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Monday, September 26, 2016

Paul Krugman: Progressive Family Values

"An attempt to focus on the problems of the real America":

Progressive Family Values, by Paul Krugman, NY Times: Here’s what happens every election cycle: pundits demand that politicians offer the country new ideas. Then, if and when a candidate actually does propose innovative policies, the news media pays little attention, chasing scandals or, all too often, fake scandals instead. Remember the extensive coverage last month, when Hillary Clinton laid out an ambitious mental health agenda? Neither do I. ...
Still, there really are some interesting new ideas coming from one of the campaigns, and they arguably tell us a lot about how Mrs. Clinton would govern.
Wait... Aren’t Republicans also offering new ideas? Well, I guess proposing to round up and deport 11 million people counts as a new idea. And Republicans ... seem to have moved past ... proposing tax cuts that deliver most of their benefits to the wealthy. Now they are, instead, proposing tax cuts that deliver all of their benefits to the 1 percent — O.K., actually just 99.6 percent, but who’s counting?
Back to Mrs. Clinton: Much of her policy agenda could be characterized as a third Obama term, building on the center-left policies of the past eight years. ... For example..., her proposed enhancements to the Affordable Care Act would extend health coverage to around 10 million more people, whereas Donald Trump’s proposed repeal ... would cause around 20 million people to lose coverage.
In addition..., Mrs. Clinton is pushing a distinctive agenda centered around support for working parents. ... One piece ... involves 12 weeks of paid family leave to care for new children, help sick relatives, or recover from illness or injury. ...
Another, even more striking piece involves helping families with young children in several ways, especially ... to hold down the cost of child care (the campaign sets a target of no more than 10 percent of income.) ...
But why should helping working parents be such a priority? It looks to me like an attempt to focus on the problems of the real America — not the white, rural “real America” of right-wing fantasies... And that America is one in which ... stay-at-home mothers are a distinct minority, and in which the problem of how to take care of children while making ends meet is central to many people’s lives. ...
So anyone who complains that there aren’t big new ideas in this campaign simply isn’t paying attention. One candidate, at least, has ideas that would make a big, positive difference to millions of American families.

    Posted by on Monday, September 26, 2016 at 09:15 AM in Economics, Politics | Permalink  Comments (94)


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