The Ghost Budget: How U.S. war spending went rogue, wasted billions, and how to fix it
PolicyCast
by Linda Bilmes, Ralph Ranalli
3w ago
HKS Senior Lecturer Linda Bilmes, an expert on public finance who has studied post-9/11 war costs for the past 20 years, says their staggering $5 trillion cost was enabled by what she calls “The Ghost Budget.” Using an unprecedented combination of borrowing, accounting tricks, and outsourcing, presidential administrations, Congress, and the Pentagon were able to circumvent traditional military budget processes in a way that kept war costs out of the public debate and resulted in trillions being spent with minimal oversight. The result: corporations and wealthy investors raking in huge profits ..read more
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The Great Creep Backward: Policy responses to China’s slowing economy
PolicyCast
by Rana Mitter, Meg Rithmire, Ralph Ranalli
1M ago
Harvard Kennedy School Professor Rana Mitter and Harvard Business School Associate Professor Meg Rithmire say that after decades of tremendous growth, an economically slowing China is the new normal. With a growing debt-to-GDP ratio, an aging population, a devastating real estate bubble, and a loss of confidence among both foreign investors and domestic consumers, Chinese President Xi Jinping and the Chinese Communist Party face a daunting array of thorny problems—including ones of their own making resulting from the One Child law policy and other home-grown policies. So how should the United ..read more
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Two peoples. Two states. Why U.S. diplomacy in Israel and Palestine needs vision, partners, and a backbone
PolicyCast
by Edward Djerejian, Ralph Ranalli
1M ago
Former U.S. Ambassador to Israel Ed Djerejian says Israeli Prime Minister Yitzak Rabin once told him “There is no military solution to this conflict, only a political one.” Rabin was assassinated a few years later and today bullets are flying, bombs are falling, and 1,200 Israelis are dead after the Hamas terrorist attacks of October 7 and nearly 30,000 Gazans have been killed in the Israeli response. Yet Djerejain still believes that a breakthrough is possible even in the current moment, as horrible as it is. Djerejian, a senior fellow at Harvard Kennedy School’s Belfer Center for Science and ..read more
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We can productively discuss even the toughest topics—here’s how
PolicyCast
by Julia Minson, Erica Chenoweth, Ralph Ranalli
2M ago
As our discourse and our politics have become both more polarized and paralyzed, Harvard Kennedy School faculty members Erica Chenoweth and Julia Minson say we need to refocus on listening to understand, instead of talking to win. In mid-2022, the School launched the Candid and Constructive Conversations initiative, based on the idea that frank yet productive discussions over differences are not only vital to democracy and a functioning society, but that the ability to have them was also an essential skill for students, staff, and faculty in the Harvard community and beyond to learn. The effor ..read more
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The document that redefined humanity: The Universal Declaration of Human Rights at 75
PolicyCast
by Kathryn Sikkink, Kenneth Roth, Harvard Kennedy School, PolicyCast, podcast, Harvard University, Universal Declaration of Human Rights, UDHR, Carr Center for Human Rights Policy, Human Rights Watch, Israel, Gaza, Russia, Ukraine, civil war, violations, atrocities, United Nations, World War II, Ralph Ranalli
4M ago
Harvard Kennedy School Professor Kathryn Sikkink and former longtime Human Rights Watch executive director Kenneth Roth have spent years both studying the transformational effects of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and have worked on the ground to make its vision of a more just, equal world a reality. On December 10th, the world celebrated not only the annual Human Rights Day, but also the 75th anniversary of the UDHR, which some historians and social scientists consider to be the greatest achievement in the history of humankind. It was the first time representatives of the world com ..read more
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Legacy of privilege: David Deming and Raj Chetty on how elite college admissions policies affect who gains power and prestige
PolicyCast
by David Deming, Raj Chetty, Ralph Ranalli
5M ago
Legacy admissions, particularly at elite colleges and universities, were thrust into the spotlight this summer when the U.S. Supreme Court effectively ended affirmative action in admissions. The ruling raised many questions, and fortunately, Harvard Kennedy School professor David Deming and Harvard Economics Professor Raj Chetty were there with some important answers—having just wrapped up a 6-year study of the impact of legacy admissions at so-called “Ivy-plus” schools. Students spend years preparing to face judgment by colleges and universities as a worthy potential applicant. They strive fo ..read more
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Need to solve an intractable problem? Try collaborative governing
PolicyCast
by Jorrit de Jong, Amy Edmondson, Ralph Ranalli
5M ago
Harvard Kennedy School faculty member Jorrit de Jong and Harvard Business School Professor Amy Edmondson say the big, intractable problems challenges facing city leaders today are too complex to be addressed by any one agency or government department. Complex challenges like the shortage of economic opportunity and affordable housing, homelessness, the effects of the climate crisis, crime—and can only be solved by multiple organizations working together. But that’s easier said than done. Bringing together government agencies, nonprofits, private business, academia, and the public into successf ..read more
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Need to solve an intractable problem? Collaboration is hard but worth it.
PolicyCast
by Jorrit de Jong, Amy Edmondson, Ralph Ranalli
5M ago
Harvard Kennedy School faculty member Jorrit de Jong and Harvard Business School Professor Amy Edmondson say the big, intractable problems challenges facing city leaders today are too complex to be addressed by any one agency or government department. Complex challenges like the shortage of economic opportunity and affordable housing, homelessness, the effects of the climate crisis, crime—and can only be solved by multiple organizations working together. But that’s easier said than done. Bringing together government agencies, nonprofits, private business, academia, and the public into successf ..read more
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How to keep "TLDR" syndrome from killing your policy proposal
PolicyCast
by Todd Rogers, Lauren Brodsky, Ralph Ranalli
6M ago
Harvard Kennedy School Professor Todd Rogers and Lecturer in Public Policy Lauren Brodsky say that trying to sound too smart—even when trying to communicate complex or nuanced ideas—can end up being a dumb strategy. Because today’s overburdened information consumers are as much skimmers as readers, Rogers and Brodsky teach people how to put readers first and use tools like simplification, formatting, and storytelling for maximum engagement. They say you can have the most brilliant, well-researched ideas in the policy world, but you can’t communicate them, they’ll never reach the ultimate goal ..read more
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Dr. Rochelle Walensky on making health care policy under fire
PolicyCast
by Rochelle Walensky, Ralph Ranalli
7M ago
Dr. Rochelle Walensky, who served as CDC director from 2021 to 2023, calls the job “probably the hardest thing I will ever do.” But she also calls it “the honor of a lifetime.” When she was appointed by President Biden as the CDC’s 19th director, she was already used to politicized health care issues, having spent her formative years as a physician working on HIV and AIDS. But COVID thrust her into an unprecedented spotlight, forcing her to lead a demoralized agency through the challenges of implementing policy and informing the public while navigating a highly polarized and often toxic public ..read more
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