Quality. Independence. Impact.

Home | Contact Us | Media Resources

Friday November 27, 2009

Welcome   |   Register   |   Log in

RESEARCH AND COMMENTARY

Save to My PortfolioThe Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation's $22 Billion Deficit

Douglas J. Elliott, November 13, 2009, The Brookings Institution

The Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation's $22 Billion DeficitThe Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC), which protects the pensions of 44 million workers, announced a $22 billion deficit for fiscal year ending September 2009. Douglas Elliott analyzes the three main reasons for the PBGC’s financial troubles, and cautions that there are serious structural problems within PBGC that cannot be blamed on the financial crisis. Read More

RESEARCH AND COMMENTARY

Save to My PortfolioEncouraging Marriage Helps Everyone

Ron Haskins, November 05, 2009, Business Week

Can marriage decrease poverty? Higher marriage rates among the poor would benefit poor adults themselves, their children and the nation, says Ron Haskins. He argues that non-coercive programs that are delivered by community-based agencies can be effective. By helping couples who want to marry, the payoff to them, their children and society is potentially enormous. Read More

VIDEO

Save to My PortfolioIs the American Dream a Myth?

Ron Haskins and Isabel V. Sawhill, October 19, 2009

Despite its status as one of the world’s leading economies, the United States is faced with high poverty rates and less economic opportunity than many other affluent countries. Senior Fellows Isabel Sawhill and Ron Haskins, argue that it will take a combination of personal responsibility along with smarter and better-targeted government policies to make the American Dream a reality for children and families now stuck at the bottom.

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 PortfolioThe "New Normal" For the U.S. Economy: What Will It Be?

William A. Galston, September 01, 2009, The Brookings Institution

We are likely to enter a period of new normality marked by lower household debt, higher personal savings, and less consumption as a share of GDP, writes William Galston. Despite these positive trends, we still need a new era of public restraint, not just private thrift. Once economic growth has become self-sustaining and the private sector’s need for capital returns to more normal levels, Congress and the administration will have to turn their attention to the difficult fiscal questions they have long evaded. Read More

RESEARCH AND COMMENTARY

Save to My PortfolioImmigrant Incorporation and Local Responses

Audrey Singer, August 09, 2009, American Sociological Association

The last two decades have witnessed unprecedented growth of the foreign-born population in new destination areas across the United States. At a session of the American Sociological Association annual meeting in San Francisco, Audrey Singer tackled the issue of immigrant incorporation in new U.S. destinations: its form and pace, variations by place, and varying responses by localities. Read More

RESEARCH AND COMMENTARY

Save to My PortfolioThe Sequence of Personal Responsibility

Ron Haskins, July 31, 2009, The National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy

The Sequence of Personal ResponsibilityRon Haskins discusses personal responsibility and the three areas of personal decision-making in which the nation’s youth and young adults most need to learn and practice personal responsibility: education, sexual behavior and marriage, and work. Read More

RESEARCH AND COMMENTARY

Save to My PortfolioHealth Care Reform: What Will It Take to Change Americans' Lifestyles?

Darrell M. West, July 27, 2009, Politico

Proponents have high hopes for health care reform, but legislation is unlikely to alter personal behavior. What is needed today, writes Darrell West, is serious thinking about how to get Americans to lead healthier lifestyles. If we want health care reform to reduce costs and improve good health, we need a public education campaign emphasizing exercise, balanced diets and healthier living. Read More

RESEARCH AND COMMENTARY

Save to My PortfolioPolicy Outlook for Immigration Reform

William A. Galston, July 17, 2009, The Brookings Institution

Policy Outlook for Immigration ReformThere is broad agreement that the nation needs to overhaul its immigration policies, but how to change national policy is shaping up to be a major debate. Sketching the policy outlook for immigration reform, William Galston divides the problem into the specific issues that new immigration legislation must confront: overall level of new legal permanent residents to be admitted; the role of family reunification; employment and skills; making the new law responsive to economic change; enforcement; coping with past policy failures, and integrating the new arrivals. Read More

RESEARCH AND COMMENTARY

Save to My PortfolioProtecting Household Income during the Economic Crisis

Gary Burtless, July 15, 2009, Korea Institute for Health and Social Affairs

Protecting Household Income during the Economic CrisisAs unemployment continues to climb, questions have arisen as to whether the stimulus package is working, how well it was designed and when it will have an impact. Gary Burtless examines its composition, finding that efforts at creating a social safety net and fiscal relief for the states were appropriately targeted and are working. Read More

RESEARCH AND COMMENTARY

Save to My PortfolioLanguage Needs and Abilities in the Nation's Capital

Audrey Singer, July 15, 2009, DC First Language Access Policy Forum

At a forum marking the five-year anniversary of the Language Access Act in the District of Columbia, Audrey Singer spoke about language needs and abilities in the nation's capital, including limited English proficient speakers and linguistically isolated households. Read More

RESEARCH AND COMMENTARY

Save to My PortfolioThe Choice Architecture of Automatic Enrollment in Health Insurance

Jeffrey R. Kling, June 12, 2009, The Brookings Institution

The Choice Architecture of Automatic Enrollment in Health InsuranceAs discussion advances on healthcare reform and expansion of coverage in the U.S., the health insurance enrollment process takes on heightened importance. Jeffrey Kling looks at the issues through the lens of behavioral economics – using both psychology and economics to understand individual decision-making. Read More

RESEARCH AND COMMENTARY

Save to My PortfolioThe Damning Paradox of ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’

Peter W. Singer, June 02, 2009, The Washington Examiner

"Don't Ask, Don't Tell" forces soldiers to lie about or hide their sexual orientation to keep from being discharged. Peter Singer believes it is time for President Obama to fulfill his campaign pledge to end the policy so that patriotic and capable military members can focus on national security instead social politics. Read More

RESEARCH AND COMMENTARY

Save to My PortfolioA Guide to the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation

Douglas J. Elliott, May 20, 2009, Center On Federal Financial Institutions

A Guide to the Pension Benefit Guaranty CorporationAs Chrysler and GM face bankruptcy proceedings and restructuring, the Senate held a hearing on whether the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC) has the capacity to insure the pensions of nearly 44 million Americans who work or have worked at those firms. Douglas Elliott explores the particulars of the PBGC, the precarious situation that the automotive industry finds itself in, and offers 14 possible solutions to the problems that plague the government’s pension program. Read More

RESEARCH AND COMMENTARY

Save to My PortfolioPromoting Economic Mobility by Increasing Postsecondary Education

Ron Haskins, Harry Holzer and Robert Lerman, May 12, 2009, The Pew Charitable Trusts

Promoting Economic Mobility by Increasing Postsecondary EducationMany low-income students miss out on college because they don’t know how much it actually costs or how to get access to billions of dollars in financial aid, says Ron Haskins. That’s why improving the equality of educational opportunity—a traditional American value—is one key to promoting economic mobility for disadvantaged students. Read More

My Portfolio

My New Content

View suggested content based on items you have saved to your Portfolio.
Log in or register now