The Antidote to Our Pessimism: Change
By Jared Bernstein
July 29, 2008
Opinion pieces and speeches by EPI staff and associates.
[THIS PIECE ORIGINALLY APPEARED AT
HUFFINGTON POST ON JULY 6, 2008.]
The Antidote to Our Pessimism:
Change
By Jared
Bernstein
In decades of tracking such sentiments, I've never seen people so
pessimistic about the economy. And remember, we haven't even had a
quarter of contracting GDP yet.
Of course, rising gas prices, the deteriorating job market, and
paychecks that are barely making it past gas and groceries are the
major drivers of these poll results. But they're not the whole
story. Well before gas prices spiked, majorities were telling
pollsters that something fundamental was wrong in the economy, and
that it had to do with the fact that most of the folks who were
baking the economic pie were ending up with thinner slices.
Read the rest of this piece
here.
Jared Bernstein is a senior economist at the Economic Policy Institute in Washington, D.C.
[POSTED TO VIEWPOINTS ON JULY 31, 2008.]
Sign Up to Stay Informed
Search EPI.org
RELATED PUBLICATIONS
- Mishel weighs in on White House Middle Class Task Force
- Sustaining workers’ bargaining power in an age of globalization
- EARN conference showcases progressive state policy agendas
- Tracking the recovery: Big banks seen as big beneficiaries of government economic policies
- Tracking the recovery: One in four households has suffered a layoff over the past year
- The role of government in hard times
- Workers have less to celebrate this Labor Day
- Farewell to a progressive crusader
- No coercion in card check
- Unions guarantee more vacation
- See more publications about: Labor policy

