Andrew Biggs and Betsey Stevenson discuss their perspectives on paid family leave. March, 2019.
Transcript:
GOOD AFTERNOON EVERYONE
HOPE YOU'RE ALL DOING WELL THANKS FOR
JOINING US HERE.
I'M MICHAEL BARR I'M THE JOAN AND
SANFORD WEILL DEAN OF THE GERALD R FORD
SCHOOL OF PUBLIC POLICY. I'M REALLY
DELIGHTED TO SEE YOU HERE TODAY FOR THIS
SPECIAL POLICY TALKS AT THE FORD SCHOOL
EVENT WE CALL IT WE ARE CALLING IT
PERSPECTIVES ON THE FUTURE OF PAID
FAMILY LEAVE WE HAVE THE AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INSTITUTE
ANDREW BIGGS AND THE FORD SCHOOLS OWN
BETSEY STEVENSON WE'VE BROUGHT DR. BIGGS
AND DR. STEVENSON TOGETHER AS PART OF
OUR INITIATIVE CONVERSATIONS ACROSS
DIFFERENCE IN A DIALOGUE TODAY MODERATED
BY OUR OWN FORD SCHOOL STUDENT NICTA MAY
KNOW WHO'S AMONG OTHER THINGS A
CO-FOUNDER OF THE STUDENT GROUP WE
LISTEN AS YOU WELL KNOW THESE ARE
CHALLENGING TIMES FOR OUR COUNTRY WITH
FRACTIOUS POLITICAL DISCOURSE GRIDLOCK
PARTISANSHIP IN OUR NATION'S CAPITAL AND
AN INCREASING LACK OF TRUST IN
INSTITUTIONS EVERYWHERE OUR
CONVERSATIONS ACROSS DIFFERENT SERIES
LOOKS TO BRING TOGETHER PEOPLE FROM
DIVERGENT VANTAGE POINTS TO TACKLE
SIGNIFICANT POLICY ISSUES WITH THE GOAL
OF DEEPER UNDERSTANDING AND TO SEARCH
FOR COMMON VALUES THE TOPIC OF THIS
EVENT PAID FAMILY LEAVE IS EMERGING AS A
SIGNIFICANT ELECTION ISSUE PARTICULARLY
IN SWING STATES AS WE MOVE CLOSER TO THE
ACCORDING TO PEW RESEARCH 82% OF
AMERICANS SUPPORT THE CONCEPT OF PAID
FAMILY LEAVE BUT ONLY SIX STATES IN THE
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA PASSED FAMILY LEAVE
LAWS.
TODAY WE HEAR TWO DIFFERENT
APPROACHES THOUGH THE POLICIES
THAT AFFECT WORKING FAMILY.
LET ME GIVE YOU A WORD ON
FORMAT.
WE WILL HAVE SOME TIME AT THE
END FOR QUESTIONS FROM THE
AUDIENCE, PLEASE WRITE THE
QUESTIONS ON THE STAFF PROVIDED
AND WE WILL COLLECT THEM.
THE STUDENTS AT THE FORD SCHOOL
AND KIM IRA, STUDENT AND MEMBER
OF AE I EXECUTIVE COUNCIL WILL
SIFT THROUGH YOUR CARDS, AND FOR
THOSE WATCHING ONLINE, TWEET
YOUR QUESTIONS USING THE HASHTAG
POLICY TALKS.
AND NICK, LET ME TURN THINGS
OVER TO YOU.
[APPLAUSE]
MR. BIGGS: THANK YOU FOR THAT
KIND INTRODUCTION.
THANK YOU FOR BEING HERE TODAY.
I'M EXCITED TO BE WITH PROFESSOR
STEVENSON, AND DR. BIGGS ON THIS
ISSUE.
I REMEMBER A COUPLE OF MONTHS
AGO, IN SEPTEMBER ANXIOUSLY
AWAITING NEXT DOOR MY FIRST
ECONOMICS CLASS WITH PROFESSOR
STSTEPHENSON BE BUT A FEW LECTURES
INTO THE CLASS, SHE HAD
MENTIONED THAT SHE JUST WRAPPED
UP OF THE WORKING ITERATION OF A
WORKING GROUP IN THE BROOKINGS
INSTITUTION ON THE TOPIC OF PAID
FAMILY LEAVE.
I THOUGHT IT WOULD BE A GREAT
IDEA TO BRING PROFESSOR
STEPHENSON AND SOMEBODY FROM AEI
AT THE FORD SCHOOL FOR A
DISCUSSION.
I'M EXCITED THAT THIS WAS ABLE
TO COME TOGETHER.
I WOULD LIKE TO SORT OF BEGIN
THE DISCUSSION BY PREFACING WITH
THE IDEA THAT AS THE DEAN
MENTIONED IT SEEMS THAT ON THE
TOPIC OF FAMILY LEAVE BOTH
LAWMAKER ON THE RIGHT AND THE
LEFT HAVE COME TO THE GENERAL
CONSENSUS THAT THIS AN ISSUE
WHOSE TIME HAS COME AND THAT IS
WHAT THE AEI AND BROOK LINS
REPORT SAID.
LAST JULY WHEN YOU TESTIFIED
BEFORE THE SENATE, SENATOR BROWN
MENTIONED THAT IF WE SORT OF
ACKNOWLEDGED AND APPRECIATE THE
HUMAN DIGNITY OF WORK AND THE
DIGNITY OF THE WORK, WE NEED TO
NEED TO EMBRACE A PAID FAMILY
LEAVE POLICY PLAN, AND PREFESS
PREFESSOR STEVENSON YOU HAVE BEEN
WORKING ON THIS FOR OVER TWO
YEARS.
WOULD YOU TALK MOST BASICALLY
WHAT PAID FAMILY LEAVE IS.
WHAT ARE THE SIMILAR STYLES TO
THE PROGRAM AND POTENTIALLY IF
ANY MISCONCEPTIONS EXIST, WHAT
MISCONCEPTIONS ARE UP THERE ON
THE POLICY?
MR. BIGGS: THANKS GROWING C CONSENSUS THAT
IT WOULD BE GOOD FOR FAMILIES
AND GOOD FOR THE ECONOMY AS
WELL.
THE IDEA IS THAT WHEN A NEW
PARENT, IT'S OFTEN THE MOTHER,
BUT THE IDEA IS THAT MOST OF
THESE PLANS WILL BE GENDER
NEUTRAL SO FATHERS CAN TAKE
PATERNITY LEAVE AS WELL.
WHEN THEY HAVE A NEW CHILD, OR
ADOPT A NEW CHILD, THEY CAN TAKE
TIME OFF FROM WORK WHILE STILL
RECEIVING PAY AND SPEND TIME IN
THAT CRUCIAL PERIOD OF RACING
THEIR CHILD -- RAISING THEIR
CHILD.
THERE'S RESEARCH THAT SAYS THAT
HAVING PAID LEAVE AVAILABLE IS
GOOD FOR CHILDREN IN TERMS OF
EDUCATION, NUTRITION AND HEALTH.
IT'S ALSO GOOD FOR PARENTS.
IT'S AN IRONIC THING, IN THE
SENSE THAT YOU WOULD SAY, WHY
WOULD PAID LEAVE AWAY FROM YOUR
JOB BE GOOD FOR PEOPLE'S
CAREERS?
WELL IN THE ABSENCE OF PAID
LEAVE, WHAT SEEMS TO HAPPEN,
PARTICULARLY FOR MOTHERS IS THAT
THEY BECOME SEPARATED FROM THE
JOB.
THEY QUIT THEIR JOB WHEN THEY
HAVE A CHILD AND THEN LATER IF
THEY WANT TO COME BACK INTO THE
WORKFORCE, THEY HAVE LOST SARE
SENIORITY, THEY HAVE LOST THE
SKILLS SPECIFIC TO THAT JOB.
A PAID LEAVE POLICY HELPS KEEP
PEOPLE CONNECTED TO THEIR JOBS.
WHEN THEY COME BACK INTO THE
WORKFORCE AFTER SPENDING TIME
WITH THEIR KIDS, THEY COME BACK
AT HIGHER WAGES, THEY COME BACK
WITH MORE HOURS WORK, AND
SOMETHING WHICH IS BENEFICIAL,
NOT JUST IMMEDIATELY BUT OVER
THE COURSE OF THEIR CAREER.
IT'S SOMETHING THAT COULD REDUCE
THE GENDER WAGE GAP WHICH IS
DRIVEN BY PEOPLE COMING OUT OF
THE WORKFORCE WHEN THEY HAVE
KIDS.
IT'S A POLICY WE THINK WOULD BE
GOOD FOR FAMILIES, BUT ALSO GOOD
FOR THE ECONOMY IN THE SENSE OF
MAXIMIZING PEOPLE'S
PRODUCTIVITY.
IT'S SOMETHING THAT IS BRINGING
TOGETHER PEOPLE FROM BOTH SIDE.
MS. STEVENSON: SO I THINK
IT'S REALLY YOU GOOD YOU START
ASKING THIS QUESTION ABOUT WHAT
DO WE MEAN BY PAID LEAVE?
ONE THE THINGS WE HAVE SEEN
HAPPEN IS SOME OF THE DISCUSSION
AROUND WHAT A PAID LEAVE PLAN
SHOULD LOOK LIKE GETS CAUGHT UP
IN WHAT DO WE MEAN WHEN WE SAY
PAID LEAVE.
I JUST TALKED ABOUT PAID
MATERNITY AND PATERNITY LEAVE.
THAT'S A VERY SPECIFIC BUCKET.
WELL, WHAT ABOUT THE SIX MONTH
CHECK-UP?
OR WHAT ABOUT THE ONE YEAR
WELL-CHILD VISIT?
WHAT ABOUT THE PARENT-TEACHER
MEETING?
SO CAN YOU TAKE TIME OFF WHEN
YOU NEED TO CARE FOR WHERE YOU
ARE KIDS WHEN THEY'RE YOUNG,
WHAT ABOUT WHEN THEY'RE 12?
WHAT ABOUT WHEN THEY'RE 14?
WELL, NOW, WE WANT TO THINK OF
PARENTS BEING ABLE TO TAKE TIME
THEY NEED WHEN A KID IS SICK.
WELL, WHAT ABOUT WHEN THEY'RE
SICK?
WHAT ABOUT WHEN THEIR SPOUSE IS
SICK?
SO WHERE -- HOW DO WE START TO
THINK ABOUT WHAT KIND OF PAID
LEAVE PLAN TO WE WANT?
DO WE WANT SOMETHING THAT IS IN
TERNTY OR PATERNITY LEAVE.
WHEN WE SAY PARENTAL LEAVE MOST
PEOPLE ARE TALKING ABOUT BEING
ABLE TO TAKE TIME OFF TO TAKE
FOR A SICK CHILD.
THAT STARTS TO DIG INTO THE
POLICY DEBATE, WHICH IS HOW BIG
OF A PROGRAM DO HE WITH WANT?
WHAT ARE PEOPLE EXPECTING
GOVERNMENT TO PROVIDE?
IT GETS AT THE ROOT OF THE LAB
CHANGES IN THE LABOR MARKET THAT
HAS BROUGHT US WHERE WE ARE
TODAY.
IN THE LAST SIX YEARS MALE LABOR
FORCE PARTICIPATION HAS COME TO
A DECLINE AND FEMALE LABOR
PARTICIPATION HAS LARGELY OVER
THE HE SEVEN DECADE HAS BEEN
INCREASING.
IT'S MUCH SMALLER, AND WHAT THAT
MEANS IS THAT FOUR GENERATIONS,
AGO, 3 GENERATIONS AGO, THERE
WAS A SECONDARY EARNER AND A
PRIMARY EARNER.
