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If AIG Sells Off Assets and Hands the Cash to the Government, How Would Its Share Price Not be Affected?Dean Baker / October 05, 2010
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Can the Good People of Wisconsin Afford 2.8-4.0 cents a Week for High Speed Rail?Dean Baker / October 05, 2010
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Sleazy Xenophobia In Pursuit of Social Security CutsDean Baker / October 04, 2010
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Latin America and the Caribbean
Intento de golpe de Estado fracasa en Ecuador, pero permanece la amenazaMark Weisbrot / October 04, 2010
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Washington Post Calls Spendthrift Consumers "Skittish"Dean Baker / October 02, 2010
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Latin America and the Caribbean
Attempted Coup in Ecuador Fails, But Threat RemainsMark Weisbrot / October 01, 2010
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Tax Breaks Are Not Sufficient to Restore EmploymentDean Baker / October 01, 2010
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Extending the Tax Cuts: The Ninety-Eight Percent SolutionMark Weisbrot / October 01, 2010
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Haitian Elections: Less Parties Allowed, Less Voters ExpectedCEPR / October 01, 2010
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CEPR Explains Inequality and PovertyCEPR senior economist John Schmitt testified on Thursday in front of the Congressional Out of Poverty Caucus on "An Emergency Response to the Crisis of Poverty in America: Understanding the Crisis and Refocusing the Fight." In his testimony, (see his full statement here) John pointed out that:
[E]ven before the Great Recession, the poverty rate was high by historical standards... at the peak of the last business cycle in 2007, one in eight people in this country had an income that we would have considered to be poor a half a century ago. Over the last thirty years, even as the economy grew by almost 70 percent per person, the share of the population that we judge to be poor has actually increased....
But even if we could restore – overnight – the economy to where it was in 2007, poverty would still be unacceptably high. Fortunately, we already know how to lower poverty dramatically. In the 1960s, in less than a decade, we cut poverty by almost half. The keys were economic institutions that linked workers wages and benefits to overall economic growth, and the expansion of the social safety net...
Economic analysts from the White House, to the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office, to former John McCain adviser Mark Zandi all tell us that the February 2009 stimulus package has created millions of jobs. Without those measures, poverty would have increased even more than it did in 2009. But, we now know that the stimulus program put forth in early 2009 was just not big enough. The single most important step we could take to combat poverty in 2011 is to implement a large -scale stimulus and jobs program today.
CEPR and / September 30, 2010
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Social Security and the Washington Post: Who Is Going Down First?CEPR / September 30, 2010
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Tax Hikes Don't Require Philosophy, Contrary to Claims in the NYTDean Baker / September 30, 2010
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The Crisis of Poverty in AmericaCEPR / September 29, 2010