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U.S Needs New Deal 2.0

March 11 2008 / by Antonio Manfredi
Category: Government   Year: Beyond   Rating: 15

In the early part of the 20th century the United States made unprecedented investment in education, technology, public health, and infrastructure.

Programs like the New Deal America made the greatest investment in human potential the world has ever seen. The fertile environment we created was a hotbed of knowledge and creativity. Other countries attempted similar plans for their societies, and all of them failed, with one unfortunate exception. The US then blew past the competition in “planning technology.”

The ability to collaborate and create massive programs for societal change from the top down put us out ahead of other countries, all while maintaining a market economy. Knowledge and innovation networks, clustered around universities and national labs, created the digital economy from the ground up.

The secret sauce is not so secret anymore, my future-friends.

From Dubai to Singapore, the worlds rising stars are planning their destinies, and now blowing right past the US. A recent FB post Futuristic Middle East, serves to articulate this trend. Such City States have been exceptional proving grounds, and benefactors, of “planning technology.” With small geographies and simplified political systems, they can implement national strategies with ease.

Dubai is also doing way more than just building shiny hotels and palm islands in the ocean. They are buying wholesale entire knowledge networks, the most prestigious in the world, (many which are jumping at the opportunity.) Recently NYU has agreed to put a campus there, following in the footsteps of Harvard Medical School and Johns Hopkins. Oh by the way future pals, they will roll out the red carpet for future conscious talent.

The US is not a city state; we need a New Deal for the 21st century that covers a wide spectrum of societal issues. Here is my short-list:

1. Internet technology, knowledge transfer systems, ubiquitous access-We need ubiquitous internet access and tailor made user driven networks for public innovation and education. (Certainly ubiquitous and pervasive computing is a long term goal)

2. Alternative Energy Research-Simply put, we need a clean, reliable, and cheap source of energy(s) for our society. I want every national lab on this one.

3. Transit oriented development in every metro area. We need affordable and high quality dense housing in urban areas supported by mass transit. (The suburban American way of life is impossible to support, and makes it difficult for immigrants and the poor)

4. Open door policy- We need to open the door to legal immigration. Companies complain tough regs prevent them from hiring the global best, so they go elsewhere. We also need to open the door to collaborating with other nations on research.

What’s on your short-list?

Comment Thread (3 Responses)

  1. I liked your short-list. The open-door policy needs to be thought out a little more so as not to be abused and drain our remaining resources – an issue primarily b/c we’re in so much debt. Immigration is certainly a tough issue. Off the top of my head, I would add to your list generalized healthcare. We can model other countries where such programs are working. This isn’t because I’m a ‘bleeding heart lib’, it’s economics. Take care of the health of your laborers, you increase your human capital (and a nice bonus: they’ll be happy. Fancy that!).

    Posted by: Marisa Vitols   March 11, 2008
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  2. I really enjoyed this article as it succinctly encapsulates what’s going on here in our humongous country: infrastructure stagnation. It’s much easier for littler national actors like Dubai, Israel, Bulgaria, Ireland, even Brazil & Japan to rally around pro-active policies. To me, the magic mix appears to be 1) a sound perception of the future at the national level, 2) the willingness to take healthy risks, and 3) regions with lower levels of cumbersome infrastructure (but sufficiently stable economies and access to commerce). This makes regions like the middle-east ideal for mini New Deals or Marshall Plans and not the U.S. According to these principles, we should expect many African nations to zip ahead in the coming 10-20 years; they’ll stand a great chance if this is all facilitated by big business buddies like Microsoft, Google and IBM that recognize these emerging patterns.

    re: the rising demand for forward-thinkers, I think you’re onto something big. It’s not enough to just be a generalist, you need to have some specific expertise, but if you’re hip to accelerating change and become even a moderate expert in a certain field (urban development, entertainment, energy tech, psychology, etc.) then the demand for your brain should rise swiftly.

    re: you short-list—I’d add affordable health-care (as Marisa points out) and especially an excellent education system.

    Posted by: Alvis Brigis   March 11, 2008
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  3. being part of the BRIC, I wouldn’t exactly call Brazil a “littler national actor” – perhaps in comparison to the States, but not by much…

    Posted by: Fishka   March 11, 2008
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