A liberal policy wish list for the middle class

cawacko

Well-known member
Bookings is a liberal think tank but they have some smart people that work there. For those so inclined if you click on the link you can see the different people on the panel speak about each of the topics listed below. For me personally I'm not big on most of these but they are still ideas worth discussing.




A policy wish list for the middle class


How can we help the American middle class, and boost more people into its ranks? Answers abounded at last week’s event on the Future of the Middle Class, but as Janet Gornick said,

“It’s really a question of political will.” Here are eight policy solutions discussed at the event:

Reduce inequality

“The crisis of the middle class, however defined, is part of the larger question about high and rising inequality,” said Janet Gornick, editor of the volume Income Inequality: Economic Disparities and the Middle Class in Affluent Countries. Gornick also reminded the audience that the level of inequality seen in the United States is “not inevitable.” She referred to fifteen solutions proposed by the late inequality expert Tony Atkinson, including higher minimum wages and lifetime taxation of inheritances.

Invest in skill upgrading

“We need to make sure that individuals who have been dislocated, displaced, or don’t have the skills demanded in today’s economy have a productive opportunity to contribute and prosper,” Melissa Kearney said. Kearney supports expanding “guided pathways” to link students more directly to career paths, as well as enhancing student supports and advising at community colleges. We’ve written about the need for better guidance at community colleges before. Former Vice President Joe Biden echoed this emphasis on community colleges in his keynote address, recommending that community colleges be free for all qualifying students.

Expand wage subsidies

Michael Strain proposed expanding earnings subsidies for low-income households, including those without children, to address declining employment rates. Currently, childless workers are eligible only for a modest subsidy under the Earned Income Tax Credit. Our colleagues have long advocated for a childless EITC.


Provide workers with paid family and medical leave

Heather Boushey, author of Finding Time: The Economics of Work-Life Conflict, argued that the middle class is facing a time crunch as well as an income squeeze. Paid family and medical leave and improved access to childcare would go a long way to help middle-class families, she said. Boushey was a member of the

Brookings-AEI working group on paid family leave that reported last year.

Provide all children with savings accounts at birth

publicly funded children’s savings accounts, which would be held until children turn 18, can help disadvantaged young people reach the middle class while also offering benefits to those who are born in the middle class or above:

Boost unionization

Heidi Shierholz argued for “a suite of policies” to help working middle-class families, including a higher minimum wage, better overtime protection, paid sick days, and fairer scheduling laws. One way to achieve those goals, she said, is to protect workers’ ability to negotiate the terms for themselves in a collective bargaining agreement.

Establish wage boards


Ben Olinsky proposed that the U.S. explore wage boards “so that we are dealing with wages not just for the very bottom, like the minimum wage, but also for the middle.” Some states, like New York and California,

already use wage boards for industry-wide collective bargaining.

Close the respect gap

Reducing economic gaps will also require reducing the growing “respect gap” across classes, according to Richard Reeves.

Vice President Biden also addressed the respect gap, saying, “Next time you see a sanitation worker, thank him, and watch the look on his face. … These people don’t think we care a whole lot about them, but you can’t function if they can’t keep these sewers open.”


https://www.brookings.edu/blog/up-front/2018/05/14/a-policy-wish-list-for-the-middle-class/
 
I'd go with supporting Unions, appears to be a high correlation between declining Unions and the shrinkage of the middle class. Other mentioned items as skill upgrading, expanded wages, family and medical leave are all within the scope of the Union's purpose

I'd also include tax reform, not tax cut as we just supposedly experienced, but real reform of the existing tax structure
 
But the dems don't have a platform.

It's all about never dump.

Democrats have as much as a platform as Republicans do, this November a lot of them will run on health care, tax reform, infrastructure, immigration, the usual generalized issues Republicans will run on
 
But the dems don't have a platform.

It's all about never dump.

Bookings is a think tank. Think tanks promote ideas and put out policy papers supporting them. Bookings is not associated with the Democratic Party.
 
Democrats have as much as a platform as Republicans do, this November a lot of them will run on health care, tax reform, infrastructure, immigration, the usual generalized issues Republicans will run on

what tax reform will Democrats run on other than raising taxes?
 
Democrats have as much as a platform as Republicans do, this November a lot of them will run on health care, tax reform, infrastructure, immigration, the usual generalized issues Republicans will run on

Oh I know they do.

But some on this board from the left and the right think the dems need to run on something other than hating dump.

It's a right talking point.
 
Oh I know they do.

But some on this board from the left and the right think the dems need to run on something other than hating dump.

It's a right talking point.

What's the "theme" if you will for the Democrats in the 2018 midterms?
 
Oh I know they do.

But some on this board from the left and the right think the dems need to run on something other than hating dump.

It's a right talking point.

Do you understand what a think tank is and does? They aren't associated with the Democratic Party. These ideas stand on their own. The ideas are up for discussion.
 
Raising taxes IS the reform.

Americans are starting to realize that the cons have been conning them for decades about cutting taxes.

I see. The simple raising or cutting of taxes is reform even if all else stays the same?
 
Do you understand what a think tank is and does? They aren't associated with the Democratic Party. These ideas stand on their own. The ideas are up for discussion.


Then why did you ask this question?

"what tax reform will Democrats run on other than raising taxes"?
 
Then why did you ask this question?

"what tax reform will Democrats run on other than raising taxes"?

Because we just had major tax reform for the first time in 35 years. The chances of doing it again are about none. Hence the question.
 
I'd go with supporting Unions, appears to be a high correlation between declining Unions and the shrinkage of the middle class. Other mentioned items as skill upgrading, expanded wages, family and medical leave are all within the scope of the Union's purpose

I'd also include tax reform, not tax cut as we just supposedly experienced, but real reform of the existing tax structure

Not everyone works in tech of course but that is where a large number of jobs are being created. Do you think workers would pass up stock options in favor of unionizing?
 
Do you understand what a think tank is and does? They aren't associated with the Democratic Party. These ideas stand on their own. The ideas are up for discussion.
I can't see any difference between Brooking and the Dems ideas?
 
Back
Top