
Shawn Fremstad
@shawnfremstad
For the many, not the few. Labor, social security, families, disability. Born in Fargo. Director, Law & Political Economy.
ID: 16870668
http://www.cepr.net 20-10-2008 17:22:09
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A Spanish reform that let parents reduce #workinghours by up to half while their youngest child was under six positively impacted #mothers' labor supply and income. -> see IZA DP No. 17509 by @adequinto EU_ScienceHub and Libertad González UPF Barcelona. docs.iza.org/dp17509.pdf


NEW: A groundbreaking survey on fairness across the world with 65,000 individuals across 60 countries -- from colleagues at NHH Norwegian School of Economics FAIR-The Choice Lab. Key findings: * The West is especially meritocratic * What drives inequality? Globally, people believe luck matters more than merit


To put the impacts in perspective, more West Virginians are employed by the federal government than the coal mining industry. 24% of WV's federal employees (5,500) are veterans. Thanks to Economic Policy Institute for partnering on this important factsheet!

Just finished "Nordic Socialism" by Pelle Dragsted. Both a great historical guide and blueprint for the future. Should be writing a review but very thankful William Banks gave me an early look.


Highly recommended--also, Doug Henwood's Behind the News convo with Vanessa Wills, I was expecting something interesting, but academic, but ended up being one of the most lucid interpretations of Marx I've heard in a long while.


The problem with the whole “women won’t marry lower status men” narrative is that, increasingly, American women are doing exactly that. My latest for The Atlantic, on the rise of women who are "marrying down." theatlantic.com/family/archive…





This is Brian Gladstone in Rachel Cohen's very good Vox interview, but I don't think I agree that an official poverty "definition & threshold is absolutely essential for determining & parceling out resources." Other nations with much more expansive social states get by without one.






Pope Leo XIV explains his choice of name: "... I chose to take the name Leo XIV. There are different reasons for this, but mainly because Pope Leo XIII in his historic Encyclical Rerum Novarum addressed the social question in the context of the first great industrial revolution.