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View Research by Author - Ron Haskins

Citation URL: http://www.urban.org/RonHaskins


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Promoting Economic Mobility By Increasing Postsecondary Education (Research Report)
Ron Haskins, Harry Holzer, Robert I. Lerman

A college education strongly affects whether or not children from poor or low-income families move up the economic ladder when they become adults. But they are less likely to enroll in either two- or four-year colleges, and less likely to complete a degree when they do, relative to those from middle- and upper-income families — even after accounting for differences in academic preparation. We review current federal efforts to help low-income students attend college, and recommend new policies that would improve their academic preparation, provide more effective guidance on selecting and paying for college, and improve retention and graduation rates.

Posted to Web: June 12, 2009Publication Date: May 01, 2009

A Budget We Can Believe In: Memo to President Barack Obama (Commentary)
Robert Bixby, William Galston, Ron Haskins, Julia Isaacs, Maya MacGuineas, Will Marshall, Pietro Nivola, Rudolph G. Penner, Robert D. Reischauer, Alice M. Rivlin, Isabel V. Sawhill, C. Eugene Steuerle

Two former directors of the Congressional Budget Office now at the Urban Institute join scholars from other organizations in a memo advising President Obama on how to balance the nation’s short- and long-term economic needs. To reduce escalating future deficits without endangering near-term recovery, the authors’ recommendations include action to stem the growth of Social Security and Medicare.

Posted to Web: January 27, 2009Publication Date: January 27, 2009

Taking Back Our Fiscal Future (Occasional Paper)
Joseph Antos, Robert Bixby, Stuart Butler, Paul Cullinan, Alison Fraser, William Galston, Ron Haskins, Julia Isaacs, Maya MacGuineas, Will Marshall, Pietro Nivola, Rudolph G. Penner, Robert D. Reischauer, Alice M. Rivlin, Isabel V. Sawhill, C. Eugene Steuerle

The authors of this paper—longtime federal budget and policy experts—were drawn together by a deep concern about the nation's long-term fiscal outlook. Despite diverse philosophies and political leanings, they found solid common ground and agree that unsustainable deficits in the federal budget threaten the health and vigor of the American economy and the first step toward establishing budget responsibility is to reform the budget decision process so that the major drivers of escalating deficits—Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid—are no longer on autopilot. The paper provides specific policy recommendations and outlines the reasons action is critical.

Posted to Web: March 31, 2008Publication Date: March 31, 2008

Welfare Reform and the Work Support System (Policy Briefs)
Ron Haskins, Isabel V. Sawhill

[© Brookings Institution] Although the sweeping welfare reform law of 1996 has received widespread attention in the media and among policymakers, the development of the nation's work support system, which is a vital complement to the 1996 reforms, has received far less attention. The work support system is a series of programs that provide benefits to poor and low-income working families. In popular parlance, they are programs that "make work pay." The most important of these programs are the minimum wage, the Earned Income Tax Credit, the child tax credit, income supplement programs conducted by states, food stamps, health insurance, child support enforcement, and child care. A recent study by the Congressional Budget Office showed that numerous expansions of these programs since the mid-1980s have increased by a factor of more than eight the value of federal work support benefits now being paid to working families. Given the important role these programs play in maintaining work incentives, supplementing earned income so working families can provide a minimum living standard for their children, and helping families when unemployment hits, the maintenance and even expansion of these programs will be a major part of this year's welfare reauthorization debate in Congress. In this brief, we provide an overview of work support programs and examine the pros and cons of proposals to expand them.

Posted to Web: January 01, 2002Publication Date: January 01, 2002

 

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