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"New in Paperback. While everyone agrees that Social Security is a
vital and necessary government program, there have been widely
divergent plans for reforming it. Peter A. Diamond and Peter R.
Orszag, two of the nation's foremost economists, propose a reform
plan that would rescue the program both from its projected
financial problems and from those who would destroy the program in
order to save it. Since the publication of the first edition of
this book in 2004, the Social Security debate has moved to the
center of the domestic policy agenda. In this updated edition of
Saving Social Security, the authors analyze the Bush
Administration's proposal for individual accounts and discuss the
so-called ""price indexing"" proposal to restore long-term solvency
through changing how initial benefits would be calculated. Soc ial
Security is essis essential reading for policymakers involved in
reform, analysts, students, and all those interested in the fate of
this safeguard of American lives. ""An honest, transparent and
comprehensive approach to making the much needed reforms to the
Social Security program.""-Journal of Pensions, Economics, and
Finance ""Very accessible presentation of facts, analysis of
underlying problems, comparison of opinions, and argument for
proposed reforms.""-Future Survey Exhaustively researched and
deeply entrenched in practical issues and mathematical
calculations... a highly recommended ray of hope against a looming
national crisis."" -Wisconsin Bookwatch ""Diamond and Orszag bring
some welcome realism and decency to the debate.""-Robert M. Solow,
Institute Professor Emeritus, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, Nobel Laureate in Economics "
"Immediately after September 11, the Brookings Institution began a
comprehensive, multidisciplinary project focused on the key policy
challenge of these dangerous times-assessing and improving homeland
defense. That intense effort produced Protecting the American
Homeland, and it continues in this important new book. In
Protecting the Homeland 2006/2007, Brookings foreign policy experts
analyze current homeland security concerns and the adequacy (or
inadequacy) of current policies designed to address them. The
authors present both the big picture and the smaller components of
homeland security policy that make up the whole. They make specific
recommendations on intelligence reform, science and technology
policy and the protection of critical infrastructure within the
United States. They also look ahead to consider what dangers we
should anticipate and plan for, recommending policies that will
work to that end. One of the strands running through Protecting the
Homeland 2006/2007 is the need to ""stitch the seams"" in our
homeland security blanket through greater integration and
coordination. The authors emphasize that the U.S. federal
government must work together with key partners who have been
insufficiently integrated into American homeland security
activities to date. These actors include foreign governments, state
and local government, and the private sector, and the coordination
must occur in several different areas (e.g. border protection,
finance, technology, intelligence). The U.S. government should
not-indeed, it cannot-do it alone. By its very nature, homeland
security is a problem that defies the usual bureaucratic
boundaries. Effective homeland security policy demands intense
collaboration on new issues and between organizations that have not
traditionally needed each other. This book is of interest and
importance to journalists, analysts, policymakers, scholars, and
citizens concerned with protecting their homeland against terrorism
and related dangers. "
"A good deal has been done to improve the safety of Americans on
their own soil since the attacks of September 11, 2001. Yet there
have been numerous setbacks. The Bush administration and Congress
wasted at least six months in 2002 due to partisan disagreement
over a new budget for homeland security, and as one consequence,
resources were slow to reach first responders across the country.
Most improvements in homeland security have focused on ""refighting
the last war""-improving defenses against attacks similar to those
the country has already suffered. Not enough has been done to
anticipate possible new kinds of terrorist actions. Policymakers
have also focused too much attention on the creation of a
department of homeland security-rather than identifying and
addressing the kinds of threats to which the country remains
vulnerable. While the creation of a cabinet-level agency focusing
on homeland security may have merit, the authors of this study
argue that the department will not, in and of itself, make
Americans safer. To the contrary, the complexity of merging so many
disparate agencies threatens to distract Congress and the
administration from other, more urgent security efforts. This
second edition of Protecting the American Homeland urges
policymakers to focus on filling key gaps that remain in the
current homeland security effort: identifying better protection for
private infrastructure; using information technology to share
intelligence and more effectively ""connect the dots"" that could
hold hints to possible terrorist tactics; expanding the capacities
of the Coast Guard and Customs Service, as well as airline
transportation security; dealing with the possible threat of
surface-to-air missiles to airliners; and encouraging better
coordination among intelligence agencies. While acknowledging the
impossibility of preventing every possible type of terrorist
violence, the authors recommend a more systematic approach to
homeland security that focuses on preventing attacks that can cause
large numbers of casualties, massive economic or societal
disruption, or severe political harm to the nation. "
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