In a little over
a month, President Obama has succeeded in advancing remarkable change
for Americans striving to attain or hold onto a middle-class standard
of living. Millions of students and their families will find a college
education – increasingly the gateway to the middle-class – more
affordable thanks to increases in federal grants and tax credits.
Middle-class employees out of work through no fault of their own are
able to rely on a reinforced unemployment safety net. Four million
children who lacked the fundamental middle-class requisite of health
insurance will become eligible for public coverage. Middle-class
commuters will travel on safer roads and bridges and move more quickly
on new and modernized transit lines. And every American will benefit
from a cleaner and safer environment due to investments in renewable
energy.
These
achievements embody a positive and progressive vision of government’s
power to improve the lives of ordinary Americans. As the President
said: “I reject the view that says our problems will simply take care
of themselves; that says government has no role in laying the
foundation for our common prosperity. For history tells a different
story. History reminds us that at every moment of economic upheaval and
transformation, this nation has responded with bold action and big
ideas.”
The
President’s vision is an inspiration, and his accomplishments so far
are significant. But in the context of the most severe economic crisis
the nation has faced in generations, our actions must be still bolder.
To reignite economic growth and emerge with a middle class that is
stronger and much broader, the President must think still bigger.
Crucial as its investments are, the stimulus package just signed into
law will not be sufficient by itself to put Americans back to work.
Necessary as the orientation toward preventing foreclosure is, the
housing plan outlined by the Administration won’t keep enough
middle-class families in their homes. And tremendous as the price tag
for bailing out financial institutions is, it will not stabilize the
system unless the government overcomes its fear of nationalization. The
President is correct to recognize that the nation’s great challenges
are interconnected and must be addressed together. It is to his great
credit that he appreciates that “transformative investments” are needed
to move the nation forward. And everyone must acknowledge that the
serious and interlinked crises America faces were fostered and
exacerbated by the irresponsibility of previous administrations.
But succumbing to
artificial preconceptions about the scope of solutions government can
offer sets us up to fall short in meeting the great challenges we face.
Indeed, President Obama’s ambitious – and necessary – health care
agenda risks failure in Congress unless he can convey the need to
surpass outdated presumptions about the value of a free market that has
Americans paying more than other nations for health and getting worse
results. And while middle-class Americans benefit from a government
that exercises prudence in both taxing and spending, the President must
ensure that efforts to reduce the deficit do not become another
self-imposed shackle holding the nation back from addressing its
serious problems.
President Obama’s homeownership plan
helps make the point that it is in the national interest to help
homeowners in distress. High mortgage debt and foreclosures not only
destabilize families, but threaten entire communities by increasing
abandonment and blight, dragging down surrounding property values,
eroding the tax base, and creating transient populations. Yet the
President has limited the reach and effectiveness of his own plan by
making lenders’ participation in foreclosure prevention voluntary and
by excluding homeowners who owe more on their homes than they are worth
from government refinancing.
If major financial institutions collapse,
the nation’s economic crisis would dramatically worsen, devastating
middle-class Americans already acing difficult times. But as President
Obama recognizes, the Bush Administration’s approach of giving a blank
check to banks has failed to stabilize the system or reignite lending.
Instead, we must invest in a financial system that is transparent,
accountable, and worthy of the public trust. Transparency is just the
beginning: in providing needed capital to troubled banks, the
government must ensure that middle-class taxpayers are not forced to
take on the costs of bank shareholders’ failed investment strategy. The
Administration must be prepared to temporarily nationalize failed banks
if this is necessary to protect taxpayers.
America’s health care system
is the most expensive in the world, yet we consistently lag behind the
health outcomes of other developed countries that spend far less. The
inefficient health system is a drag on the nation’s economic
competitiveness and the leading fiscal problem for local, state, and
federal governments. Middle-class Americans pay the cost as patients,
employees, taxpayers, and small business owners. President Obama can
succeed in his plan to achieve universal health coverage while reducing
costs only if he stands firm on commitments to create a public health
plan that competes with private insurers and incorporates the results
of research on the effectiveness of different medical treatments into
cost-cutting strategies.
President Obama is right to emphasize the need for investments in education
to foster economic growth and competitiveness. Educated citizens ensure
higher rates of productivity and aggregate growth for a country as a
whole. But the dropout epidemic threatens to create a lost generation
unprepared to compete in an economy where advanced skills are
undeniable prerequisites for attaining the mobility, security, and
prosperity associated with a middle-class livelihood. Strengthening the
cognitive capacity of young people will have positive economic
consequences for productivity and growth—both in terms of individual
earning power and national GDP.
The change America’s
middle class needs is just getting started. Americans aspire to a
reliable job capable of supporting a family; access to health care; a
safe and stable home; the opportunity to provide a good education for
one’s children, including a college education; time off work for
vacations and major life events; and the security of looking forward to
a dignified retirement. With the mandate he has received, President
Obama can make this middle-class standard of living a reality for many
more of us.
Please click on the links below for DMI's comprehensive response to the President's proposals in each policy area: