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America’s urban-rural divides

The Economist Original article ›

The rural-urban divide, globalization in America and the Trump voter in 2017

07/06/2017

Grouped Articles

America’s urban-rural divides

The Economist 07/06/2017

A special report on Donald Trump’s America

The Economist 07/06/2017

Unlikely Holdout Underscores Challenge for Senate Health Bill

The New York Times 07/06/2017

Why the Senate health care bill is in trouble, in 2 quotes

CNN 07/05/2017

The 3 Republicans Who Doomed a Senate Repeal of the Health Law

The New York Times 07/18/2017

Globalization and the white working class in Europe and the U.S. in 2016- job losses, regional disparities, growing inequality with declining incomes

07/13/2016

Sanders, Trump, in the U.S., Marie Le Pen in France, and Brexiters in England appeal to white working class which has not benefitted from trade agreements and globalization. Globalization has produced very different outcomes for different industries and regions, benefitting some and hurting others. Leaders of existing political parties have failed to grasp and respond to these changes leaving room for others to take up the cause of the white working class. TPP trade agreement for instance benefits the information technology industry and hurts the automobile industry in the U.S., producing unequal outcomes that come after years of job losses and hollowing out in some industries- making it unpopular, and raising questions about the wisdom of such policies when most of the gains in free trade are already behind us according to Krugman and other experts.

Grouped Articles

Brexit: The Era of the Angry Voter Is Upon Us - SPIEGEL ONLINE

SPIEGEL ONLINE 07/06/2016

What the New GOP Means for Wall Street

WSJ 07/19/2016

Support for Trump in unexpected places | US elections 2016 | DW.COM | 20.07.2016

DW.COM 07/20/2016

The presidential campaign and the US middle class | US elections 2016 | DW.COM | 13.03.2016

DW.COM 03/13/2016

Hillary Clinton Asks Not for Trust, but for Faith in Her Competence

The New York Times 07/29/2016

Two Political Conventions, Two Distinct World Views

WSJ 07/28/2016

The other roots of increasing inequality in the U.S.- global competition and sourcing, the case of the U.S. auto industry and manufacturing workers

03/24/2015

Auto parts imports into the U.S. from Mexico have increased by 86% since 2008, more than doubled for China. As wages rise in China, India is the next source country for low cost automobile parts from auto industry hubs in Gujarat and Tamilnadu, placing continuous downward pressure on manufacturing wages for the next decade, and the next. Parts imports were $32 billion in 1990, $138 billion in 2014. Workers in manufacturing make as low as $10 an hour today, similar to workers at Wal-Mart. An entire generation of manufacturing workers are now shifted from middle class to lower class from their parents generation to their own, reducing educational mobility in the American system and fewer opportunities for improvement. As more jobs are created in manufacturing than in IT related industries this is a significant hurdle for improving wages and employment in the U.S.

Grouped Articles

U.S. Car-Making Boom? Not for Auto-Industry Workers

Wall Street Journal 03/24/2015

Income Inequality Is Costing the U.S. on Social Issues

New York Times 04/28/2015

Economic-Ladder Concerns Trump Income Gap in Poll

Wall Street Journal 05/05/2015

Sanders, Corbyn and the coming debate inside the Democratic Party - The Washington Post

Washington Post 09/13/2015

U.A.W. Contract With Fiat Chrysler Would Give 2nd-Tier Workers Big Raise

New York Times 09/18/2015

A stunning stat about pay seems impossible but actually is true - The Washington Post

Washington Post 09/22/2015

Globalization and markets are not always fair and the need to redirect resources and wealth to help poorer sections

08/25/2008

Globalizations effects on the economy are positive given the right conditions and good government policy. But markets are not always fair and the need for governments to redirect resources and wealth to the poorer sections.

Grouped Articles

What’s Our Duty to the People Globalization Leaves Behind?

