Robert
Reich on America, the Global Economy, and our Future
Economic commentator and former U.S. secretary gives a
public talk Thursday, Oct. 4, 8 pm
TACOMA,
Wash. – Robert Reich, former U.S. secretary of labor,
political economist, commentator, and bestselling author, who TIME
magazine described as “one of the 10 most successful cabinet secretaries of the
past century,” will speak at University of Puget Sound on Thursday, Oct. 4.
An
exacting and popular scholar, whose wit is as sharp as his intellect, Reich is
coming to Tacoma to present a talk titled “The Global Economy and the Future of
Everything National.” It will start at 8 p.m. in Schneebeck Concert Hall on
campus. Ticket information is below.
Reich
has served under three administrations—those of Presidents Gerald Ford and
Jimmy Carter, and as secretary of labor under Bill Clinton, from 1993 to 1997.
Reich and Clinton first met when the two were young Rhodes Scholars traveling
by ship to Oxford, England. Years later, a telephone call from the White House
ferried the labor expert and economist into what Reich described
as “a very heady, very exciting time, trying to decide basically how bad the
economy was, how large the deficit was.”
More
recently Reich served on President Barack Obama's economic transition board. He
is currently a nationally known consultant and media commentator and
Chancellor’s Professor of Public Policy at University of California, Berkeley.
Public
recognitions have underlined Reich’s expansive career. In 2003 he was awarded
the prestigious Václav Havel prize, in Prague, for his original contributions
to economic thinking. A year later he was named one of America's three most
influential opinion leaders on business and the economy, based on a study by
management consultant Accenture. In 2008 The Wall Street Journal named
him one of the nation’s top 10 thought leaders.
In
his new e-book, Beyond
Outrage (April 2012), Reich argues that the U.S. economy is
paralyzed by the gridlock of competing interests, and that only ordinary
Americans can ensure that Washington gets moving again. His 2011 book, Aftershock:
The Next Economy and America’s Future, scrutinized the economic outlook
following the Great Recession and predicted what might come over the next
decade. In a recent interview with The
Browser, Reich pointed to income disparity as one of the major
issues affecting our economy.
“You
see, when you have the extraordinary moves to inequality that we’ve seen over
the past 30 years, there is simply no way that democracy can be maintained,” he
said. “Massive inequality is incompatible with robust democracy. Today, in the
United States, the top 1 percent is taking home more than 20 percent of total
income and owns at least 38 percent of total wealth. …a handful of extraordinarily
wealthy people can virtually control the election result—not entirely, but have
a huge impact. That’s not a democracy.”
Reich is the author of more than a dozen books including The Work of Nations,
which has been translated into 22 languages, and the bestsellers Locked in
the Cabinet and The Future of Success. His 2007 book, Supercapitalism,
warned of the perils of an underregulated financial system tenuously supported
by layers of debt. Reich writes a nationally syndicated column about the
economy, and he is a regular contributor to public radio and CNBC television.
The
Susan Resneck Pierce Lecture in Public Affairs and the Arts series is named for
the president emerita of University of Puget Sound. The series brings
intellectuals, writers, and artists to the university to present challenging
ideas that stimulate further exploration and discussion on campus.
For tickets
order online at http://tickets.pugetsound.edu
or contact Wheelock Information Center to purchase with a credit card by
calling 253.879.6013. Admission is $20 for the general public. Advance booking
is advised. Puget Sound students, faculty, and staff can attend for free, but
tickets must be ordered in advance. Any remaining tickets will be available at
the door.
To read Robert Reich’s blog
visit: http://robertreich.org/
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