Robert Reich is the nation's 22nd Secretary of Labor and a professor at the University of California at Berkeley.

Blog Entries by Robert Reich

Slouching Toward Health Care Reform

136 Comments | Posted December 17, 2009 | 12:23 PM (EST)


"Don't make the perfect the enemy of the better," says the President and congressional insiders when confronted with the sorry spectacle of a health-care bill whose scope and ambition continue to shrink, and whose long-term costs to typical Americans continue to grow. They're right, of course. But by the same...

Read Post

How a Few Private Health Insurers Are on the Way to Controlling Health Care

453 Comments | Posted December 11, 2009 | 12:05 PM (EST)


The public option is dead, killed by a handful of senators from small states who are mostly bought off by Big Insurance and Big Pharma or intimidated by these industries' deep pockets and power to run political ads against them. Some might say it's no great loss at this point...

Read Post

The President's Jobs Initiative Doesn't Measure Up

191 Comments | Posted December 9, 2009 | 01:13 PM (EST)


Barack Obama is trying once again for balance. On the one hand, he wants enough government spending to offset the timid spending of consumers and businesses. Otherwise, the jobs and wage recession could drag on for years. On the other hand, he doesn't want to set off more alarm bells...

Read Post

The Economic Reality That No One Wants to Talk About

324 Comments | Posted December 2, 2009 | 01:38 PM (EST)


Most ideas for creating more jobs assume jobs will return when the economy recovers. So the immediate goal is to accelerate the process. A second stimulus would be helpful, especially directed at state governments that are now mounting an anti-stimulus package (tax increases, job cuts, service cuts) of over $200...

Read Post

The Housing Crisis And Wall Street Shame (Or Lack Thereof)

253 Comments | Posted November 29, 2009 | 02:42 PM (EST)


One out of four homeowners is now under water, owing more on their homes than the homes are worth. Why? The biggest single factor behind the housing crisis is rising unemployment. According to the latest ABC-Washington Post poll, one out of every three Americans has either lost their job or...

Read Post

The Ersatz Public Option

331 Comments | Posted November 19, 2009 | 04:45 PM (EST)


First there was Medicare for all 300 million of us. But that was a non-starter because private insurers and Big Pharma wouldn't hear of it, and Republicans and "centrists" thought it was too much like what they have up in Canada -- which, by the way, cost Canadians only 10...

Read Post

Obama, China, and Wishful Thinking About American Jobs

283 Comments | Posted November 17, 2009 | 07:40 PM (EST)


President Obama says he wants to "rebalance" the economic relationship between China and the U.S. as part of his plan to restart the American jobs machine. "We cannot go back," he said in September, "to an era where the Chinese . . . just are selling everything to us, we're...

Read Post

An Open Letter to Harry Reid on Controlling Health Care Costs

203 Comments | Posted November 13, 2009 | 03:43 PM (EST)


Dear Senator Reid,

I know you're in a tough spot. It would be bad enough if you only had to get Ben Nelson, Evan Bayh, Mary Landrieu, and Blanche Lincoln on board, but anyone who has to kiss Joe Lieberman's derriere deserves a congressional medal of honor.

But Harry, you...

Read Post

Why We Need Even More Stimulus

289 Comments | Posted November 5, 2009 | 12:34 PM (EST)


The administration's biggest economic mistake so far was to badly underestimate last January how bad the employment situation would become by Fall. As a result, it low-balled the stimulus -- settling for a plan that, while avoiding even worse job losses, didn't go nearly far enough.

Read Post

Health Care Reform is Critically Important, But Getting Americans Back to Work is More So

77 Comments | Posted November 2, 2009 | 12:41 PM (EST)


Presidents tend to overcompensate for the errors of their predecessors in the same party and in so doing sow seeds of their own mistakes. Bill Clinton wanted above all to avoid Jimmy Carter's fate -- losing re-election because the economy was heading south on Election Day. So Clinton made a...

