Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Raj Chetty’s prescription for reviving the American dream

                                                                                

 LOTS OF POSTS IGNORED BY BLOGGER.....

OR REMOVED ON THEIR WHIM!

ALL POSTS ARE AVAILABLE ON

MIDDLEBORO REVIEW AND SO ON

BLOGGER DOESN'T LIKE TRUTH OR FACTS!

BLOGGER DOESN'T LIKE FUND RAISERS AND DELETES

POSTS THAT INCLUDE FUNDRAISING THAT 'VIOLATES THEIR

UNDEFINED COMMUNITY STANDARDS SO ALL 'FUND RAISING'

IS DELETED - CONTRIBUTE AS YOU ARE INCLINED TO SUPPORT

IMPORTANT ISSUES! THESE ARE NOT SOLICITATIONS


ADVERTISEMENT

MOTT_MA250_Commwealth_Beacon_640x200

The Download Email Header

POT REPEAL: The first of four expected rulings about ballot question eligibility went in favor of the campaign, with the Supreme Judicial Court deciding that a push to reverse the 2016 statewide vote legalizing recreational marijuana sales was properly certified and summarized, and can appear on the November ballot. Chris Lisinski explains

CVS-MGB AFFILIATION: The state Health Policy Commission released its final report on the proposed affiliation of CVS MinuteClinics with Mass General Brigham, saying access and cost issues continue to leave it “uncertain” whether or when MinuteClinic will "provide comprehensive, high-quality primary care,” as promised. Alison Kuznitz of State House News Service reports. 

OPINION: Boston does not need to choose between development of housing and a new high school on a parcel in Roxbury. By building higher and making use of air rights, the city can achieve both goals, write former Boston City Council president Lawrence DiCara and Air Right Exchange of America president Joseph Ravenna IV. 

The American dream has long loomed as the guiding promise of life in the United States. Seeds of the idea can be seen in the country’s founding documents, but the phrase itself first emerged just under 100 years ago. In 1931, historian James Truslow Adams popularized the term in his book The Epic of America to describe a society of opportunity for all, regardless of social class.  

Today, the American dream seems more a mythic ideal than lived reality. The country has been buffeted by decades of economic insecurity, with upward mobility increasingly elusive, especially for those on the lower rungs of the income ladder. That angst has been a driving force in national politics, fueling populist discontent from the left and right.  

As the American dream has slipped out of reach for many, few have done more than Raj Chetty to try to understand the fading of the American dream and what could be done to change that dispiriting trendline.  

A professor of economics at Harvard, Chetty has emerged as the country’s preeminent scholar of economic mobility. The 46-year-old son of Indian immigrants has established an entire research center, Opportunity Insights, focused on understanding the barriers to economic opportunity and upward mobility, and on crafting solutions aimed at helping people chart a path out of poverty.  

ADVERTISEMENT

CB_640x200 (1)

Chetty’s work pulls on strands of earlier research from a number of his Harvard colleagues, including sociologist William Julius Wilson, who chronicled the disappearance of work in inner cities and the economic isolation it brought, and fellow economists Claudia Goldin and Lawrence Katz, who have documented the ways in which educational achievement is not keeping up with the demands of advances in technology. Most notable, however, has been Chetty’s work on the impact of “social capital” on economic mobility, building on research by Robert Putnam, who launched the issue of civic connectedness into the public conversation with his book Bowling Alone, published in 2000.  

Chetty has opened the door to a dramatically more fine-tuned understanding of economic mobility by making use of “big data” — enormous datasets drawing on the experience of tens of millions of Americans — to provide a strong evidence base explaining the factors that propel economic gains or inhibit them.  

While circumstances like growing up in areas of concentrated poverty, or in single-parent households, have long been associated with low economic mobility, the effects of social capital have been harder to measure. Chetty and his colleagues came up with ways to do so using data from social media companies. It has transformed our understanding of economic mobility — and fundamentally reshapes thinking about the kinds of policies we should pursue to restore the vitality of the American dream for those in poverty.   

“This is the single strongest predictor of economic mobility that we or anybody else has identified to date,” Chetty says of social capital that connects low-income people with those higher in the income distribution.    

The challenge, he says, is aligning incentives so there is broad support for policies that can restore the promise of the American dream to all.  

“Even if you set aside issues of social justice, fairness, and so on that are obviously central, and look at it purely from a cold economic lens of maximizing GDP and growth, you still want to invest in improving opportunity in these areas,” he says of communities of concentrated poverty. Chetty thinks viewing expanded opportunity as “an economic growth policy” is part of the way to bring more people to the table, something that “ultimately lead to change on scale.”  

It’s a tall order, but the insights Chetty and his colleagues have provided mean we can no longer throw up our hands and say we don’t know how to tackle the problem. The challenge is mustering the political will to do it.  

I sat down with Chetty to better understand the withered state of the American dream and how to revive it at the recent WBUR Festival. What follows is an edited transcript of our discussion. You can also watch the conversation here or listen to it on this episode of The Codcast

SOUTH COAST RAIL: One year after the MBTA’s South Coast Rail expansion launched, Gateway Cities leaders in the area are still waiting for updates on the project’s second phase, which would electrify and speed up trips between Boston and New Bedford. Hallie Claflin assesses the outlook. 

PRIMARY CARE: Inviting a political fight with influential hospital systems, the Senate plans to approve legislation that would more than double the share of health care dollars that go toward the ailing primary care sector. Chris Lisinksi has the details.  

OPINION: Chuck Tanowitz, vice chair of the Newton Economic Development Commission, offers a meditation on the “temporary community” riders share while traveling on public transportation, with an ode to his commute on the MBTA’s 71 bus between Watertown Square and Harvard Square. 

CAMPBELL RISING? Like her predecessor, Maura Healey, Attorney General Andrea Campbell has repeatedly flexed her legal and political muscle by filing suit against the Trump administration. Could that help put her on a similar path to the corner office or another more prominent perch? (The Boston Globe – paywall)  

BERKSHIRE GRAY: Government offices in the Berkshires, which have an aging population, are struggling to find replacements for older civic officials who are eager to pass the torch but are finding few takers interested in stepping up to lead.  (The Berkshire Eagle – paywall)  

TRUMP POLLS: Polling shows white working-class voters, a key demographic behind President Trump’s election, have soured dramatically on him over the economy, with the group now disapproving of his handling of the economy, according to various polls, by 14 to 30 points. (The New York Times – paywall)  

EASTHAM DOG FIGHT: The Eastham select board found itself adjudicating a bitter standoff between two dog owners, one of whom says the dog belonging to her neighbor poses a mortal threat to her dog and should be banished from town. (The Provincetown Independent)  

KIDDER FAREWELL: More than 300 people gathered at Smith College in Northampton for a memorial service to remember Pulitzer Prize-winning author Tracy Kidder, a longtime resident of nearby Williamsburg, who died in March at age 80. (Daily Hampshire Gazette)  

 
 
 
https://commonwealthbeacon.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/cropped-30-Year-CWB-New.png

Published by MassINC



No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.

A Wannabe MAGA Congressman Says Americans' Pain Is "Worth It"

                                                                                    LOTS OF POSTS IGNORED BY BLOGGER..... OR REMOVED ON THEI...