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The demographics and economy of New England may lead more people there to receive Disability Insurance (DI) benefits for mental disorders.
For decades, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have issued separate mortgage-backed securities. But the price difference between the two has cost taxpayers billions.
Consumer-facing websites like the Department of Education’s College Scorecard may not have the impact policymakers expect.
More than 12 million Americans receive Social Security Disability Insurance benefits, but the program’s trust fund is projected to be exhausted in 2023.
A Q&A with Linda Blumberg, who's extensively studied the impacts of the Affordable Care Act following its initial implementation in 2014.
The median FICO score for borrowers approved for agency-originated loans has declined from 742 in June 2016 to 725 in April 2017.
Apprenticeships are a cost-effective approach to upgrading skills, raising job quality, and widening routes to rewarding careers.
A recent Supreme Court ruling and two studies of existing school voucher programs in Louisiana and Indiana may pave the way for more voucher programs.
A study on Seattle's minimum wage used high-quality data that also limit what kinds of analysis are possible.
Nonprofits employ around 10 percent of the labor force, but this sphere of job creation does not get much respect from the administration.

The Future of Federal Antipoverty Programs

COLLECTION

The Future of Federal Antipoverty Programs

How will transformative policy changes affect millions of American families?

Structural Racism in America

COLLECTION

Structural Racism in America

Public policies, institutional practices, and cultural narratives perpetuate our country's racial inequalities. 

How Can We Reduce Poverty and Increase Opportunity?

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How Can We Reduce Poverty and Increase Opportunity?

More than 48 million Americans, including one in six children, live in poverty. How can we do better?

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Urban Wire Writers