Monday, June 26, 2023

Why This Economist Wants to Give Every Poor Child $50,000 (Ezra Klein Show podcast)

“Wealth is the paramount indicator of economic prosperity and well-being,” says the economist Darrick Hamilton. He’s right. Policy analysis tends to focus on income, but it is wealth that often determines whether we can send our kids to college, pay for an illness, quit a job, start a business or make a down payment on a home. Wealth is also the source of some of our deepest social inequalities: The top 10 percent of households in the U.S. own about 70 percent of the nation’s wealth, and the typical Black family has about one-tenth the wealth of the typical white family.

Hamilton is an economist at the New School who has spent decades studying the origins of the United States’ wealth disparities and how to close them. His “baby bonds” proposal — which would give poor children up to $50,000 in wealth by the time they become adults — has been put forward as national legislation by politicians like Senator Cory Booker and Representative Ayanna Pressley, and a state-level version of it is about to be established in Connecticut. So I asked him on the show to walk me through the structure of wealth in America today, the policy decisions undergirding that structure and the kinds of policies we could pass to dismantle it.

Mentioned:
  • “Can ‘Baby Bonds’ Eliminate the Racial Wealth Gap in Putative Post-Racial America?” by Darrick Hamilton and William Darity, Jr. 
  • “A Birthright to Capital” by Darrick Hamilton. Emanuel Nieves, Shira Markoff and David Newville  
  • “Hidden in Plain Sight” by The Corporation for Enterprise Development 
  • “Umbrellas Don’t Make it Rain” by Darrick Hamilton, William Darity, Jr., Anne E. Price, Vishnu Sridharan and Rebecca Tippett 
Book Recommendations: 
  • When Affirmative Action Was White by Ira Katznelson 
  • Racial Conflict and Economic Development by W. Arthur Lewis 
  • Postcolonial Love Poem by Natalie Diaz
Interview: 


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