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Wednesday November 25, 2009

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RESEARCH AND COMMENTARY

Save to My PortfolioFiscal Policy Rules and Latin America: Lessons from the Crisis

Mauricio Cárdenas and José Tessada, November 23, 2009, The Brookings Institution

Fiscal Policy Rules and Latin America: Lessons from the CrisisFiscal policy has been mentioned as a key driver of the resilience that many large Latin American countries have seen during the global financial crisis. Mauricio Cárdenas and José Tessada examine Chile's fiscal rules and caution that a comprehensive fiscal strategy cannot focus solely on the short- and medium-term evolution of fiscal policy. Read More

RESEARCH AND COMMENTARY

Save to My PortfolioShould Increasing the Progressivity of Entitlement Benefits be Part of a 21st Century American Social Contract?

William A. Galston, November 23, 2009, The Brookings Institution

As the United States begins to recover from the deepest recession in decades, policymakers and the public are increasingly turning their attention to our long-term fiscal problems. To help alleviate the deficit, we need to fix the social contract. William Galston presents evidence which suggests that if done right, strengthening the link between income and net benefits would allow entitlement programs to meet essential social objectives without antagonizing upper-income beneficiaries and undermining cross-class coalitions. Read More

RESEARCH AND COMMENTARY

Save to My PortfolioTelling the Narrative of the Financial Crisis: Not Just a Housing Bubble

Douglas J. Elliott and Martin Neil Baily, November 23, 2009, The Brookings Institution

What really caused the great economic crisis of the past year? Should the Fed’s powers be stripped away, per legislation sponsored by Rep. Ron Paul that recently passed the House Financial Services Committee? In an effort to help inform the debate, Brookings Fellow Douglas Elliott and Senior Fellow Martin Baily ponder the importance of public perceptions of the causes of the crisis - and how they will affect chances of financial regulatory reform. Read More

PAST EVENT

Save to My PortfolioFiscal Challenges Facing Cities: Implications for Economic Recovery

Thursday, November 19, 2009
9:00 AM to 11:45 AM
Washington, DC

Fiscal Challenges Facing Cities: Implications for Economic RecoveryThe current economic crisis is not only a national crisis; it is also a metropolitan crisis. And soon the downturn will bring a local government fiscal crisis. On November 19, the Brookings Metropolitan Policy Program and the National League of Cities co-hosted a forum on city fiscal conditions, the responses being undertaken by creative mayors, and the implications for national economic recovery. Read More

RESEARCH AND COMMENTARY

Save to My PortfolioFiscal Challenges Facing Cities: Implications for Recovery

Mark Muro and Christopher W. Hoene, November 18, 2009, The Brookings Institution

The current economic crisis is not only a national crisis; it is also a metropolitan crisis; and it will soon become a local government fiscal crisis. In this framing report, Mark Muro and Christopher Hoene assert the importance of local government fiscal conditions to national economic performance, survey current and projected fiscal conditions, review implications for economic recovery, and offer a menu of federal policy options to help minimize city layoffs and service cuts that could harm the economy. Read More

RESEARCH AND COMMENTARY

Save to My PortfolioThe Case for Budget Autonomy in the District of Columbia

Alice M. Rivlin, November 18, 2009, Subcommittee on Federal Workforce, Postal Service and the District of Columbia, U.S. House of Representatives

The Case for Budget Autonomy in the District of ColumbiaTestifying before the U.S. House Subcommittee on the Federal Workforce, Postal Service and the District of Columbia, Alice M. Rivlin, Director of Greater Washington Research at Brookings, asserted that the District of Columbia government should have greater autonomy over its own budget. Once the District government finalizes its budget spending out of its own source revenues, Dr. Rivlin states that it should not be altered or delayed by Congress. Read More

RESEARCH AND COMMENTARY

Save to My PortfolioAn Awkward Dance: China and the United States

Eswar Prasad and Grace Gu, November 11, 2009, The Brookings Institution

An Awkward Dance: China and the United StatesWhile the economic entanglements between the U.S. and China have increased over the last decade, so has the tension. With President Obama visiting China and other Asian nations, Brookings expert Eswar Prasad and Grace Gu of Cornell University discuss the tightening embrace between the two countries—in terms of flows of goods and services, financial capital and people—and the implications. Read More

RESEARCH AND COMMENTARY

Save to My PortfolioStrengthening United States Fiscal Policy

William A. Galston, November 10, 2009, Senate Budget Committee

Speaking before the Senate Budget Committee, Senior Fellow William Galston discussed how the Untied States’ current fiscal course is unsustainable. The level of deficits, debt, and borrowing from abroad projected for the next decade threatens not only our economic prosperity, but also our currency, global leadership, and national independence, he asserted. Galston recommended that an independent, bi-partisan commission be created to address the challenge of developing a sustainable fiscal policy. Read More

RESEARCH AND COMMENTARY

Save to My PortfolioWas Irving Kristol a Neoconservative?

Justin Vaïsse, September 23, 2009, ForeignPolicy.com

Irving Kristol, regarded by many as the "godfather" of neoconservativism, passed away on September 18 at the age of 89. Justin Vaïsse examines the history of the movement and explains why Kristol was not a neocon in the modern sense of the word – partly because of Kristol’s consistently realist foreign policy approach. Read More

RESEARCH AND COMMENTARY

Save to My PortfolioAn Update on the Economic and Fiscal Crises: 2009 and Beyond

William G. Gale and Alan J. Auerbach, September 15, 2009, The Brookings Institution

An Update on the Economic and Fiscal Crises: 2009 and BeyondWilliam Gale and Alan Auerbach review recent economic events and their impact on U.S. fiscal performance and prospects, highlighting the historic nature of the 2009 budget outcomes, the unsustainability of plausible ten-year budget projections, and the increasingly dire long-term fiscal problem. Read More

BOOK

Save to My PortfolioCreating an Opportunity Society

Ron Haskins and Isabel V. Sawhill, September 15, 2009

Creating an Opportunity Society examines economic opportunity in the United States and explores how to create more of it, particularly for those on the bottom rungs of the economic ladder. Read More

RESEARCH AND COMMENTARY

Save to My PortfolioFix Health Care. But Fix the Deficits, Too

Alan J. Auerbach and William G. Gale, September 08, 2009, CNNMoney.com

Senior Fellow William G. Gale and Alan J. Auerbach argue that while Obama must spell out a plan for reducing health costs, that will only partly address the long-term fiscal gap. Taxes and broader cuts are needed to solve the government's long-term financial problems. Read More

VIDEO

Save to My PortfolioBen Bernanke’s Second Term and the Federal Budget Forecast

Alice M. Rivlin, August 27, 2009

President Barack Obama has nominated Ben Bernanke to serve a second term as Chairman of the Federal Reserve. The nomination came on the same day the White House announced a sharp increase in projected deficits. Alice Rivlin says the deficit projections should serve as an impetus for officials to step up efforts to fix the floundering economy. She also gives the Bernanke nomination her nod of approval.

RESEARCH AND COMMENTARY

Save to My PortfolioActivist Fiscal Policy to Stabilize Economic Activity

Alan J. Auerbach and William G. Gale, August 24, 2009, Financial Stability and Macroeconomic Policy Conference

Facing the most severe recession since the 1930s, the U.S. government has pursued an aggressive countercyclical fiscal policy, which is striking given the consensus a decade ago against the use of discretionary fiscal policy as a stabilization tool. In this new paper, William Gale and Alan J. Auerbach consider the evidence on the effects of discretionary fiscal policy, beginning with how the practice of this policy has changed over time. Read More

VIDEO

Save to My PortfolioBetter Ways to Stimulate than "Cash for Clunkers"

Barry P. Bosworth, August 06, 2009

President Obama recently signed a law adding $2 billion to the wildly popular "Cash for Clunkers" program that has given automakers a boost after months of declining sales. Barry Bosworth says despite the program’s quick uptake, there are probably better ways to help stimulate the economy.

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