New York Times 01/26/2016

Nobel Laureates Say Globalization's Winners Should Aid Poor

Wall Street Journal 08/25/2008

G-8 Stumbles Anew, Comes Up Short on Food Aid

Wall Street Journal 07/10/2009

A Tiny Tax Could Do a World of Good

New York Times 09/24/2009

America’s urban-rural divides

The Economist 07/06/2017

How teachers, firefighters and service workers union joined the opposition to the TPP and granting fast track trade authority in 2015, and why

06/12/2015

Firefighters and other service workers unions actively campaigned against the trade bills in Congress for the first time in 2015. The public sector unions now see how the closing of American factories, the decline in neighborhoods near plants, affects the demand for public services and the ability of cities and municipalities to pay for the public services. The decline in wages for industrial workers creates a negative perception for the higher wages in the public sector, reducing support from struggling industrial workers. The drastic drop in factory wages with globalization and the shrinking revenues of cities as incomes decline, is leading to a realization in labor that workers are affected in many ways by seemingly unrelated developments in trade and globalization. Another development is the expert information that shows the need for investment in infrastructure in the poorer countries of Latin America, and in the U.S., which would provide significant benefits. The benefits from trade tariff reduction are now small, as most of the benefits were achieved through earlier action in trade.

Grouped Articles

Labor’s Might Seen in Failure of Trade Deal as Unions Allied to Thwart It

New York Times 06/13/2015

Washington Dysfunction, With a Twist: Democrats Desert Their President

New York Times 06/12/2015

Unions Declare Partial Victory Against Obama’s Pacific Trade Deal

Wall Street Journal 06/15/2015

Elizabeth Warren’s claim that the bottom 90 percent got ‘zero percent’ of wage growth after Reagan - The Washington Post

Washington Post 10/23/2015

McConnell warns that trade deal can’t pass Congress before 2016 elections - The Washington Post

Washington Post 12/11/2015

Trans-Pacific Trade Pact Would Lift U.S. Incomes, but Not Jobs Overall, Study Says

New York Times 01/25/2016

Faces of the global financial crisis of 2008- grandparents, grandfamilies and children

04/04/2009

Grouped Articles

'Grandfamilies' Come Under Pressure

Wall Street Journal 04/04/2009

Economic Crisis Sweeps Eastern Ukraine

New York Times 04/08/2009

America’s urban-rural divides

The Economist 07/06/2017

Views on globalization- Trump for the U.S. and Jinping for China

02/06/2017

China sees globalization within the context of pursuing its own interests, Trump's trade policies are similar in this respect.

Grouped Articles

On Globalization, China and Trump Are Closer Than They Appear

WSJ 01/27/2017

China Takes Heat on Trade, but Germany’s Power Continues to Grow

WSJ 03/05/2017

Building Trade Walls

03/07/2017

Germany to take legal action if Trump taxes imports | Business | DW.COM | 17.03.2017

DW.COM 03/17/2017

Mnuchin Says U.S. Is Seeking to Avoid Trade Wars

WSJ 03/16/2017

Trump and Xi’s First Meeting: How Long Will the Cordiality Last?

The New York Times 04/06/2017

Reviving the use of the term "working class" in America as opposed to middle class- why this is important

11/12/2015

Cherlin, a professor at John Hopkins University, who has written about the decline of the working class family, once portrayed in television shows such as "All in the Family," says the term was seen as derogatory and avoided in recent times. Archie Bunker in that show was seen as bigoted and behind the times. He points out that Obama in his speeches has used middle class frequently but rarely used the term "working class." Yet he points out the Americans with a diploma at most but no bachelors degree, comprise 54 percent of the American people, and are quite different in lifestyle and educational opportunities than the middle class better educated Americans. They also face a different set of problems and obstacles to upward mobility and social mobility. It is right to revive the use of the term "working class" says Cherlin, so that one can wrap ones hands around the problem facing so many Americans. A combination of forces have trampled the future prospects of these Americans, many arising out of forces beyond the control of policy such as automation and global manufacturing, and some such as the problems created by the 2008 financial crisis which were the result of bad decisions by business have only worsened the situation.

Grouped Articles

The missing working class - The Washington Post

Washington Post 11/12/2015

The Bleak Reality Driving Trump’s Rise

Wall Street Journal 12/16/2015

It’s the American Dream, Stupid

Wall Street Journal 01/10/2016

Two Political Conventions, Two Distinct World Views

WSJ 07/28/2016

Voices From Donald Trump’s Rallies, Uncensored

The New York Times 08/03/2016

Pieces of Silver

The New York Times 08/12/2016


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