IF THERE WAS SOMETHING WHERE
SOMEBODY NEEDED TO TAKE A KID TO
A DOCTOR'S APPOINTMENT, MISS A
DAY OF WORK IN ORDER TO CARE FOR
A SICK CHILD, WITH HE KNEW WHO
WAS GOING TO DO IT.
IT WAS GOING TO BE THE PARENT
WHOSE JOB WAS LESS IMPORTANT.
NOW ALL THE JOBS ARE IMPORTANT.
SO WE SEE WOMEN ARE OUT EARNING
THEIR HUSBANDS IN 38% OF
MARRIAGES WHERE WOMEN WORK AND
THEY ARE EQUAL IN AN EVEN LARGER
SHARE.
SO THERE'S NOT SOMEBODY WHO IS,
LIKE -- WE COULD USE IT OR LOSE
IT WHEN IT COMES TO MY WAGES.
IT BECOMES VERY HARD FOR PARENTS
TO JUGGLE.
THAT IS WHERE THIS PRESSING NEED
COMES FROM.
IT DOES COME PARTIALLY FROM THE
-- WE KNOW THAT KIDS ARE BETTER
OFF, AS YOU SAY, WE KNOW THAT
WOMEN ARE MORE ATTACHED TO THE
LABOR FORCE IF YOU CAN TAKE TIME
WITH THE NEW BABY, BUT WE ALSO
HAVE TO FIGURE OUT HOW PEOPLE
CAN MANAGE WORK LIFE AND TAKING
TIME TO CARE FOR THEIR FAMILIES
THROUGH THE COURSE OF RAISING
CHILDREN.
THAT IS GREAT.
SO I SUPPOSE MY SECOND QUESTION,
YOU HAVE SORT OF OUTLINED WHY
THE TIME IS NOW TO APPROACH THE
ISSUE.
FOR BOTH OF YOU, COULD YOU TALK
A LITTLE BIT ABOUT WHY YOU THINK
IT IS THAT IT HAS TAKEN THIS
LONG.
THERE'S SORT OF TWO WAYS, THAT I
SORT OF THINK ABOUT GOING ABOUT
THIS.
THE FIRST IS IT, DO WE BELIEVE
THAT PRIVATE EMPLOYERS SHOULD BE
THE ONES PROVIDING THIS SORT OF
BENEFIT, OR ALTERNATIVELY COULD
YOU TALK ABOUT WHY IN YOUR
ESTIMATION THEY SHOULD BE
INVOLVED IN THE PROGRAM AT ALL.
MS. STEVE.MR. BIGGS: THAT'S A GOOD
QUESTIONED, I'M A FREE MARKET
ORIENTED MYSELF.
IF I THINK OF PROPOSING A NEW
GOVERNMENT PROGRAM, YOU WANT TO
ASK YOURSELF, WHY IS IT THAT
GOVERNMENT NEED TO DO THIS?
WHY IS THE PRIVATE SECTOR NOT
DOING IT ALREADY?
DO WE NEED TO MANDATE SOMETHING,
OR CAN IT BE DONE VOLUNTARILY?
PAID LEAVE IS HAPPENING IN A LOT
OF INSTANCES IN THE PRIVATE
SECTOR.
MANY ALREADY HAVE PAID LEAVE
BENEFITS, BUT SMALLER FIRMS ARE
RUNNING ON A SHOE STRING, THEY
ARE JUST GETTING STARTED.
A
BECAUSE THIS IS WORTHWHILE.
THE PEOPLE SEE THE
DISRUPTIVENESS, AND PEOPLE ARE
TRYING TO MANAGE THEIR LIVES,
TWO EARNERS, YOU'RE WORRIED
ABOUT TAKING TIME AWAY FROM
LEAVE.
THIS SEEMS LIKE A WAY YOU CAN DO
IT.
IT'S NOT GOING TO SOLVE ALL THE
PROBLEMS THAT PEOPLE HAVE.
I THINK PEOPLE ARE COMING
TOGETHER AND SAYING THIS IS
GOING TO MAKE LIFE A LITTLE
EASIER FOR PEOPLE.
SO IT'S GOING TO FACILITATE THIS
KIND OF THING.
MS. STEVENSON: TO DIG MORE
INTO WHY SOME PEOPLE GET THIS AS
A BENEFIT AND WHY WON'T THE
MARKET PROVIDE IT FOR EVERYBODY?
ONE IS SOME WORKERS DEVELOP
REALLY SPECIFIC SKILLS THAT ARE
TIED TO THE JOB.
WE THINK OF THOSE AS YOU KNOW,
JOB-SPECIFIC INVESTMENTS.
WHEN THAT PERSON LEAVES THE
LABOR FORCE, NOT JUST THE LABOR
FORCE, BUT QUITS THAT JOB,
BECAUSE THEY GOT A NEW CHILD AT
HOME.
THE EMPLOYER LOSES OF SOMETHING
OF VALUE.
WE HAVE SEEN A LOT OF COMPANIES
THAT HAVE ACTUALLY DONE THE MATH
ON THIS.
SO GOOGLE SAT DOWN AND REALIZED
THAT THEIR PAID LEAVE PROGRAM AT
THE TIME OF A NEW BIRTH WAS TOO
SHORT GIVEN THE NUMBER OF PEOPLE
THEY WERE LOSING THAT WERE NOT
RETURNING BACK.
THEY LENGTHENING IT AND GOT
BETTER RETURN.
AND IT GAVE THEM GREATER
RETENTION OF VALUABLE EMPLOYEES.
THEY'RE TALKING ABOUT EMPLOYEES
WHERE IT CAN COST THEM ONE TO
TWO YEARS SALARY JUST TO RECRUIT
A REPLACEMENT, SO HOLDING ON TO
THAT PERSON IS WORTH PAYING THEM
FOR FOUR MONTHS.
THERE'S PEOPLE WHO HAVE JOB
SPECIFIC SKILLS, AND THAT IS WHY
WE'RE GOING TO SEE HIGHLY
COMPENSATED WORKERS ARE GOING TO
BE MORE LIKELY OFFERED THIS
BENEFIT, THAN LOWER SKILLED
WORKERS, WORKERS WHO ARE LESS
PAID BECAUSE THEY ARE NOT AS
EXPENSIVE TO REPLACE, THAT THE
BOTTOM LINE.
YOU ALSO MENTIONED SMALL
EMPLOYERS.
THERE'S ALSO JUST AN ISSUE OF,
YOU KNOW, HOW DO YOU SMOOTH THIS
OUT?
IF YOU ARE A GIANT EMPLOYER WITH
TO BE PAYING THE SAME AMOUNT
EACH YEAR IN MATERNITY COSTS.
IF YOU GOT 50 EMPLOYEES AND YOU
HAVE A BAD YEAR WHERE THREE OF
THEM ARE GIVING BIRTH, IT'S
GOING TO SHAKE YOUR COSTS.
NEXT YEAR NOBODY GIVES BIRTH,
YAY, WE'RE REPORTING AWESOME
PROFITS.
THAT IS NOT HOW YOU WANT TO RUN
YOUR BUSINESS WITH THAT KIND OF
VOLATILITY.
THAT THOSE ARE THE TWO TISSUES
THAT THINK ABOUT.
WHAT ARE THE BENEFITS TO THE
FIRM VERSUS SOCIETY.
AND THAT IS WHAT YOU SAID.
THERE'S BIG BENEFITS TO SOCIETY.
THAT THE JUSTIFICATION FOR
GOVERNMENT INVOLVEMENT.
I DID WANT TO MENTION WHICH IS
THE IDEA OF GOVERNMENT PROVIDING
IT.
SHOULD WE REQUIRE EMPLOYERS TO
PROVIDE IT.
I THINK THAT HOPEFULLY, EVEN
THOUGH THE PUBLIC TENDS TO
SUPPORT THE IDEA OF AN EMPLOYER
MANDATE, I THINK REGARDLESS OF
PARTY, WE ALL HATE IT.
THAT WAS LIKE THE THING WE GOT
TO UNITE BEHIND IN OUR AI
BROOKINGS PROPOSAL, WHICH IS A
EMPLOYER MANDATE IS A TERRIBLE,
TERRIBLE IDEA, RIGHT.
BECAUSE WE DON'T WANT TO PUT
ADDITIONAL COSTS ON BUSINESSES.
WHAT -- THAT REQUIRE THAT LEAD
THEM TO DO THINGS LIKE
DISCRIMINATE AGAINST CERTAIN
GROUPS OF PEOPLE.
IF YOU'RE A SMALL BUSINESS AND
YOU DON'T THINK YOU CAN HANDLE
THE COST OF PAID LEAVE, AND
WE'RE SAYING, YOU HAVE TO PAY
IT, THEN WHAT ARE THEY GOING TO
DO?
THEY'RE GOING TO AVOID THE
PEOPLE THAT LOOK THE MOST LIKE
THEY'RE GOING TO USE IT AND
THAT'S A PROBLEM.
AND THAT IS WHY HAS A PAID
MATERNITY AND PATERNITY LEAVE.
BEFORE DIVING DI COMPROMISE
THAT THE WORK CREATED.
SORT OF KEEPING IN THE IDEA OF
CONVERSATION ACROSS THE DIRVES,
SORT OF THE IN THE CONTEXT.
AIE OR BROOKINGS WORKING FRAP.
SPECIFICALLY RELATED TO THE PAID
FAMILY LEAVE, COULD YOU TALK
ABOUT WHAT THAT PROCESS HAS BEEN
LIKE, BOTH IN D.C. AND ACADEMIA,
GENERALLY, WHAT SORT OF PROBLEMS
DO YOU ENCOUNTERED, THINGS OF
THAT NATURE?
MS. STEVENSON: YOU WERE WITH
MR. BIGGS: YOU WERE WITH THE
WORKING GROUP LONGER.
MS. STEVENSON: I THINK THE
THING -- IT'S SOMEWHAT
SURPRISING TO ME.
I DON'T KNOW WHERE TO START.
WE WENT FROM BARELY BEING ABLE
TO TALK ABOUT PAID LEAVE AS A
REALISTIC POLICY CHOICE IN SA
SAY, 2009 TO, I THINK, HAVING
GENUINE BY PART BIPARTISAN SUPPORT IN
THE POLICY WORLD THAT WE NEED
SOMETHING.
HERE WE ARE IN 2019 SO THAT IS A
BIG MOVEMENT IN TERMS OF
ATTITUDE.
YOU HAD ASKED EARLIER WHY THAT
MOVEMENT HAPPENED SO FAST?
I DON'T REALLY KNOW THE ANSWER
TO THAT.
I THINK THAT IT IS THE
CULMINATIONING OF COMPANIES
DOING, YOU KNOW, THE MATH, THE
RESEARCH COMING OUT, AND PEOPLE
STARTING TO SAY, WOW, WE ARE
ACTUALLY SHOOTING OURSELVES IN
THE FOOT.
THE OTHER THING WE LEARNED IS
THAT THE U.S. USED TO BE ONE OF
THE HIGHEST COUNTRIES IN TERMS
OF FEMALE LABOR FORCE
PARTICIPATION IN THE OECD.
NOW WE SLIPPED TO VERY FAR, SO
WE WERE NUMBER SIX, WE'RE NOW
LIKE NUMBER 20.
AND RESEARCHERS HAVE PINNED A
LOT OF THAT ON THE FACT THAT YOU
KNOW, OVER A 20-YEAR PERIOD, ALL
OF THESE OTHER COUNTRIES STARTED
TO PASS THINGS LIKE PAID
PARENTAL LEAVE, IMPROVE THEIR
ACCESS TO HIGH QUALITY CHILD
CARE.
IT'S PART OF OUR LOSS OF
INTERNATIONAL COMPETITIVENESS.
