http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2010-07-19/save-the-economy-a-manifesto-by-harry-evans-joseph-stiglitz-alan-blinder-and-other-leaders/%5D


Fourteen million out of work! Sixteen notable economists and
historians have joined in a consensus statement for The Daily Beast
demanding urgent action on unemployment and the faltering recovery.
Joseph Stiglitz, Alan Blinder, Robert Reich, Richard Parker, Derek
Shearer, Laura Tyson, Sir Harold Evans, and other thought leaders have
produced a manifesto calling for more government stimulus and tax
credits to put America back to work.

GET AMERICA BACK TO WORK

Fourteen million unemployed represents a gigantic waste of human
capital, an irrecoverable loss of wealth and spending power, and an
affront to the ideals of America. Some 6.8 million have been out of
work for 27 weeks or more. Members of Congress went home to celebrate
July 4 having failed to extend unemployment benefits.

We recognize the necessity of a program to cut the mid- and long-term
federal deficit but the imperative requirement now, and the surest
course to balance the budget over time, is to restore a full measure
of economic activity. As in the 1930s, the economy is suffering a
sharp decline in aggregate demand and loss of business confidence.
Long experience shows that monetary policy may not be enough,
particularly in deep slumps, as Keynes noted.

• Update: 24 More Economists Sign Manifesto The urgent need is for
government to replace the lost purchasing power of the unemployed and
their families and to employ other tax-cut and spending programs to
boost demand. Making deficit reduction the first target, without
addressing the chronic underlying deficiency of demand, is exactly the
error of the 1930s. It will prolong the great recession, harm the
social cohesion of the country, and continue inflicting unnecessary
hardship on millions of Americans.

Watch Laura Tyson and Alan Blinder Explain the Manifesto on Bloomberg

Signatories:

Alan Blinder
Alan Blinder was vice chairman of the Federal Reserve and served on
Bill Clinton’s Council of Economic Advisers; he’s the Gordon S.
Rentschler Memorial Professor of Economics and Public Affairs at
Princeton University.

Daniel Kevles
Daniel Kevles is the former faculty chair at California Institute of
Technology and serves as a professor of history at Yale University.

David Reynolds
David Reynolds is an international history professor and fellow at
Christ’s College in Cambridge. His latest book is America, Empire of
Liberty: A New History of the United States.

Derek Shearer
Derek Shearer served as the ambassador to Finland from 1994-1997. He
is now a diplomacy and world affairs professor at Occidental College
in Los Angeles.

Jim Hoge
Jim Hoge is editor of Foreign Affairs and the former editor of the
Chicago Sun-Times, which won six Pulitzer Prizes under his tutelage.
He is co-editor of How Did This Happen? Terrorism and the New War.

John Cassidy
A journalist and author of the book How Markets Fail: The Logic of
Economic Calamities, John Cassidy has been a staff writer at The New
Yorker since 1995, covering economics and business.

Joseph Stiglitz
Joseph Stiglitz is the former chief economist of the World Bank, and a
recipient of the Nobel Prize and the John Bates Clark Medal;
currently, he’s a professor at Columbia University. He is most
recently the author of Freefall: America, Free Markets, and the
Sinking of the World Economy and The Stiglitz Report: Reforming the
International Monetary and Financial Systems in the Wake of the Global
Crisis.

Laura Tyson
Laura Tyson served as the chair of Council of Economic Advisers and
the director of the National Economic Council during the Clinton
administration. She is a professor at the Haas School of Business at
the University of California, Berkeley.

Lizabeth Cohen
Lizabeth Cohen is the Howard Mumford Jones Professor of American
Studies in the History Department at Harvard University, and author of
Making a New Deal: Industrial Workers in Chicago, 1919-1939.

Harold Evans
Sir Harold Evans is a journalist and former editor of The Sunday Times
and the Times, who was knighted in 2004 for his services to
journalism. His award-winning book, They Made America, chronicled the
country’s most important innovators and inventors.

Nancy Folbre
Nancy Folbre won a MacArthur Genius Award, is a professor of economics
at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst, and recently wrote the
book Saving State U: Fixing Public Higher Education.

Richard Parker
Richard Parker, a former congressional consultant, is a public policy
lecturer and senior fellow at the Shorenstein Center at Harvard’s
Kennedy School of Government. He is the author of The Myth of the
Middle Class, Mixed Signals: The Future of Global Television News, and
John Kenneth Galbraith: His Life, His Politics, His Economics.

Robert Reich
A professor of public policy at the University of California at
Berkeley, Robert Reich was the 22nd secretary of Labor under President
Clinton. He is the author of 12 books, including his most recent
Supercapitalism: The Transformation of Business, Democracy, and
Everyday Life.

Sean Wilentz
Sean Wilentz is the Sidney and Ruth Lapidus Professor in the American
Revolutionary Era at Princeton. His book, The Rise of American
Democracy: From Jefferson to Lincoln, won the 2006 Bancroft Prize.

Sidney Blumenthal
Sidney Blumenthal is a former senior adviser to President Bill Clinton
and advised Hillary Clinton during her 2008 presidential campaign. His
books include The Clinton Wars and The Permanent Campaign.

Simon Schama
The author and host of the BBC documentary A History of Britain, Simon
Schama is a historian who teaches at Columbia University.

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