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She had just finished giving a major speech on her economic vision β she wanted "a full employment and full potential economy," she said β and I wanted to know more about what that meant and how she would achieve it. We spoke for about 40 minutes you can read my longer thoughts on our conversation, and what I learned about Hillary Clinton, here.
It will give you a sense of how Clinton thinks, how she reasons, how she works through policy questions. Click the link below to head to that point in the conversation or scroll down to read the whole interview:. You have about 1. Given how many children are now in that condition, should we be following the model of countries β like Sweden, Germany, and now Canada under Trudeau β that have a universal child allowance to cut or eliminate child poverty?
And I have been focused on child poverty and what we can do to alleviate it for a very long time. We had more people lifted out of poverty. We had a 33 percent increase in African-American family income.
We were on the right track. But we were on the right trajectory β and, unfortunately, we changed direction. We had policies that I think contributed greatly to the increase in childhood poverty starting in , the Great Recession being the worst of those.
But there were also policy decisions, regulatory changes β providing more leeway to the states, so that they did not have either the requirement or the incentive to continue lifting people, particularly kids, out of poverty. But trying to create more financial support is something that we should look at. And I think we have to move on both tracks. But to ask a big-picture question about that policy shift: Something a lot of poverty scholars argue to me is that we made a very big change toward trying to support the working poor β welfare reform was, of course, part of that.