ONCE PEOPLE START TO THINK OF IT
THAT WAY, IT STARTS TO CHANGE
THE CONVERSATION.
I THINK HAD THE BIGGEST
CHALLENGE IN TALKING TO PEOPLE
IS, HOW ARE WE GOING TO FUND IT?
HOW MUCH ARE WE GOING TO COVER?
WHAT ARE WE TALKING ABOUT?
HOW LONG IS IT GOING TO BE?
AND THAT'S A REALLY -- I THINK A
BIG DEBATE, BECAUSE NOBODY IN
THE U.S. IS TALKING ABOUT THE
KIND OF LEAVE YOU SEE IN EUROPE.
IN EUROPE, PEOPLE GET A YEAR
OFF, NOBODY IS TALKING ABOUT
LEAVE LIKE THAT.
BUT RESEARCHERS WHO HAVE HEALTH,
WANT TO SEE 12 WEEKS.
THAT IS WHAT THEY HAVE SEEN IS
GOOD FOR THE KID AND THEY HAVE A
HARD TIME COMPROMISING ON THAT.
I THINK PEOPLE WHO ARE
CONSERVATIVE, ARE LIKE, WOE,
THAT IS A LOT OF TIME, TO JUMP
INTO.
WHY DON'T WE START WITH
SOMETHING SMALLER?
YOU KNOW, WE JUST -- THAT HAS
BEEN A BIG ISSUE.
I THINK THERE'S THIS NATURAL
INCLINATION, HUM, ON THE
REPUBLICAN SIDE TO FIGURE OUT
WHAT YOU CAN DO THROUGH TAX CUTS
AND TAX INCENTIVES, AND THEY
JUST DON'T THINK THIS IS ONE
WHERE WE CAN DO IT
COST-EFFECTIVELY THROUGH TAX
INCENTIVES, BUT I THINK THAT HAS
BEEN A BIG PART OF THE DEBATE,
AND I THINK THE BIGGER OVER
ARCHING THING THAT YOU RUN INTO,
WHEN YOU TALK TO PEOPLE ABOUT
THIS, IS WE HAVE TO MAKE
DECISIONS AS A NATION ABOUT HOW
MUCH SPENDING WE WANT TO DO, AND
THIS IS GETTING CAUGHT UP IN
THAT.
YOU KNOW, 50 YEARS AGO, MORE
THAN THAT, 70 YEARS AGO, WE MADE
A DECISION THAT WE WERE GOING TO
SPEND LIKE CRAZY FOR PEOPLE OVER
THE AGE OF 65.
AND GOODNESS, WE HAVE BEEN
SUCCESSFUL, NOW THEY LIVE
FOREVER.
SO NOW WE'RE SPENDING EVEN MORE
ON THOSE FOLKS, AND THAT HAS
LEFT OUR ABILITY TO SPEND ON
KIDS LIKE REALLY, REALLY CON
TRAINED.
SO WE START TO GET INTO
ARGUMENTS, ABOUT, WELL, WE'VE
GOT A BIG CHUNK OF GDP GOING TO
TAKE CARE OF PEOPLE OVER 65.
ARE WE REALLY GOING TO SPEND
THAT MUCH MORE ON TAKING CARE OF
CHILDREN.
MAYBE WE SHOULD TAKE FROM THE
PEOPLE OVER 65 -- SO THERE YOU
START TO SEE THE PROBLEMS.
SO MOVING MORE TOWARD THE
BROOKINGS PUT OUT.
SORT OF WATCHING IN PRINCIPLES
OF ON THE GROUP THE CODIRECTORS
OF IT BASICALLY SAID THAT THIS
WAS IN FACT, A COMPROMISE,
BECAUSE AS THEY PUT IT, NO ONE
ON THE GROUP LOVED IT.
FROM ALL THE THINGS YOU JUST
MENTIONED, HOW TO PAY FOR IT,
HOW LONG THIS SHOULD LAST,
THINGS OF THAT NATURE.
THERE WAS CERTAINLY A GREAT DEAL
OF DISCUSSION AND CERTAINLY
POTENTIALLY GRIDLOCK.
FIRST, CAN YOU TALK ABOUT WHAT
THAT SORT OF COMPROMISE LOOKED
LIKE?
WHAT IT WAS MOST BASICALLY, AND
THEN SOME OF THE ECONOMIC AND
MORAL PRINCIPALS THAT SORT OF
ANIMATED THAT DISCUSSION?
MS. STEVENSON: SO ONE OF THE
ISSUES IS, WHO ARE WE GOING TO
COVER?
WE DID MATERNITY AND PATERNITY
LEAVE.
FOR A LOT OF PEOPLE THAT WAS
REALLY PAINFUL.
SO IT SORT OF LEAVES EVERYTHING
ELSE BEHIND.
WE SAID THAT WE WOULD COME BACK,
AND WE DID TO TALK ABOUT TDI,
AND A BROADER PARENTAL LEAVE
PROGRAM, BUT WE WERE LIKE, LOOK,
WE CAN ALL AGREE.
EVERYBODY CAN UNITE ON THE FACT
THAT KID ARE BETTER OFF, THERE
ARE ENORMOUS SOCIETAL BENEFITS
WHEN PARENTS TAKE TIME TO BOND
WITH A NEWBORN.
YOU KNOW, IT'S JUST -- A
TWO-WEEK-OLD DOES NOT DO WELL IN
CHILD CARE.
LIKE THEY NEED CONSTANT
ATTENTION.
WE KNOW THAT YOU KNOW, NURSING
HAS BENEFITS.
LIKE WHEN A KID IS TWO WEEKS,
THERE'S NOT A LOT OF OTHER
THINGS YOU CAN BE DOING IN THE
DAY IF YOU'RE NURSING BESIDES
NURSING.
SO THERE'S JUST REAL BENEFITS TO
PARENT BEING ABLE TO STAY HOME
AND THERE'S REAL BENEFITS TO
BOTH PARENTS BONDING WITH THE
CHILD SO THAT THE CHILD MAKES
THAT CONNECTION.
AS I MENTIONED EARLIER, THE
HEALTH RESEARCHERS REALLY FEEL
LIKE IT NEEDS A FULL 12 WEEKS SO
THAT THE KIDS GET THE FULL SIX
MONTHS.
YOU STACK THEM, YOU DO MOM FOR
THE FIRST THREE MONTHS, YOU DO
MOM FOR 3 TO 6, AND THE KID
DOESN'T NEED OUTSIDE PARENTAL
CARE UNTIL AFTER SIX MONTHS.
WE DIDN'T DO THAT.
LIKE WE SAID, SOMETHING SHORTER.
I THINK WE SAID EIGHT WEEKS,
ALTHOUGH WE HAVE THIS REALLY
HEDGY LANGUAGE, LIKE A FIXED
AMOUNT OF TIME TO BE DEBATED
LATER.
LIKE SIX WEEKS.
I WILL SAY IT WAS A DEBATE JUST
TO PUT CONCRETE RECOMMENDATIONS
IN.
WHEN WE WERE FIRST GOING TO COME
OUT WITH THE REPORT, WE WEREN'T
GOING TO PUT ANY RECOMMENDATIONS
AND SOME PEOPLE THINK THIS AND
SOME PEOPLE THINK THAT.
AND YOU'RE NOT GOING TO TELL ME
I WASTED A YEAR OF MY LIFE AND
WE'RE NOT GOING TO FIND SOME
NARROW THREAD THAT WE'RE GOING
TO AGREE ON.
THAT IS WHY WE CAME UP ON WITH
THE THING THAT EVERYBODY HAD TO
SWALLOW HARD AND SAY, I DON'T
LIKE THIS.
AT LEAST NOW WE CAN SAY, WE HAVE
PUT THIS ON THE TABLE.
THERE'S BIPARTISAN AGREEMENT.
THAT KIDS SHOULD HAVE TIME WITH
THEIR PARENTS WHEN THEY ARE
BORN.
THERE'S BIPARTISAN AGREEMENT
THAT THIS SHOULD BE FUNDED AT
LEAST PARTIALLY THROUGH A TAX
INCREASE.
THAT IS ANOTHER PART OF IT.
I MEAN WE HAD TO HAVE A PLAN TO
PAY FOR IT.
NOT LIKE MONEY COMES LATER.
WE ARE GOING TO PAY FOR IT
TODAY, IT'S GOING TO COME
THROUGH CUTS OF SOME OTHER
ENTITLEMENT PROGRAM AND IT'S
GOING TO BE THROUGH SOME OTHER
REVENUE, THAT IS PAINFUL FOR
OTHERS OF US, SO THAT IS A
COMPROMISE.
THOSE ARE THE KINDS OF THINGS
WHERE WE PUT THAT COMPROMISE OUT
THERE.
IT'S A BASIC MINIMAL PLAN.
EVERYBODY WOULD HAVE WANTED
EITHER SOMETHING BIGGER OR
SOMETHING SMALLER, BUT NOBODY
OBJECTED VEHEMENTLY THOUGH WHAT
WE PUT TOGETHER.
MR. BIGGS: I THINK IT'S
IMPORTANT THAT THE SPECIFICS
WENT IN THERE.
IN THE SENSE THAT IF YOU WANT
SOMETHING FROM CONGRESS, YOU ARE
ASKING THEM TO PUT THEIR JOBS ON
THE LINE.
PEOPLE IN CONGRESS WHO VALUE
THEIR JOBS VERY HIGHLY, IF THE
THINGS TANK, EVEN THOSE WHO HAVE
EARNED, IF THEY CAN'T EVEN PUT
SOME SPECIFICS AND COME TO A
COMPROMISE, THEN THERE'S NOT
MUCH HOPE ON THE CONGRESSIONAL
END.
I THINK THIS IS IMPORTANT IN THE
SENSE THAT WHAT YOU'RE TALKING
ABOUT THE BONDING WITH THE
NEWBORN.
IF YOU'RE UPPER MIDDLE-CLASS,
YOU ARE TAKING THIS FOR GRANTED.
YOU ARE READING THE BOOKS.
WHEN WE HAD A CHILD, THE STUFF
WE DO IS INSANE, AND WHY
SHOULDN'T EVERY AMERICAN HAVE
THE OPPORTUNITY TO THE SAME
INSANE THINGS I DID.
THIS IS IMPORTANT, IT'S NOT JUST
IMPORTANT IF YOU ARE UPPER
MIDDLE-CLASS.
IT'S IMPORTANT FOR EVERYONE.
IT'S BRINGING BENEFITS TO
EVERYONE.
IT MEANS THAT WE HAVE TO MAKE
CERTAIN COMPROMISES IN A PERFECT
WORLD WE WOULDN'T MAKE.
WE'RE NOT LIVING IN A PERFECT
WORLD.
WE'RE IN A WORLD WE'RE TRYING TO
MAKE PROGRESS ON THINGS.
I THINK THIS SORT OF WORK
BETWEEN AEI WHICH IS THE RIGHT
CENTER IN BROOKINGS, WHICH IS
LEFT OF CENTER IS A REALLY
FRUITFUL THING IN THIS TIME WHEN
GENERALLY THAT SORT OF
COOPERATION IS PRETTY ABSENT.
SO, DR. BIGGS AS YOU SORT OF
HAVE COME ON THE WORKING GROUP
IN MORE RECENT MONTHS, WHEN THE
REPORT FOR 2018 WAS PUBLISHED,
IT TACKLED, AS PROFESSOR
STEPHENSON PAID MEDICAL AND PAID
FAMILY LEAVE.
FOR PAID FAMILY LEAVE THERE
WASN'T A TOTAL COMPROMISE, HENCE
THE DISCUSSION NOW.
BUT THEY FOUND A COMPROMISE WITH
REGARD TO PAID MEDICAL LEAVE.
THAT SORT OF CAME IN THE FORM OF
TDI, THE TEMPORARY DISABILITY
INSURANCE.