Read Post

Breaking Up the Big Banks, and Why Congress Won't Do It

228 Comments | Posted October 26, 2009 | 09:49 PM (EST)


And now there are five -- five Wall Street behemoths, bigger than they were before the Great Meltdown, paying fatter salaries and bonuses to retain their so-called"talent," and raking in huge profits. The biggest difference between now and last October is these biggies didn't know then that they were too...

Read Post

Why Wall Street Reform is Stuck in Reverse

288 Comments | Posted October 22, 2009 | 12:39 PM (EST)


At a conference in London, a Goldman Sachs international adviser, Brian Griffiths, praised inequality. As his company was putting aside $16.7 billion for compensation and benefits in the first nine months of 2009, up 46 percent from a year earlier, Griffiths told us not to worry. "We have to tolerate...

Read Post

Lessons From Letterman in Health Reform

373 Comments | Posted October 19, 2009 | 07:50 AM (EST)


Last January, as I understand it, the White House promised Big Pharma, big insurance, and the American Medical Association the moral equivalent of what Joel Halderman allegedly demanded of David Letterman: hush money. The groups agreed to stay silent or even be supportive of healthcare reform, as long as they...

Read Post

The Audacity of Greed

163 Comments | Posted October 14, 2009 | 04:31 PM (EST)


The health-insurance industry has finally revealed itself for what it is.

Insurers hate the idea that's emerged from the Senate Finance Committee of lowering penalties on younger and healthier people who don't buy insurance. Relying on an analysis by PricewaterhouseCoopers, insurers say this means new enrollees will be older and...

Read Post

Going To Copenhagen Empty-Handed

53 Comments | Posted October 12, 2009 | 11:56 PM (EST)


On Friday, Denmark's climate and energy minister, Connie Hedegaard, who will be chairing U.N.-sponsored climate talks in December in Copenhagen, said President Obama needs to do more on climate. "It is hard to imagine that he will be receiving the Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo on Dec. 10 and then...

Read Post

Why Obama Should Not Have Received the Peace Prize -- Yet

203 Comments | Posted October 12, 2009 | 11:34 AM (EST)


President Obama's only real diplomatic accomplishment so far has been to change the direction and tone of American foreign policy from unilateral bullying to multilateral listening and cooperating. That's important, to be sure, but not nearly enough. The Prize is really more of Booby Prize for Obama's predecessor. Had the...

Read Post

The Phantom Recovery and What To Do About Jobs

437 Comments | Posted October 5, 2009 | 01:56 PM (EST)


In his Saturday radio address, President Obama acknowledged the White House is exploring "additional options to promote job creation." It's about time. This is the worst job market in seventy years -- including the longest duration of steep job losses.

If anyone had any doubt that something far more dramatic...

Read Post

The Truth About Jobs That No One Wants to Tell You

1352 Comments | Posted October 2, 2009 | 10:45 AM (EST)


Unemployment will almost certainly hit double-digits next year -- and may remain there for some time. And for every person who shows up as unemployed in the Bureau of Labor Statistics' household survey, you can bet there's another either too discouraged to look for work, or working part-time who'd rather...

Read Post

The Public Option Lives On

321 Comments | Posted September 28, 2009 | 02:28 PM (EST)


Tuesday is a critical day in the saga of the public option. Democrats Charles Schumer (New York) and Jay Rockefeller (West Virginia) are introducing an amendment to include the public option in the bill to be reported out by the Senate Finance Committee -- the committee anointed by the White...

Read Post

Why the Dow is Hitting 10,000 While Everyone Else is Cutting Back

770 Comments | Posted September 22, 2009 | 11:16 AM (EST)


So how can the Dow be flirting with 10,000 when consumers, who make up 70 percent of the economy, have had to cut way back on buying because they have no money? Jobs continue to disappear. One out of six Americans is either unemployed or underemployed. Homes can no longer...

Read Post