Author Archives: byi

Economics Of Sustainability Conference

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Why democratic ownership matters if we care about class

Originally published in Classism Exposed on May 18, 2015. I often open my lectures by explaining that the current distribution of wealth in the United States—with the richest 400 people owning more of the country than the poorest 180 million combined—is, essentially, a medieval arrangement, with a vast underclass and a tiny elite.  After one […]

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We need a new economic system

Originally published in AlJazeera America on May 20, 2015. As the 2016 election begins to come into focus, economic populism appears to be the order of the day. The Center for American Progress, the Campaign for America’s Future and National People’s Action, Hillary Clinton, Bernie Sanders, Bill de Blasio and the Roosevelt Institute have all […]

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It’s Time to Get Serious About Systemic Solutions to Systemic Problems

Originally published in Huffington Post on April 1, 2015. Co-Authored By James Gustave Speth It’s getting harder and harder to be an optimist. A deep economic crisis has given way to a profoundly unequal recovery. Climate catastrophe is steadily unfolding across the globe. And the work of building a racially inclusive society appears to be […]

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Inequality’s Dead End—And the Possibility of a New, Long-Term Direction

Originally published in the Nonprofit Quarterly on March 10, 2015. It is easy to be distracted by what passes for economic news these days, focused as it is on short-term fluctuations and assurances of recovery and revitalization. The simple truth, however, is that year by year, decade by decade, life in the United States is […]

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