I WAS WONDERING IF YOU COULD
TALK A LITTLE BIT ABOUT THAT?
WHERE ELSE -- I KNOW YOU SAID
SOME STATES, CALIFORNIA OR
HAWAII IN THIS REGARD HAVE BEEN
WITH THAT A LITTLE BIT.
WHAT DOES THIS LOOK LIKE OUTSIDE
MUCH A THINK BANK ENVIRONMENT
AND MORE IN THE STATES HANDS.
MR. BIGGS: CALIFORNIA HAS HAD
PAID LEAVE FOR 15 YEARS OR SO.
AND I THINK THERE'S INTERESTING
RESULTS THERE FROM THE RESEARCH
ON HOW THAT HAS AFFECTED
FAMILIES IN A POSITIVE WAY.
MOST OF THE STATES ARE USING A
PAYROLL TAX TO FINANCE IT.
THEY ARE NOT AS BETSEY SAID,
IMPOSING A REQUIREMENT ON
EMPLOYERS, ALTHOUGH I THINK
HAWAII MAY BE GOING IN THAT
DIRECTION.
BUT YOU HAVE CONNECTICUT HAS
IMPLEMENTED.
AND SO, IT'S A POSITIVE THING IN
THE SENSE YOU'RE SEEING
EXPERIMENTATION AT THE STATE
LEVEL, AND YET THERE'S LIMITS TO
THAT GIVEN THE MOBILITY WE SEE.
IT'S OFTEN RUN AT STATES THROUGH
-- MANY STATES HAVE STATE LEVEL
DISABILITY PROGRAMS IN ADDITION
TO THE FEDERAL DISABILITY
PROGRAM.
THEY'RE OFTEN RUN THROUGH THE
STATE DISABILITY OFFICE.
SOME STATES DON'T HAVE THAT.
SAY THE STATE OF WASHINGTON IS
ESTABLISHING A PAID LEAVE
PROGRAM.
THEY DON'T HAVE A DISABILITY
OFFICE, SO THEY ARE GOING TO GO
THROUGH THE UNEMPLOYMENT
INSURANCE OFFICE.
A LOT OF THIS IS THE MECHANICS
OF HOW DO YOU YOU HAVE DATA
ABOUT PEOPLE AND THE JOBS AND
THE EMPLOYERS THAT THEY WORK
FOR.
YOU WANT TO PIGGY BACK ON THE
EXISTING PROGRAMS AS MUCH AS YOU
CAN, BUT MOST OF THE CASES IT'S
BEEN A PAYROLL SURTAX THEY'RE
USING TO FINANCE IT.
MS. STEVENSON: AS ANDREW
MENTIONED, THERE'S A HANDFUL OF
STATES THAT HAVE TEMPORARY
DISABILITY SYSTEMS.
THOSE ARE THE STATES THAT FOUND
IT EASIEST TO GET A PAID
PARENTAL LEAVE IMPLEMENTED,
BECAUSE THEY JUST ADD IT ON.
IT COUNTS AS A TEMPORARY
DISABILITY, AND WASHINGTON
STATE, PASSED THAT IRPAID FAMILY
LEAVE A LONG TIME AGO, BOUGHT
THEY HAVEN'T BEEN ABLE TO DO IT,
BECAUSE THEY DON'T HAVE SORT OF
MECHANICALLY DO IT.
THIS ISSUE OF TEMPORARY
DISABILITY INSURANCE, A LOT OF
STATES HAVE IT AND IT WORKS
PRETTY WELL IN THOSE STATES.
THEY HAVE HAD IT FOR A LONG
TIME.
THIS ISN'T LIKE A BUNCH OF
STATES HAVE RECENTLY PASSED.
IT IT'S DECADES OF HAVING A
TEMPORARY DISABILITY INSURANCE
SYSTEM.
IT'S NOT FOR A SICK DAY, MISTION
ONE DAY, BUT IT'S NOT FOR A
LONG-TERM DISABILITY.
IT'S FOR SHORT-TERM DISABILITY.
THE IDEA IS THAT YOU HAVE
SOMETHING THAT IS LIKE AN
UNEMPLOYMENT INSURE AN PAYMENT
BUT IT'S A DISABILITY INSURE
ANSWER PAYMENT.
-- INSURANCE,
PAYMENT.
FOR ISSUES LIKE FMLISH, IF YOU
HAVE, YOU CAN MISS WEEKS OF
WORK, YOU CAN APPLY FOR THE TDI
PROGRAM.
THERE'S BEEN A SIGNIFICANT
AMOUNT MUCH ACADEMIC RESEARCH OF
WHETHER TDI REDUCES THAT YOU GO
ON LONG-TERM DISABILITY.
WE HAVE SEEN IN STATES WHERE
THERE'S TDI PROGRAMS, THERE'S
LOWER NUMBERS OF PEOPLE GOING
INTO PERMANENT DISABILITY.
IT'S HARD TO ESTABLISH HOW
CAUSAL THAT RELATIONSHIP IS, AND
THEREFORE HOW BIG IS THE
POSITIVE EFFECT OF REDUCING DI;
IT'S A SINK HOPE, YOU GO ON DI
AND YOU'RE NEVER COMING OFF.
THAT T IS THE PROBLEM.
IF YOU CAN GO ON TDI FOR SIX
WEEKS AND THEN YOU GO BACK TO
WORK ASK T AND THAT IS IT.
MAYBE YOU GO ON TDI IN FOUR
YEARS FOR 6 WEEKS, THAT IS LESS
AMOUNT OF SPENDING THAN GOING ON
DI AND GO ON THERE FOR 10 YEARS.
BUT BECAUSE THE PEOPLE STAY ON
IT FOREVER, THEY COULD END UP
HAVING BIG COST SAVINGS. SO
THERE'S SUGGESTIVE EVIDENCE IN
THE RESEARCH THAT A TDI SYSTEM
ESSENTIALLY PAYS FOR ITSELF BY
REDUCING PEOPLE'S APPLICATIONS
TO DI.
I THINK YOU HAVE TO SAY THAT
CAUTIOUSLY, BECAUSE THE RESEARCH
ISN'T COMPLETELY CLEAR.
THAT IS ONE OF THE REASONS WHY
WE WERE ABLE TO GET TO AGREEMENT
ON T DIFFERENT.
DI.IN A WORLD WHERE WE DIDN'T HAVE
DI.
WE WOULDN'T GET TO AN AGREEMENT
ON DI.
IF WE CAN START PULLING PEOPLE
ON PERMANENT SYSTEM AND GIVE
THEM TEMPORARY SUPPORT WHERE WE
TRY TO FIGURE OUT HOW TO GET
THEM IN A BETTER SITUATION SO
THEY CAN STAY ATTACHED TO THE
LABOR FORCE, THAT SAY COMPROMISE
WORTH DOING.
THAT IS WHY WE COULD GET THERE.
WHAT ABOUT THE BROADER SENSE OF
LEAVE?
I WILL TELL YOU WHERE WE GOT
CAUGHT UP ARE IS THE BABY
BOOMERS.
THEY'RE GETTING OLDER AND THEY
NEED CARE.
AND IT COULD BE REALLY EXPENSIVE
IF WE ALL OF A SUDDEN START
LETTING A WHOLE BUNCH OF PEOPLE
IN THEIR 50S TAKE TIME OFF TO
CARE FOR THEIR -- MY 70-YEAR-OLD
DAD WAS IN THE HOSPITAL LAST
WEEK FOR HEART PROBLEMS.
AND LIKE, DO YOU HAVE LIKE,
SHOULD I HAVE TAKEN.
SHOULD I HAVE BEEN THERE FOR THE
WHOLE WEEK.
THAT'S A PERSONAL ISSUE.
LIKE YOU HAVE THIS ISSUE.
IMAGINE I HAVE A JOB WHERE YOU
KNOW, I'M EITHER AT MY -- IN MY
OFFICE OR MY EMPLOYER IS PAYING
ME TO NOT DO DO ANY WORK.
DO YOU GIVE ME TIME OFF TO DO
THAT EVERY TIME IT HAPPENS.
I DIDN'T THINK IT'S GOING TO BE
THE LAST TIME IT HAPPENS.
THAT IS THE THING WITH THE SORT
OF AGE RELATED PROBLEMS, THEY
ARE NOT SHORT DURATION, THEY ARE
LONG DURATION AND THEY CAN LAST
A REALLY LONG TIME.
WHAT THAT MEANS IS IT MADE IT
HARD FOR US TO FIGURE OUT WHAT
THE COST ESTIMATE WAS GOING TO
BE.
THAT CREATED A LOT OF AV ANXIETY
FOR PEOPLE WHO WORRY ABOUT THE
GOVERNMENT SPENDING TOO MUCH.
IT MADE IT REALLY HARD FOR US TO
SAY, WELL, YOU CAN CARE FOR
ANYBODY, EXCEPT FOR YOUR AGING
PARENTS.
THAT SOUNDS PROBLEMATIC, AND THE
REPUBLICANS DON'T WANT TO GET
PEOPLE OVER 65 THAT UPSET.
SO LIKE, EVERYONE IS LIKE, LET'S
NOT TALK ABOUT THIS ONE.
I THINK THAT IS GOING TO BE A
BIG PROBLEM.
FRANKLY, THERE'S THIS WHOLE
SANDWICH GENERATION.
THESE PEOPLE WHO HAD KIDS LATER
IN LIFE, SO THEY'RE TRYING TO
TAKE CARE OF THEIR KIDS AND THEY
GOT PARENTS WHO ARE IN THE 70S
AND 80S.
YOU KNOW, ONE -- THAT WAS LIKE
LAST WEEK.
MY DAD IS IN THE HOSPITAL WITH A
HEART CONDITION AND BOTH OF MY
KIDS HAVE THE FLU, AND I HAVE
THE FLU AND WE'RE RUNNING
WHAT DO YOU DO?
THAT IS THE SANDWICH GENERATION.
HOW MUCH SUPPORT DO WE PROVIDE
THEM.
MR. BIGGS: THIS GETS ON WHAT
YOU WERE SAYING BEFORE.
HIGHER INCOME EMPLOYEES TEND TO
HAVE JOB-SPECIFIC SKILLS.
THEIR EMPLOYER DOESN'T WANT TO
GET RID OF THEM.
IF I CALL AEI AND SAY I HAVE TO
TAKE A WEEK OFF TO CARE FOR MY
WIFE OR MY SON; THEY'RE GOING TO
SAY FINE.
THEY DO NOT WANT TO SPEND THE
TIME TO FIND ANOTHER ME.
IF YOU HAVE SOMEBODY WHO HAS TO
BE ON THE JOB 9:00 TO 5:00,
RETAIL, THAT IS A DISRUPTION
THEY CAN'T AFFORD TO DEAL WITH.
IT'S TRYING TO FIND WAYS TO
FACILITATE THIS, AND I THINK A
LOT OF IT GOING TO BE WORKING
FOLKS ARE GOING TO BE THE REAL
BENEFICIARIES OF GIVING THEM THE
SAME OPTIONS THE HIGHER INCOME
PEOPLE ALREADY HAVE.
MOVING MORE TOWARD WHAT
FEDERAL COMPROMISE MIGHT LOOK
LIKE.
I WOULD LIKE TO TALK ABOUT WHAT
SOME THE PLANS OUT THERE ARE
SAYING, WHAT THEY ARE PROPOSING
AND SORT OF WHAT YOUR THOUGHTS
ON THOSE ARE.
SO FISTLY, I W I -- FIRSTLY, I WOULD
LIKE TO TALK DR. BIGGS ON A
PROPOSAL THAT YOU HAVE WRITTEN
ON, AND THAT IS IN REGARD TO
HAVING PEOPLE CLAIM A TEMPORARY
SOCIAL SECURITY BENEFIT.
