Featured Story: A Big Week for Secure Choice
This week saw two major victories for secure choice legislation in both Connecticut and California. Last week鈥檚 News Week reported that the California Assembly passed Secure Choice legislation, this week 鈥渢he California Senate approved legislation to set up a state retirement savings program…that would provide coverage to nearly 7 million small-business employees in the state who lack access to workplace plans,鈥 reports for Time. It鈥檚 expected that California Governor Jerry Brown will sign the bill despite industry opposition.
Those who oppose California鈥檚 program argue that the smaller retirement accounts won鈥檛 produce the economy of scale necessary to cover the administrative costs of managing them. Such a claim is simply not true says . According to Kwak, the asset-management industry is afraid these public retirement programs鈥攍ike California鈥檚 Secure Choice鈥攚ill 鈥…by virtue of their size, be able to negotiate low fees from fund companies. And [that]…workers will leave their money in [public] plans for the long term instead of venturing out into the private market….鈥
This all comes after the made public a final rule that helps states create public IRA programs for workers not currently enrolled in any sort of program. At the same time, the department also announced a separate that would make it easier for cities and localities to create similar programs.
On Tuesday, Governor Dan Malloy signed the creating the Connecticut Retirement Security Program. While Governor Malloy originally signed the bill back in May, his office held a more official affair earlier this week. live tweeted the occasion.
News Highlights: City Living and Men of Leisure
Cities like New York, San Francisco, and Washington, DC 鈥渉ave grown into centers of opportunity largely for those who already have [which] is not good for the cities, which need strivers to flourish,鈥 says Mark Gimien in the New Yorker. These cities represent major hubs of innovation and while the economic boom is good for business, long-term residents continue to be pushed out by the rising cost-of-living. Unfortunately, there aren鈥檛 any short or even medium-term solutions. Building more housing takes time and often comes too late. Though it鈥檚 still a long-term solution, Gimien says there should be more of a focus on encouraging the migration of wealth to smaller cities. By spreading and reducing the concentration of wealth, we might be able to make city living more affordable.
Citing the contributions of Darwin, Descartes, and Galileo, Quartz鈥檚 Joel Dodge makes a case for universal basic income (UBI). The introduction of a UBI, Dodge argues, could cause some people to choose to stop working, 鈥淸b]ut even if some people did stop working, they might wind up contributing to society in other meaningful ways.鈥 The increased leisure time afforded to an individual whose basic needs are covered by UBI may be just what they need in order to jumpstart their creative processes鈥攍ike Darwin, Descartes, and Galileo. Dodge argues that if we were guaranteed money to cover our basic needs, we might be less risk-averse and more willing to innovate (and create).
News in Brief: Black Wealth, Flawed Laws, Urban Homesteading, and More
- 鈥淯nion decline has exacerbated wage inequality in the United States by dampening the pay of nonunion workers as well as by eroding the share of workers directly benefitting from unionization,鈥 says the in its latest report. 聽
- There was a time when Richmond, VA was the epicenter of black finance and black-owned banks thrived, what happened? The Atlantic’s investigates.
- Writing for CityLab, visits Detroit where there has a been a recent explosion in urban farming as a means to achieve self-sufficiency in a struggling city.
- 鈥96,000. That鈥檚 how many fewer African-Americans are living in New Orleans now than prior to Hurricane Katrina,鈥 writes for Talk Poverty. While white New Orleanians have arguably recovered from Katrina, the same can not be said for the city鈥檚 black inhabitants.
- 鈥淸Inclusionary zoning] legislation would require cash-strapped Baltimore to pay $180 million to the developers of the…Port Covington project to build affordable housing there,鈥 writes the Baltimore Sun鈥檚 , 鈥淟acking such funds, the city has approved a waiver so the law does not apply to the development.鈥
- In an op-ed for the LA Times, makes the case for gentrifying parts of LA鈥檚 skid row in order to bring in the development necessary to improve the blighted area.
- More women are working and attitudes surrounding women who work have changed writes Bloomberg鈥檚 , but there鈥檚 still more work to be done in order to achieve true equity.
- 鈥淭he back-to-school season is the second-biggest shopping period of the year, behind Christmas. But while families will spend more than before, how they will do it 鈥 and where they will do it 鈥 varies widely,鈥 reports the New York Times鈥 .
Events:
| Urban Institute | September 13, 2016
| Brookings Institution | September 14, 2016聽
| American Enterprise Institute | September 19, 2016
| Brookings Institution | September 22, 2016
| Brookings Institution | September 23, 2016
| CFED | September 28-30, 2016