Combating market power through a graduated U.S. corporate income tax
Equitable Growth
by Kimberly Clausing
2d ago
This issue brief has been excerpted with minor modifications from a more extensive treatment of these issues in “Capital Taxation and Market Power,” to be published in the forthcoming Spring 2024 issue of Tax Law Review, Issue 77, Number 2. Overview Rising market power in the United States and around the world calls for changes to our nation’s international corporate taxation system. The importance of market power today suggests that corporate tax policy should distinguish between normal returns to capital and above-normal returns to capital, the latter of which is a telling indicator of corp ..read more
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An Unemployment Insurance modernization bill now before the U.S. Senate is a much-needed step in the right direction
Equitable Growth
by Alexander Hertel-Fernandez
1w ago
The nearly 90-year-old federal-state Unemployment Insurance program provides much-needed relief to unemployed workers who lose their jobs through no fault of their own and helps to stabilize the U.S. economy during downturns. Through 14 recessions since its enactment as part of the New Deal, most recently the Great Recession of 2007–2009 and the short but sharp COVID-19 recession in 2020, this pivotal income support program remains a cornerstone of our nation’s social infrastructure. Yet despite its strengths, the UI system falls short in serious ways. New U.S. Senate legislation—the Unemploy ..read more
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Hospital consolidation matters
Equitable Growth
by Equitable Growth
2w ago
How antitrust enforcement in the United States can improve competition in the U.S. healthcare system to promote more equitable economic growth Overview The U.S. policy landscape is replete with reports from organizations across the political spectrum decrying the lack of competition in hospital markets around the nation and the resulting high prices, mixed quality, and potential drag on labor markets. The COVID-19 pandemic simultaneously accelerated the trend of hospital consolidation and revealed, in the starkest terms, the consequences of this consolidation: reduced capacity to care for cr ..read more
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Enhanced Child Tax Credit helped U.S. families afford life-enhancing necessities and cope with inflation
Equitable Growth
by David S. Mitchell
2w ago
Amid ongoing congressional debate over expanding the Child Tax Credit for U.S. families, it’s important to understand why the fears about the expansion of that tax credit in 2021 were wrong. One of the more prominent concerns voiced at the time was that families who qualified for the expanded tax credit would spend the additional money unwisely, even perhaps using it to buy illicit drugs. These concerns were offensive on many levels. One never hears those same legislators worrying about the spending habits of the families or individuals enrolled in other government programs, such as the mortg ..read more
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Spending Responses to the Child Tax Credit Expansions
Equitable Growth
by Jonathan Fisher, Jake Schild, David Johnson
2w ago
Authors: Jonathan Fisher, Washington Center for Equitable Growth Jake Schild, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics David S. Johnson, National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine Abstract: This article summarizes the literature that studied how people used the 2021 advance Child Tax Credit. Four primary findings emerged. Families more frequently reporting paying down debt during the first few months the payments were being distributed. In the final months of payments, families more frequently reported spending it. Families primarily used the monthly CTC on household necessities and chil ..read more
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U.S. economic mobility trends and outcomes
Equitable Growth
by Hiba Haroon, Shaun Harrison
2w ago
A research update Fast facts Building on prior research, some new studies demonstrate that there is a relationship between high levels of inequality and low levels of absolute mobility, or a child’s economic well-being compared to their parents’ economic well-being at a similar point in the life cycle. New methodological innovations have engendered a more comprehensive understanding of the relationships between inequality and mobility. For instance, examining racial inequality, the University of California, Los Angeles’ Randall Akee and his colleagues use unique linked data to demonstrate the ..read more
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In conversation with Sasha Killewald
Equitable Growth
by Austin Clemens
2w ago
The post In conversation with Sasha Killewald appeared first on Equitable Growth ..read more
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Matching competition policy in the U.S. healthcare industry to address a new generation of challenges in provider markets
Equitable Growth
by Barak D. Richman
3w ago
Overview Antitrust policy in the U.S. healthcare sector is perennially 10 years behind the industry. But at the start of the Biden administration in early 2021, there was hope for a change. After nearly 40 years of what has been called a complete antitrust policy failure,1 the administration’s promise to pursue aggressive competition policies—and ultimately enhance competitiveness—was met with near-desperate relief. The promise began with campaign promises and culminated in the July 2021 “Executive Order on Promoting Competition in the American Economy.”2 The executive order included an especi ..read more
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Equitable Growth hosts State of the Union press briefing with leading U.S. economists
Equitable Growth
by Equitable Growth
1M ago
The Washington Center for Equitable Growth last week hosted an online press briefing in prelude to tonight’s State of the Union address to the U.S. Congress by President Joe Biden. The briefing—attended by journalists from leading news organizations, including The Associated Press, The Atlantic, The Economist, and CNN—took a deep dive into recent economic indicators and timely research, the Biden administration’s economic policy agenda, and what’s ahead for the U.S. economy amid current congressional debates over enacting a federal budget this month and in the run up to the presidential and c ..read more
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The state of the U.S. labor market 4 years after the start of the COVID-19 recession
Equitable Growth
by Michael Linden
1M ago
Over the past 4 years, the U.S. economy—in particular the U.S. labor market—weathered some incredible shocks and fluctuations. From the COVID-19 pandemic and supply chain breakdowns to global energy shocks and massive shifts in consumer behavior, U.S. workers have been through a lot. This month, 4 years on from the start of the pandemic in the United States, it is valuable to take stock of what the U.S. labor market has been through and where it currently stands. Given the incredible challenges of the past several years, it is, in many ways, remarkable to report that the livelihoods of U.S. w ..read more
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