IT'S SOMETHING THAT SEEMS
RELATIVELY SIMILAR TO SENATOR
RUBIO'S PLAN A COUPLE OF MONTHS
AND MOVER RECENTLY, SENATOR'S
PLAN, I WAS WONDERING, INITIALLY
COULD YOU TALK INITIALLY ABOUT
WHAT THAT PLAN IS AND SORT OF
FLUSH OUT THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN
THAT.
MR. BIGGS: ABOUT A YEAR AGO,
I WROTE A PIECE FOR THE "WALL
STREET JOURNAL."
SO I THINK IN TERMS OF SOCIAL
SECURITY.
WHAT OCCURRED TO ME IS TREATING
PARENTAL LEAVE AS A SORT OF A
TEMPORARY PERIOD OF DISABILITY
AND SUCH THAT SOCIAL SECURITY,
THEY KNOW YOU ARE EARNING.
IT'S A PROGRESSIVE P BENEFIT
FORMULA.
IT WOULD BE A BETTER ADVANTAGE
FOR LOWER INCOME PEOPLE AND
HIGHERS.
THROUGH SOCIAL SECURITY CAN YOU
COULD CLAIM A PARENTAL LEAVE
BENEFIT FOR A PERIOD.
THERE'S A QUESTION OF HOW YOU
PAY FOR IT.
KNOWING THAT PEOPLE DON'T JUST
WANT TO TAKE MONEY OUT OF SOCIAL
SECURITY, BECAUSE IT'S ALREADY
UNDER FUNDED, KNOWING THAT
REPUBLICANS DON'T WANT TO RAISE
TAXES, WHAT I AND MY CO-AUTHOR
CHRISTIAN SHA SHAPIRO IS THAT PEOPLE
WHO AGREED TO TAKE THE PAID
BENEFIT WOULD AGREE TO DELAY
THEIR RETIREMENT AGE FOR A
PERIOD SORT OF TO MAKE UP FOR
IT.
IF YOU TAKE ONE MONTH OF PAID
LEAVE, YOU AGREE TO TAKE TWO
MONTHS OF PAID YOU RETIREMENT
AGE.
THAT WOULD CUT YOUR SOCIAL
SECURITY BENEFIT 1.5%.
IT'S NOT A MASSIVE DIFFERENCE.
FOR WHATEVER REASON, THIS GOT A
LOT OF INTEREST.
SENATOR RUBIO SPONSORED A BILL
BASED ON THIS IDEA.
HAD DISCUSSIONS WITH -- HAVE A
BILL BASED ON THIS.
IT'S CONTROVERSIAL, SOME PEOPLE
LIKE IT, SOME PEOPLE DON'T.
FROM MY PERSPECTIVE IS THROWING
AN IDEA OUT THERE AND SEEING
WHERE IT GOES.
THERE'S BEEN A REAL ADVANTAGE IN
SENSE THAT EVEN THOUGH SOMEBODY
DOESN'T WANT TO DELAY FINANCE,
WHAT IT DOES, IT GETS PEOPLE IN
THE TENT.
WE THINK PARENTAL LEAVE IS A
GOOD IDEA.
THEN WE CAN START TALKING ABOUT
THE ALL THE OF THE PRIZE THAT
NEED TO GET IT HAPPEN.
ONCE WE GET PEOPLE TO ARGUE
ABOUT THE POLICY AND THE RESULTS
THAT IT GETS TO PEOPLE, IT GETS
CLOSER TO THE HE A SOLUTION EVEN
WHAT I OUTLINED ISN'T THE WAY IT
EVENTUALLY GOES.
SO SPEAKING MORE TO THE
PROPOSAL, PROFESSOR STEVENSON,
COULD YOU TALK ABOUT EVALUATING
WHAT YOU THINK THE POTENTIAL
ERNZ CCONCERNS ARE, AND IMPLICATIONS
AND MAYBE WE CAN MOVE TO AN
ALTERNATIVE POLICY AFTER THAT.
MS. STEVENSON: WHAT I THINK
PEOPLE ARE MOST CONCERNED ABOUT
IS WHETHER OTHER PEOPLE, YOU
KNOW, WHETHER PEOPLE HAVE
APPROPRIATE SAVINGS FOR
RETIREMENT AND WHETHER THIS IS
JUST, YOU KNOW, SOLVING A
PROBLEM TODAY BY CREATING A
PROBLEM IN THE FUTURE.
SO I THINK THAT THERE'S SOME
PEOPLE FOR WHOM THIS ISN'T GOING
TO CAUSE ANY KIND OF PROBLEM
WHICH ARE HIGHER INCOME PEOPLE
WHO ARE PROBABLY GOING TO RETIRE
AT A SLIGHTLY HIGHER AGE ANYHOW.
THE THING IS THOSE ARE THE
PEOPLE WHO ARE ALREADY GETTING
ACCESS TO PAID LEAVE THROUGH
THEIR EMPLOYER.
SO WHAT ABOUT THE PERSON WHO IS
DOING, YOU KNOW MORE MANUAL
LABOR, WORKING RETAIL, OR LOWER
INCOME WORKERS WORKING MINIMUM
WAGE FOR A LOT OF THEIR CAREER.
THEY ARE RELYING ON SOCIAL
SECURITY TO EAT.
AND IT'S ALSO HARDER FOR THEM TO
EXTEND THEIR RETIREMENT BY
ANOTHER TWO MONTHS.
SO THAT IS THE CONCERN WITH THAT
KIND OF PROPOSAL IS THAT THE
PERSON WHO NEEDS IT MOST FOR
WHEN THEY HAVE A CHILD IS ALSO
THE PEOPLE WHO NEED IT MOST AT
THE TIME OF RETIREMENT.
SO COULD WE USE SOCIAL SECURITY
TO THINK ABOUT HOW TO REFORM A
SAFETY NET WHICH PROVIDES US
SUPPORT WHEN WE HAVE A TEMPORARY
NEED, LIKE PARENTAL LEAVE?
YES.
BUT COULD IT BE MECHANICALLY
QUITE THAT WAY?
I THINK, NO.
I THINK IF WE'RE GOING TO USE
SOCIAL SECURITY, WE NEED TO MAKE
SURE THAT WE'RE ALSO, YOU KNOW,
READJUSTING BENEFITS IN A WAY SO
THAT WE'RE SUPPORTING THE MOST
VULNERABLE, LOWEST INCOME
WORKERS A LITTLE BIT MORE IN
RETIREMENT AND MAKING SURE THAT
THEY'RE GETTING THE COVERAGE
THEY NEED FROM FAMILY LEAVE.
SO MY CONCERN IS NOT, DON'T
TOUCH SOCIAL SECURITY.
I THINK WE ABSOLUTELY SHOULD
HAVE A CONVERSATION ABOUT YOU
KNOW, HOW DOES A PAID FAMILY
LEAVE PROGRAM FIT IN WITH OUR
OVERALL SOCIAL SECURITY SYSTEM,
BUT I DO THINK WE NEED TO BE
REALLY CAREFUL THAT WE'RE NOT
MAKING ADJUSTMENTS THAT END UP
HURTING THE WORKERS WHO NEED IT
MOST.
THE LOWEST PAID WORKERS ARE ALSO
THE ONES WHO TEND TO GET THE
SMALLEST AMOUNT OF SOCIAL
SECURITY BENEFITS.
NOT JUST BECAUSE THEY PAID IN
LESS, BUT THEY HAVE A SHORTER
LIFE EXPECTANCY.
SO SOMEONE, YOU KNOW, MY
DEMOGRAPHIC HAS A MUCH HIGHER
LIFE EXPECTANCY, I'M GOING TO
DECADE OF SOCIAL SECURITY
PAYMENTS WITH ANY LUCK.
AND THAT MEANS THAT I GET A BIG
HE BENEFIT THAN SOMEONE WHO
MIGHT HAVE A LIFE EXPECTANCY OF
ONLY 70 CUTTING INTO TWO MONTHS
INTO THEIR SHORT LIFE EXPECTANCY
IS A LOT.
THOSE ARE THE KIND OF THINGS WE
NEED TO THINK ABOUT.
THINKING MORE IN THE
ALTERNATIVE APPROACH THAT HAS
BEEN PROPOSED RECENTLY BY
SENATOR FROM NEW YORK, THE
FAMILY ACT, SORT OF THINKING OF
IDEA OF WHETHER OR NOT TO LOOK
AT SOCIAL SECURITY AT ALL.
COULD YOU TALK BOTH A LITTLE BIT
ABOUT YOUR SORT OF THOUGHTS ON
THE FAMILY ACT FIRSTLY START
OUTLINING WHAT IT SAYS, AND WHAT
IT PROPOSES AND SIMILARLY WHAT
SORT OF CONCERNS YOU HAVE ABOUT
IT.
MR. BIGGS: THE FAMILY ACT IS
THE LEGISLATION IN CONGRESS.
IT WILL PROVIDE BOTH PARENTAL
LEAVE BUT IT WILL TAKE CARE
GIVER LEAVE.
IN CASE YOU HAVE TO LEAVE AND
CARE FOR A FAMILY MEMBER.
IT'S A MORE COMPREHENSIVE
BENEFIT THAN SORT OF WHAT I
TALKED ABOUT, WHICH IS STRICTLY
PARENTAL LEAVE.
SO IT'S A BIGGER SET OF
BENEFITS.
IT WOULD BE FINANCED WITH A NEW
PAYROLL TAXING ON BOTH THE
EMPLOYER AND THE EMPLOYEE OF LEFFING THE PAYROLL
TEX ON EMPLOYERS, THE LARGER
ISSUE, WHEN IT'S FINANCED.
THAT PUT -- WE SEE
ALL THE INCIDENTS ON THE
WORKERS, SO THE WORKERS PAY FOR
IT.
IT'S OKAY, THE WORKERS WANT IT.
SO I DON'T MIND THAT.
THE QUESTION IS, FIRST OF ALL,
IS THE ESTIMATE RIGHT?
SO 0, .4% FOR PAID FAMILY LEAVE
DOESN'T SOUND THAT BAD.
IT'S $2 A WEEK FOR A TYPICAL
WORKER.
THIS ISN'T A BURDEN.
BUT IT FOLDS INTO OUR ALREADY
PRETTY HIGH SOCIAL SECURITY
TAXES.
THOSE AREN'T .4%, THOSE ARE
SO THE QUESTION IS CAN WE REFORM
SOCIAL SECURITY WITHOUT RAISING
SOCIAL SECURITY TAXES?
YOU KNOW, IF OUR OVERALL REFORM
WAS TO HAVE A PAID PARENTAL
LEAVE LIKE THE FAMILY ACT, SOLVE
SOCIAL SECURITY, SOLVENCY AND WE
DID ALL WITH ONLY RAISING
PAYROLL TAXES BY .4%.
I THINK WE SHOULD ALL DECLARE
THAT A VICTORY, AND BE VERY
EXCITED ABOUT IT.
I THINK THE CONCERN COMES FROM
IF WE DON'T DO THIS TOGETHER,
CAN WE PUT THIS PAYROLL TAX ON
WHILE TALK ABOUT RAISINGS THESE
OTHER SETS OF PAYROLL TAXES?
IT'S VERY HARD TO GET CONGRESS
TO THINK COMPREHENSIVELY IN THIS
WAY.
LIKE WHAT SHOULD OVERALL PAYROLL
TAXES BE, AND HOW DO WE
THEREFORE WANT TO ALLOCATE THEM.
A DEALEY THAT IS A POLICY.
THAT IS WHAT I WANT THEM TO DO.
GETTING THEM TO DO THAT IS A
TOUGH JOB.
