Heather Boushey is the executive director and chief economist at the Washington Center for Equitable Growth and co-editor of a volume of 22 essays about how to integrate inequality into economic thinking, After Piketty: The Agenda for Economics and Inequality. Her research focuses on economic inequality and public policy, specifically employment, social policy, and family economic well-being and her latest book is Finding Time: The Economics of Work-Life Conflict from Harvard University Press. The New York Times has called Boushey one of the “most vibrant voices in the field” and Politico twice named her one of the top 50 “thinkers, doers and visionaries transforming American politics.”
Boushey writes regularly for popular media, including the New York Times’ “Room for Debate,” The Atlantic, and Democracy; and she makes frequent television appearances on Bloomberg, MSNBC, CNBC, and PBS. She previously served as chief economist for Hillary Clinton’s transition team, and as an economist for the Center for American Progress, the Joint Economic Committee of the U.S. Congress, the Center for Economic and Policy Research, and the Economic Policy Institute. She sits on the board of the Opportunity Institute and is an associate editor of Feminist Economics. She received her doctorate in economics from the New School for Social Research and her bachelor’s from Hampshire College.
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Fighting inequality is key to preparing for the next recession
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Finding the better fit: Receiving unemployment insurance increases likelihood of re-employment with health insurance
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More workers without health insurance
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In over our heads—debt burdens, bankruptcies on the rise
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The State of Working America 2002-03
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Bringing the jobs back home to prisons
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Welfare Reform Has to Work for Moms
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‘Baby panic’ Book Skews Data; Misses Actual Issue
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What helps mothers stay employed?
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Do career women trade away motherhood?
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Job tenure of former welfare recipients
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Staying Employed After Welfare
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Restaurant employment sags despite high sales
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Pulling Apart: A State-by-State Analysis of Income Trends (Briefing Paper, April 2002)
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Families’ Hardships Must Be Softened—Viewpoints | EPI
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The Needs of the Working Poor
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Congress Must Do More to Support Mothers—Viewpoints | EPI
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Closing the Wage Gap | EPI Viewpoints
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Former Welfare Families Need More Help: Hardships Await Those Making Transition to Workforce
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Welfare rolls still declining as unemployment rises
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Last hired, first fired—Job losses plague former TANF recipients
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Coming up Short: Current Unemployment Insurance Benefits Fail to Meet Basic Family Needs
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Hungry in America
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Not making ends meet
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Family budgets and the poverty line
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Hardships in America
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Hardships suffered by welfare families
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When Work Just Isn’t Enough: Measuring hardships faced by families after moving from welfare to work
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The rise and fall of the minimum wage
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Step up, not out: The case for raising the federal minimum wage for workers in every state