and earned a law degree from Harvard Law School (1975). He and his wife live in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
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