MR. BIGGS: ONE THING I WILL
SAY IN FAVOR.
FAMILY ACT IN TERMS OF HAVING
THE BULL PACKAGE OF BENEFITS.
IT -- THE FULL PACKAGE BENEFITS.
IT HAIKS MAKES IT EASIER.
IT COULD BE THAT PEOPLE OVER
CHILD BARING AGE WOULD NOT LOOK
AT KINDLY ON THAT.
IF IT'S OFFERING MORE
COMPREHENSIVE BENEFIT, CARING
FOR AN AGING PARENT OR GIVING
YOURSELF SOME LEAVE, WHEN YOU
NEED SICK TIME OFF OF WORK, THAT
IS SOMETHING THEY WOULD SEE THE
BENEFIT THEMSELVES.
THERE'S NO FREE LUNCH BUT IT
WOULD BE A WAY OF BROADENING THE
COALITION THAT MIGHT SUPPORT IT.
MS. STEVENSON: SO DEMOCRATS
-- SO WE POLLED THE IDEA OF A
PAID FAMILY POLICY LIKE THIS
INCLUDING, THIS IS WHAT IT'S
GOING TO TAKE OUT OF YOUR
PAYCHECK IS WE STILL GOT THE
MAJORITY OF PEOPLE SAYING, IT
SOUND GOOD.
BUT IT INCLUDED YOUR OWN
BENEFITS, NOT JUST PAID
MATERNITY AND PATERNITY LEAVE.
AGREE WITH YOU, WHEN WE ASKED
PEOPLE WHAT IF ONLY COVERED PAID
MATERNITY AND MATERNITY LEAVE,
THEY WERE LESSEN ENTHUSIASTIC,
NOT SURPRISINGLY.
THERE'S A LOT OF PEOPLE THAT
WOULD GO, I WOULD TAKE THIS
BENEFIT.
WHEN HILLARY CLINTON RAN FOR
PRESIDENT, SHE WOULDN'T SIGN ON
TO IT, MUCH TO MY CHAGRIN.
SHE DID NOT WANT A PAYROLL TAX A
PATCHED TO IT.
SHE SAID I WILL PASS A PAID
PARENTAL LEAVE POLICY IS WE WILL
PAY OUT OF IT GENERAL REVENUE.
LIKE GENERAL REVENUE IS A NOT A
MAGIC MONEY TREE.
WHERE IS THE FUNDING GOING TO
COME FROM, BUT IT MADE HER
NERVOUS TO SAY, WE'RE GOING TO
RAISE TAX THIS HAS MUCH IN ORDER
TO COVER IT.
SO MY LAST QUESTION BEFORE
WE TURN TO QUESTIONS FROM THE
AUDIENCE IS SORT OF RELATED TO
WILSON, AND THE FEASIBILITY.
WILISON AT MICHIGAN IS AN
ORGANIZATION THAT BRINGS PEOPLE
TOGETHER FOR DISCUSSION ON
CONTENTIOUS ISSUES.
ALTHOUGH THE EMOTIONS MAY NOT BE
SUPER HIGH ON PAID FAMILY LEAVE,
IT'S STILL SOMETHING THAT
THERE'S A LOT OF DISAGREEMENT.
WHY I BRING THAT, IS AT END OF
THE MOST SESSIONS, STUDENTS,
PARTICIPANTS GENERALLY SAY, THIS
WAS PRETTY NICE.
THIS WAS A GREAT DISCUSSION, BUT
WHAT DOES THIS ALL MEAN?
WHEN AEI AND BROOKING PUBLISHED
A REPORT, THAT IS ALL GOOD, AND
I THINK IT'S REALLY GREAT.
AND IT'S REALLY SPECTACULAR,
THAT LEGISLATION IS BEING
PROPOSED ON THIS POLICY NOW.
ALL OF THAT CONSIDERED, THOUGH,
WHAT DO YOU THINK THE POLITICAL
FEASIBILITY OF THESE SORT OF
PROPOSALS ARE?
PROFESSOR STEVENSON, AS YOU
MENTIONED 2009, WE WOULDN'T BE
HAVING THIS CONVERSATION AT ALL.
IN THE NEXT COUPLE OF YEARS,
GETTING TO THE 2020 ELECTION, AS
WE ARE SORT OF IMMERSED IN THE
CYCLE NOW.
WHAT DO YOU THINK AS THE TITLE
OF THIS LECTURE, THE FUTURE
LEGISLATIVELY LOOK LIKE IN THIS
RESPECT?
MR. BIGGS: LOOK AT THIS THIS
WAY, IN TODAY'S POLITICAL
ENVIRONMENTING SOMETHING THAT IS
PROPOSED AND SUPPORTED BY DONALD
TRUMP IS USUALLY NOT GETTING
MUCH DEMOCRATIC SUPPORT AND VICE
VERSA.
YOU KNOW, PRESIDENT TRUMP AND
THE STATE OF THE UNION STATED,
YOU KNOW, HIS SUPPORT FOR PAID
PARENTAL LEAVE.
YOU ALSO HAVE SUPPORT FROM
DEMOCRATS IN CONGRESS.
YOU ALSO NOW HAVE SUPPORT FROM
SOME REPUBLICANS IN THE SENATE.
THEY'RE NOT ALL COMING AT IT
FROM THE PRECISELY THE SAME WAY,
BUT YOU KNOW, YOU GOT TO TAKE
YOUR WIN WHERE YOU CAN GET THEM.
THESE DAYS THERE'S NOT THAT MANY
ISSUES ON WHICH THERE SEEMS TO
BE AT LEAST AGREEMENT ON GOALS.
SO I SEE THAT AS A POSITIVE IN A
TIME IN WHICH THERE ARE NOT TOO
MANY POSITIVES TO BE HAD.
I THINK THE AEI BROOKINGS
WORKING GROUP IS ALSO AN EXAMPLE
MUCH TRYING TO KEEP THE CENTER
STRONG AND SAYING, WHERE ARE THE
THINGS WE CAN AGREE ON SO THAT
STUFF DOESN'T JUST SIMPLY FALL
APART IN THE WASHINGTON D.C. MUD
SLINGING MATCH?
MS. STEVENSON: SO WE MOVED
GENERALLY TO A PLACE WHERE
THERE'S EMBRACEMENT, YOU KNOW,
THE IDEAS OF BEING EMBRACED BY
BOTH SIDES.
TAX CUT AND JOBS ACT INCLUDED
MONEY FOR PAID FAMILY LEAVE,
RIGHT?
I THINK THAT THE PROBLEM IS THAT
THEY'RE SEEING THAT IT INCREASE
-- IT DIDN'T INCREASE ACCESS TO
PAID LEAVE.
IT DID COST A LOT OF MONEY.
IT'S A POLICY IDEA THAT HAS BEEN
TRIED.
FAMILY LEAVE, SO I THINK THE
GOOD NEWS IS, YOU KNOW, THAT
WILL AUTOMATICALLY SUNSET, AND I
DON'T KNOW.
LIKE MAYBE I'M JUST POLY ANNA --
BUT I'M HOPING THAT IDEA DOESN'T
WORK AND COSTS A LOT OF MONEY.
THAT IS WHY WE'RE SEEING THIS
SET OF SOCIAL SECURITY
PROPOSALS.
THAT IS MOVING ON TO
UNDERSTANDING TAX INCENTIVES TO
BUSINESSES ISN'T GOING TO SOLVE
THIS PROBLEM.
SO I SEE THAT AS OPTIMISM.
I'M SEEING REAL PROPOSAL THAT
WILL INVOLVE LIKE THE SOCIAL
SECURITY ADMINISTRATION.
THAT IS PROGRESS.
AND WHO KNOWS?
I DON'T SEE HOW THEY PASS
ANYTHING BEFORE 2020.
BUT I THINK THE 2020 ELECTION,
PEOPLE ARE GOING TO HAVE TO A
POSITION OF HOW THEY FEEL ABOUT
PAID LEAVE.
I THINK WE ARE SEEING BILLS
COMING OUT.
PEOPLE ARE GOING TO BE PROPOSING
THINGS AND WE WILL SEE INCREASED
DEBATE ABOUT THE NITTY GRITTY OF
THE POLICY, NOT WHETHER WE
SHOULD HAVE ONE, BUT WHAT KIND
OF ONE WE SHOULD HAVE AND THAT
IS PROGRESS.
MR. BIGGS: WITHIN THE
REPUBLICAN PARTY, YOU'RE GETTING
KIND OF A RETHINKING AMONG
POLICY FOLKS OF HOW DO WE
DEVELOP POLICY IN A WAY THAT IS
NOT JUST SMALL GOVERNMENT TAX
CUTS.
HOW DO WE ADDRESS THE PROBLEMS
THAT PEOPLE FACE TODAY?
SO SOMETHING LIKE PAID LEAVE IS
ADDRESSING A PROBLEM THAT PEOPLE
HAVE, AND IT'S TRYING TO FIND A
WAY THAT WE CAN CA DO IT, THAT'S
CCOST-EFFECTIVE.
IT'S A POSITIVE THING OF PEOPLE
WITHIN MY PARTY THINKING ABOUT
HOW TO DO THIS AND TRYING TO
SHARE GOALS.
THANK YOU SO MUCH.
I THINK AT THIS TIME WE WILL
TRANSITION TO QUESTIONS FROM THE
AUDIENCE.
WITHOUT FURTHER ADIEU.
WE WILL START A Q&A SESSION.
I'M A JUNIOR AT THE LSA SCHOOL
OF INTERNATIONAL STUDIES AND I'M
A MEMBER.
AEI EXECUTIVE COUNCIL HERE AT
MICHIGAN.
MY NAME IS TOLLIA, I'M A
SENORAT THE FORD'S SCHOOL, AND
I'M ON AI EXECUTIVE COUNCIL, I
WAS INTRODUCED AEI FROM
PROFESSOR'S STEVENSON.
THANK YOU FOR THAT.
WHEN APPROACHING SEEMINGLY
BIPARTISAN POLICIES, WHAT ROAD
BLOCKS DO YOU FACE FROM CONGRESS
THAT IMPEDE AN ISSUE BOTH SIDES
LARGELY SUPPORTS?
MR. BIGGS: I WOULD SAY A LOT
OF IT ON THE FINANCING AND THAT
IF YOU GO HE TO CONGRESS,
THERE'S MANY OF THEM, MOST OF
THEM WHO SIGN THESE PLEDGES,
SAYING I WILL NEVER UNDER ANY
CIRCUMSTANCES RAISE TAXES.
AND YOU KNOW, I'M NOT A TAX
RAISER MYSELF, BUT IF YOU FIND
SOMETHING THAT IS A WORTHY
PROJECT THAT PEOPLE WANT AND
WHICH THEY ARE WILLING TO FUND
WITH A DEDICATED TAX, TO ME THAT
MAKES SENSE.
THESE ARE OFTEN CONGRESS AND
POLITICS WORK ON THESE BROAD
RULES OF, I WILL ALWAYS DO THIS,
OR I WILL NEVER DO THIS.
SOMETIMES THE SUBTLETY GETS LOST
THERE.
MS. STEVENSON: I THINK THE
FINANCING IS ALWAYS THE BIGGEST
ISSUE WITH CONGRESS IS HOW WE'RE
GOING TO PAY FOR SOMETHING.
WHAT YOU SEE IS LARGELY THE
ANSWER IS SOMETIMES THEY JUST
GET OVER IT.
THEY RUN UP THE DEFICIT AND THEY
DON'T USUALLY FIND A WAY TO FUND
IT, IF THEY'RE GOING TO -- SO I
THINK THAT WILL REALLY BE THE
BIG STICKING POINT.
