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Ezra Klein
Ezra Klein is a former Prospect writer and current editor-in-chief at Vox. His work has appeared in the LA Times, The Guardian, The Washington Monthly, The New Republic, Slate, and The Columbia Journalism Review. He’s been a commentator on MSNBC, CNN, NPR, and more.
Wealth-Care Reform
Fixing our health-care system will make us more economically secure. It won’t make us much healthier.
NEW ADDRESS.
The new address of this blog is http://voices.washingtonpost.com/ezra-klein/ The new RSS feed is: https://voices.washingtonpost.com/ezra-klein/fast.xml Come on over!
MY LAST POST AT TAP.
“It’s not a goodbye post,” a friend just said to me. “It’s a ‘see you later’ post.” And that’s probably true. This will be my last real blog post at The American Prospect. This site will go dark for the rest of the week. On Monday, it will move to the Washington Post (the archives […]
IS THE ADMINISTRATION AT WAR WITH ITSELF?
This morning, some conservative groups expended a lot of energy hyping a document that seemed to show the Office of Management and Budget — and hence the Obama administration — opposes the Environmental Protection Agency’s decision to classify carbon as a dangerous pollutant. That was a bad idea, because it’s just given the OMB a […]
HAS THE BUSINESS COMMUNITY BOXED ITSELF INTO A CORNER ON LABOR LAW?
I’ve written often on the strategic mistake the unions made uniting behind the specific solution of card check rather than the general problem of unfair barriers to workers who want to organize. But I’m starting to wonder if the business community hasn’t made the same mistake in reverse. They’ve done a damn good job burying […]
THE OTHER INSOLVENCY PROBLEM.
The Annual Trustees Report is out today, telling us something akin to what we already knew: Medicare and Social Security are in bad shape, and getting worse. The headlines will emphasize the dates of insolvency. Medicare runs out of money in 2017, two years earlier than anticipated by last year’s report. Social Security falls in […]
BROTHER, CAN YOU SPARE $92,000?
The White House released some new numbers on the stimulus today. The one that’s getting the most attention is $92,000. That’s how much it will cost to create or preserve each stimulus-related job. Do I even need to relay the snarky rejoinder to this? But the number is more complicated than it seems. Building a […]
THE POWER OF POPULARITY.
One of the reasons I like reading Patrick Ruffini is he has a tendency to grapple with, rather than downplay, troublesome evidence. Here he is, for instance, on Obama’s personal popularity: Obama’s personal popularity stayed remarkably stable throughout the course of the campaign, and the average unfavorable rating barely ever cracked 35%. Obama the campaigner […]
THE CASE FOR BORROWING BIG, AND QUICK.
There’s some evidence that demand for Treasury debt might be waning. That makes sense on a number of levels: Deficits look bad and so the risk of default — though quite small — inevitably inches upwards. There are signals that other markets are stabilizing and their products may once again be worth investing in — […]

