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Productivity is everything: Why economic policy misses what really matters

By: Slaughter, Matthew J. and Wessel, David.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: Foreign Affairs Description: 104(2), Mar-Apr, 2025: p.148-161. In: Foreign AffairsSummary: For the United States, these are trying times. Americans are overcome with an unshakable sense of economic malaise. The top-line indicators are good: unemployment is low, inflation is declining, and the country remains the richest in the world. Yet in poll after poll, most Americans say they are unhappy with the state of the economy today and its prospects for tomorrow. Only a quarter consider the economy good or excellent. Nearly 80 percent say they are not confident that their children will live better than they do.- Reproduced https://www.foreignaffairs.com/productivity-everything-slaughter-wessel
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Articles Articles Indian Institute of Public Administration
104(2), Mar-Apr, 2025: p.148-161 Available AR135640

For the United States, these are trying times. Americans are overcome with an unshakable sense of economic malaise. The top-line indicators are good: unemployment is low, inflation is declining, and the country remains the richest in the world. Yet in poll after poll, most Americans say they are unhappy with the state of the economy today and its prospects for tomorrow. Only a quarter consider the economy good or excellent. Nearly 80 percent say they are not confident that their children will live better than they do.- Reproduced

https://www.foreignaffairs.com/productivity-everything-slaughter-wessel

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