I ALSO -- I THINK THE REAL
CHALLENGE IS GOING TO BE
THINKING ABOUT THE DIFFERENT
CONSTITUENTS THAT ARE BEING
SERVED BY THE POLICY, AND WHO IS
GOING TO BE IN ORDER TO FIGURE
OUT WHO IS GOING TO BE
SUPPORTING WHAT KIND OF POLICY.
SO THE NEXT QUESTION
SUPPORT CONTINGENCY ON SOCIAL
SECURITY AND SOLVENCY.
MR. BIGGS: I DO A LOT OF WORK
ON SO SOCIAL SECURITY WORK.
THERE WAS BY APARTY SON BILLS IN
GONE DOWNHILL AND SEPARATED ON
THAT ISSUE.
I WORK ON IT A LOT.
YOU HOPE THAT THE TWO SIDES WILL
COME TOGETHER, IT'S BETTER TO
SOLVE A PROBLEM LIKE THAT SOONER
RATHER THAN LATER.
CONGRESS IS A LITTLE BIT LIKE A
TEENAGER WITH THEIR HOMEWORK.
THEY OFTEN DON'T DO THINGS UNTIL
THEY ABSOLUTELY NEED TO DO THEM.
SOCIAL SECURITY TRUST FUND IS
PREEXPECT DICTED TO RUN OUT IN
THE EARL -- PREDICTED IN THE
EARLY 2030S, I WOULD NOT IF THEY
WAIT.
CONGRESS HAS NOT SHOWN TO BE A
PARTICULARLY GOOD STEWARD OF
THAT PROGRAM.
MS. STEVENSON: SOCIAL
SECURITY IS AN ISSUE WHOSE
BIPARTISAN TIME CAME AND WENT
WITH NOTHING REALLY HAPPENING.
AND THAT IS REALLY UNFORTUNATE,
AND WE'RE NOW IN THIS REALLY
DIFFICULT POSITION WHICH IS THAT
MOST SOCIAL SECURITY
BENEFICIARIES VOTE REPUBLICAN.
REPUBLICANS HAVE TRADITIONALLY
BEEN THE MOST WILLING TO TRIM
BACK THE PROGRAM.
NOW THEY'RE, LIKE, MAYBE NOT SO
FAST.
RIGHT?
THESE ARE -- THIS IS OUR CORE
CONSTITUENTS, SO THEY DON'T WANT
TO CUT IT.
DEMOCRATS ARE, WHERE WOULD WE
CUT IT?
WE ARE HAPPY WITH THE BIG SOCIAL
SAFETY NET.
THEN YOU END WITH THE KICK THE
CAN DOWN THE ROAD.
I THINK -- I'M AN OPT M OPTIMIST, AND
I THINK THAT WHAT WE REALLY NEED
IS SOMEONE WHO SAY, WE CAN DO,
PAID PARENTAL LEAVE WITHOUT
THINKING THROUGH THIS WHOLE
SYSTEM AND TRYING TO FORCE IT
TOGETHER.
I THINK YOU CAN'T JUST TAKE
THINGS FROM PEOPLE.
YOU WILL HAVE TO HAVE A SET OF
POLICY REFORMS THAT ARE REFORMS
BE NOT PURE SET OF GIVE ME, NOT
WE'RE GOING TO GIVE YOU PAID
PARENTAL LEAVE.
NOT A PURE SET OF CUTS, WE'RE
GOING TO MAKE YOU WORK UNTIL
YOU'RE EVEN OLDER.
YOU GOT TO HAVE SOMETHING THAT
SAYS, WE'RE GOING TO GIVE YOU A
LITTLE BIT OF THIS, WE ARE GOING
TO TAKE A LITTLE BIT OF THAT.
AND THAT, I THINK IS THE MOST
EFFECTIVE WAY TO GET IT DONE.
IT'S GO TO BE WHETHER CONGRESS
HAS THE WILL DO THAT.
MR. BIGGS: BACK IN THE LATE
SECURITY WHICH WERE SEEN AS
SWEETERS TO MAKE THE MORE
DIFFICULT POLICY DECISIONS GO
DOWN EASIER.
CONGRESS ULTIMATELY GAVE THOSE
SWEETENERS AWAY WITHOUT DOING
THE REFORM.
YOU KNOW, IT'S NOT ALWAYS
ENCOURAGING, BUT HOPE SPRING IS
ETERNAL.
SO OUR NEXT QUESTION, IS, DO
YOU THINK THAT A CHANGED POLICY
TOWARD PAID FAMILY LEAVE COULD
IMPACT SMALL BUSINESSES?
MS. STEVENSON: I'M GLAD YOU
ASKED THAT QUESTION.
WE DIDN'T TALK ABOUT THE MOST
IMPORTANT ISSUE, WHICH IS NOT
ABOUT THE LEAVE, IT'S ACTUALLY
ABOUT THE JOB GUARANTEE.
FIRST OF ALL, IT'S IMPORTANT TO
KNOW THAT THE EMPLOYERS ALREADY
BEAR MOST OF THE COST OF PAID
FAMILY LEAVE, BECAUSE THEY ARE
REQUIRED TO GIVE PEOPLE UNPAID
LEAVE.
THE COST TO EMPLOYERS IS WHEN
PEOPLE ARE GONE FROM THEIR JOB
FOR THE DURATION OF THE LEAVE.
THEY ARE BY LAW, ALREADY
REQUIRED TO DO THAT.
NOW NOT AUTOMATIC SMALL
BUSINESSES ARE.
SO THE QUESTION IS, WILL THE
TAKE UP BE HIGHER SO MORE OF
THEM ARE FACE AING THESE
ABSENCES -- FACING THESE
ABSENCES?
I THINK THAT IS PRETTY SMALL.
THE BIGGER ISSUE, IS HOW LONG DO
EMPLOYERS HAVE TO HOLD THE JOB
OPEN FOR, AND HOW SMALL WILL THE
BUSINESS BE THAT WE REQUIRE.
IT'S NOT A BURDEN ON SMALL
BUSINESSES IF I GO ON MY PAID
PARENTAL LEAVE AND THEY ARE FREE
TO REPLACE ME, AND I CANNOT COME
BACK TO MY JOB.
BUT I DON'T KNOW HOW GOOD THAT
IS LEAVE WHEN I DON'T GET JOB
PROTECTION.
THAT IS ONE OF THE THING WE
SPENT A LOT OF TIME DEBATING.
A.
EI BROOKINGS WORKING GROUP,
IT'S EASY TO TELL A 500 OR A
A JOB OPEN FOR 12 WEEKS.
IT'S HARDER TO TELL THAT TO A 10
OF PERSON FIRM.
AND THE LONGER THE NUMBER OF
WEEKS ARE, THE BIGGER THE BURDEN
IS.
I THINK MOST -- I DON'T KNOW
THAT IT'S SO MUCH OF AN ISSUE OF
SMALL EMPLOYERS VERSUS LIKE WHAT
KIND OF EMPLOYER IT IS, HOW EASY
IT IS TO SUB-IN, THAT IS WHERE
THE BURDEN COMES FROM NOT FROM
THE FACT THAT THE PERSON IS
GETTING PAID LEAVE, NOT FROM THE
COST OF PAID LEAVE.
IT COMES FROM THE FACT THAT WHO
IS GOING TO DO THE WORK WHILE
YOU'RE GONE AND DO YOU HAVE
ENOUGH STAFFING AND OPTIONS TO
BE ABLE TO DO THAT?
SO THAT -- HOW SMALL OF A
BUSINESS -- HOW SMALL DOES THE
BUSINESS -- OR HOW BIG DOES A
BUSINESS HAVE TO BE BEFORE WE
PUTTED THAT REQUIREMENT ON THEM
WAS A BIG PART OF OUR DISCUSSION
CAND WE DIDN'T REACH A GOOD
CONCLUSION ON THAT.
IT'S HARD TO THINK ABOUT WHAT
PAID PARENTAL LEAVE IS, WHEN
IT'S REALLY A SEVERANCE PAY.
SO NEXT QUESTION IS WHAT ARE
YOUR OPINIONS ON A GOVERNMENT
FUNDED RETIREMENT SAVINGS?
MR. BIGGS: ON THE PARENTAL
LEAVE FRONT, THERE'S BEEN
PROPOSALS THAT HAVE TAKEN THAT
MODEL, AND THE CONCERN I HAD WAS
GIVEN THE AGE AT WHICH MOST
PEOPLE HAVE KIDS, AND GIVEN
THEY'RE COMING INTO, HAVING PAID
OFF STUDENT LOANS OR SIMILARLY,
THEY MAY NOT HAVE ENOUGH TIME OR
RESOURCE TO BUILDUP THAT KIND OF
ACCOUNT IN ORDER TO COVER PAID
LEAVE.
IT'S JUST THE TIMING IS NOT
RIGHT IN TERMS OF THE TIME OF
THEIR LIFE.
WHEN I THOUGHT ABOUT THE SOCIAL
SECURITY-BASED PROPOSAL IN A
SENSE, I WAS SAYING, AT A TIME
IN SOMEBODY'S LIFE WHEN THEIR
INCOME IS VERY LOW, THEY'RE ABLE
TO ESSENTIALLY BORROW FROM THEIR
INCOME IN THE FUTURE, USUALLY
SOMEBODY INCOME WHEN THEY'RE AT
CHILD BEARING AGE IN REAL TERMS
IS HALF WHAT IT IS WHEN THEY'RE
IN THE MID-50S.
IT WAS THE IDEA OF NOT JUST
GETTING INCOME THERE, BUT
GETTING IT THERE AT A TIME WHEN
THEY CAN USE IT.
I'M NOT REALLY OPPOSED TO THE
IDEA, I'M JUST NOT SURE IT'S
SUFFICIENT FOR THE JOB.
MS. STEVENSON: SO I HATE
FLEXIBLE SAVINGS ACCOUNT.
MR. BIGGS: SHE IS OPPOSED TO
IT.
MS. STEVENSON: I'M OPPOSED
TO.
LET ME EXPLAIN WHY I'M OPPOSED
TO IT.
IT'S A LOT ADMINISTRATIVE BURDEN
TO GET THE MONEY BACK.
THE SECOND OF ALL THE ONLY
BENEFIT COMES FROM THE FACT THAT
YOU'RE PAYING TAX INSIDE FIST
PLACE.
IT DOESN'T -- FIRST PLACE.
IT DOESN'T GET YOU OUT.
THIS IS ONLY FOR PEOPLE WHO TOP
AT THE HALF INCOME DISTRIBUTION
AND THEY'RE GOING TO THE PEOPLE
AT THE TOP END OF THE INCOME
DISTRIBUTION.
IF YOU'RE PAYING A HEFTY 35%
MARGINAL TAX RATE.
FLEXIBLE SPENDING IS GOING TO BE
A GREAT OPTION, BECAUSE YOU ARE
GOING TO REDUCE THE TAX BURDEN.
THOSE GUYS ALREADY GET PAID
LEAVE THROUGH THEIR EMPLOYER.
SO THEY DIDN'T NEED THE HELP.
WE'RE PUTTING TOGETHER A
REGRESSIVE POLICY THAT DOESN'T
HELP ANYBODY WHO DOESN'T HAVE
ACCESS TO PARENTAL LEAVE.
ASK WE ARE GOING TO DO IT IN ONE
OF THE MOTT COSTLY WAYS WE CAN.
I THINK IT'S A -- I'M HAPPY TO
GIVE THEM INCENTIVES TO SAVE
MORE, BUT SAYING THIS A SOLUTION
TO PAID FAMILY LEAVE IS
COMPLETELY FALSE.
IT DOES NOT OFFER ANY SOLUTION
TO THE PROBLEM.
MR. BIGGS: CAN AFTER THAT
DESCRIPTION, I'M NOW READY TO
PREDICT CONGRESS WILL PASS IT.
