Michael A. Peterson Op-Ed, TIME.com, April 2016
America’s young people have the most to gain — and the most at stake — in how we address our pressing fiscal policy challenges.
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America’s young people have the most to gain — and the most at stake — in how we address our pressing fiscal policy challenges.
Michael A. Peterson, President and CEO of the Peter G. Peterson Foundation, commented today following the release of the 2015 Annual Reports of the Social Security and Medicare Trustees.
Although a return to a normalized interest environment is a good sign for the strength of the economy, rate increases will make it more expensive to borrow.
The Foundation is developing a growing program of initiatives and grants aimed at fostering improvements in the U.S. healthcare system, which Jeffrey D. Selberg, MHA, will shape and oversee.
The federal deficit is growing during a period of economic expansion — a pattern that is highly unusual.
https://www.pgpf.org/blog/2018/12/the-risks-of-running-up-deficits-when-the-economy-is-good
In the legislative days remaining before the 113th Congress adjourns, there is much urgent work to be done to put the nation on a more sustainable and predictable path, now and in the future.
Up to Us kicks off at colleges and universities across the country, with three weeks of nonpartisan campaigns to raise awareness about the national debt.
https://www.pgpf.org/blog/2016/02/up-to-us-4th-annual-competition-kicks-off
A new report from the Henry L. Stimson Center puts forth a plan for U.S. military preparedness in an evolving global landscape and under an increasingly uncertain fiscal situation in Washington.
The Peter G. Peterson Foundation releases a statement on the agreement to raise the debt ceiling.
The combined Social Security trust funds are projected to be fully depleted by 2034 — just 18 years from now.
https://www.pgpf.org/analysis/2016/06/trustees-warn-social-security-in-financial-trouble