YOU ON NEXT QUESTION FROM
THE AUDIENCE, HOW WILL ENACTMENT
OF UNIVERSAL HEALTHCARE IMPACT
FUNDING ISSUES FOR PAID FAMILY
LEAVE?
MR. BIGGS: THIS IS SOMETHING,
WHEN I HAVE BEEN AT CAPITOL
HILL, I'VE TALKED TO DEMOCRATS,
FOLKS WHO FAVOR THE FAMILY ACT,
WHICH HAS A BIG BENEFIT PACKET
AND PAYROLL TAX ADDED TO IT.
TO FUND IT, I HAVE SAID, YOU
ALSO FAVOR SOCIAL SECURITY
EXPANSION, WHERE YOU HAVE 2 1/2
PERCENTAGE POINT IN THE SOCIAL
SECURITY TAX TO PAY FOR THAT.
YOU ALSO FAVOR MEDICARE FOR ALL,
WHICH LIKE IT OR NOT, WILL BE
FUNDED BY SOME TAX THAT WOULD
IMPACT LOWER INCOME PEOPLE.
NOT ALL IS GOING TO COME FROM
THE RICH.
ECONOMICS IS ABOUT SCARCITY AND
POLICY MAKING IS ABOUT SCARCITY,
IT'S ABOUT HOW DO WE BALANCE
THESE DIFFERENT PRIORITIES.
THAT IS AN IMPORTANT THING TO
THINK ABOUT THAT YOU CAN ONLY GO
TO THE WELL SO OFTEN ON THE
FINANCING SIDE.
HOW IT WOULD AFFECT THINGS FROM
THE BENEFICIARY'S POINT OF VIEW.
I DON'T KNOW.
THE FINANCING SIDE OF IT IS
WHERE THE TROUBLE COMES.
MS. STEVENSON: THE PROBLEM
WITH, YOU KNOW, MEDICARE FOR ALL
IS THAT IT'S GOING TO REQUIRE
HUGE AMOUNT OF TAXES.
NOW ON THE PLUS SIDE, WE WON'T
BE PAYING FOR PRIVATE HEALTH
INSURANCE.
AND JUST LIKE WORKERS BEAR ALL
THE BURDEN WHEN THEIR EMPLOYERS
ARE PAYING TAXES ON THEIR
BEHAVE, THEY'RE ALSO BEARING ALL
THE BURDEN WHEN THEIR EMPLOYER
IS PAYING HEALTH INSURANCE COSTS
ON THEIR BEHAVE, SO PEOPLE'S
TAXES WILL GO UP, BUT THEIR
WAGES SHOULD GO UP A LOT BECAUSE
THEIR EMPLOYERS CAN PAY THEM
WHAT THEY WERE PAYING IN WAGES,
WHAT THEY WERE PAYING IN HEALTH
INSURANCE, THEY CAN PAY IN
WAGES.
THE HOPE IS THAT, YOU KNOW, YOU
KNOW THE MASSIVE ADMINISTRATIVE
COST ASSOCIATED WITH U.S. HEALTH
CARE PROVIDES A BIG ENOUGH
CUSHION THAT ONE COULD RAISE
REVENUE TO PROVIDE A UNIVERSAL
HEALTHCARE PLAN IN A WAY THAT
DIDN'T -- THAT DIDN'T LEAVE
FAMILIES WITH LESS INCOME FOR
NONE HEALTH RELATED THINGS AT
ENTD END OF THE DAY.
THAT IS GREAT IN THEORY, BUT I
THINK WHEN PEOPLE SEE THE ACTUAL
PAYROLL TAX REQUIRED TO ADOPT
THIS KIND OF PROGRAM, IT'S GOING
TO BE TOUGH, AND PUTTING THAT
AND THEN SAYING, I'M GOING TO
ADD THIS OTHER 4.4%, IT'S GOING
TO BE LIKE ROUNDING ERROR WHEN
IT COMES TO HEALTHCARE.
THE GOOD THUS IS THEY'RE GOING
TO GO, LET'S GO WITH THIS LITTLE
ONE INSTEAD.
I THINK THE HEALTHCARE
CHALLENGE, THAT IS ITS OWN
CHALLENGE.
IT'S BIG.
I DOUBT IT CROWDS UP PAID FAMILY
LEAVE, BUT IT CERTAINLY WILL
RAISE BIG QUESTIONS ABOUT HOW
BIG WE WANT THE SAFETY NET TO
BE.
OKAY, NEXT QUESTION HERE IS
FATHERS OFTEN DO NOT TAKE
PARENTAL LEAVE TO WHICH THEY ARE
ENTITLED SHOULD A PARENTAL LEAVE
POLICY ENCOURAGE PARENTS TO TAKE
THAT TIME OFF AND HOW SO?
MR. BIGGS: IN SOME OF THE
SCANDINAVIAN POLICY.
MS. STEVENSON: THEY'RE USE IT
OR LOSE POLICY: IT'S NOT JUST
USE IT OR LOSE IT.
THE GUYS HAVE LEAVE, AND THEY
USE IT OR LOSE IT.
THAT'S THE PROBLEM, THERE'S A
LOT OF GUYS IN THE U.S. WHO HAVE
LEAVE AND THEN THEY LOSE IT.
MR. BIGGS: IF YOU SPEND A
COUPLE OF WEEK WITH A NEWBORN,
RETURN TO WORK DOESN'T SEEM AS
BAD.
THERE'S A SOCIETAL PRESSURE AND
THERE'S YOU KNOW, I'VE READ
REPORTS FROM EMPLOYERS
THEMSELVES, PARTICULARLY, LIKE
LAW FIRMS, CONSULTING FIRM WHERE
IF, YOU NO HE, THEY OFFER
PATERNITY LEAVE, BUT OFTEN THE
MEN WHO TAKE IT ARE FROWNED
UPON.
I THINK THERE'S LEGAL AND
THERE'S SOCIETY ISSUES AS WELL
OF EMPLOYERS YOU KNOW, NOT
PENALIZING PEOPLE FORMALLY OR
INFORMALLY IF THE FATHERS TAKE
IT.
THAT MAY BE A TOUGH NUT TO
CRACK, BECAUSE IT'S NOT JUST
PASSING A BENEFIT, IT'S THINKING
ABOUT WHOLE YOU THE WORKFORCE
INTERACTION.
MS. STEVENSON: IN THE U.S.
WE'RE NOT CONSIDERING THE KIND
OF POLICIES THAT THEY HAVE IN
EUROPEAN COUNTRIES.
THE POLICIES ARE FAMILY BASED.
THE FAMILY DECIDES HOW THEY'RE
GOING TO SPLIT THE LEAVE UP.
THEY MIGHT HAVE ACCESS TO 12
MONTHS, AND IT USED TO BE THE
MOM CAN TAKE 12 MONTHS OF IT,
THE DAD CAN TAKE 12 MONTHS, THE
DAD CAN TAKE 6 MONTHS, AND WHAT
YOU FOUND IN A COUNTRY LIKE
SWEDEN, THE MOM TOOK THE WHOLE
THING AND THE DAD TOOK NOTHING.
NO, WE'RE NOT GOING TO DO THAT
ANYMORE.
NOW IT'S GOING TO BE 13 MONTHS
BUT ONLY IF THE DAD CAN TAKES AT
LEAST ONE MONTH, OTHERWISE IT'S
ONLY 12 MONTHS.
OTHERWISE THERE WAS A HUGE
INCREASE IN DADS TAKING, WELL,
OTHERWISE WE WOULD LOSE IT.
U.S. WE'RE TALKING A POLICY THAT
IS SEPARATE FOR MEN THAT IS
SEPARATE FOR WOMEN.
BY DEFAULT THAT IS USE IT OR
LOSE IT IF THE GUY DOESN'T TAKE
IT.
LIKE YOUNG MEN WHO ARE STUDENTS
HERE, I TALK TO MEN IN THEIR
EARLY 30S, I LOOK AT SURVEY
DATA, IT'S JUST A DIFFERENT
ATTITUDE TOWARD PARENTING TODAY.
AND MOST GUYS WANT TO BE THERE,
AND WANT TO GET TO KNOW THEIR
KID AND WANT TO PARTICIPATE.
THEY'RE NOT LIKE, OH, YEAH THAT,
YOU KNOW, EVERY ONCE IN A WHILE
I BABY-SIT MY KIDS.
THAT IS NOT A VERY MODERN
APPROACH TO FATHERING AND --
LIKE FATHERS ARE THREE TIME AS
LIKELY AS MOMS TO SAY THAT
THEY'RE STRUGGLING WITH WORK
LIFE BALANCE.
I THINK THAT IS LIKE, THEY NEED
TO GET A GRIP.
[ LAUGHTER ]
IT'S PARTIALLY BECAUSE THEY
DO FEEL MORE PRESSURE IN THE
WORKPLACE, BUT YOU'RE SEEING AN
I CREASING NUMBER OF DADS, WHO
ARE, I CAN'T DO A MEETING AT THE
I NEED TO PICK UP MY ID CAN FROM
DAYCARE.
-- MY KID FROM DAYCARE.
I THINK THAT CHANGE HAS STARTED
TO HAPPEN.
YOU MENTIONED A LAW FIRM.
MY BROTHER IS A LAWYER AND IN
HIS LAW FIRM.
WHEN HE TOOK HIS FIRST PATERNITY
LEAVE, HIS SENIOR PARTNER WAS,
WE HAD IT WHEN WE DIDN'T TAKE
IT.
MY BROTHER, IS YEAH, MY
GENERATION TAKES IT.
THERE ARE THINGS THEY DO FOR
EACH OTHER.
ONE TIME, HE SAID, I'M COVERING
FOR THIS GUY WHO IS COVERING FOR
ME WHEN I WAS IN A PATERNITY
LEAVE.
AND THEY ARE LIKE CAN YOU COVER
THIS TIME WHEN I'M GOING TO BE
OUT I'LL COVER FOR YOU.
I DO THINK THAT YOU NEED A
COHORT TO CHANGE.
IF YOU ARE COVERING FOR EACH
OTHER, IT DOESN'T FEEL LIKE A
BURDEN ANYMORE.
RIGHT, IT'S NOT LIKE I'M TAKING
ON YOUR WORK BECAUSE YOU'RE
STAYING HOME WITH YOUR BABY.
MR. BIGGS: IT NO LONGER FEELS
LIKE A FREE RIDE.
MS. STEVENSON: YOU DO NEED A
NOBODY DOES IT OR EVERYBODY DOES
IT.
I'M STARTING TO SEE THIS SWAP
FROM NOBODY DOING IT TO
EVERYBODY DOING IT.
OUR NEXT QUESTION IS, COULD
JOB SECURITY BE A SUITABLE BACK
UP TO A POSSIBLE FAMILY LEAVE
WITHOUT PAY FOR EXTENDED TIME
OFF?
MR. BIGGS: I DON'T TOTALLY
UNDERSTAND THE QUESTION, SO I
WILL LET YOU ANSWER.
MS. STEVENSON: JUST GIVEN THE
PAID PROTECTION WITHOUT THE PAID
LEAVE?
YES, I BELIEVE THAT IS WHAT
PERSON IS TRYING AS TO ASK.
MS. STEVENSON: THE FMLA
ALREADY GIVES YOU JOB
PROTECTION.
THE FMLA HAS PROBLEMS, IN TERMS
OF IT DOESN'T COVER EVERYBODY,
BUT THEY'RE, THAT IS THE SMALL
BUSINESS ISSUE.
I THINK WHAT -- IF YOU WANT TO
GET THE BENEFITS OF KEEPING FEEL
ATTACHED TO THE LABOR FORCE,
IT'S REALLY THE PAID PARENTAL
LEAVE THAT MAKES THE DIFFERENCE.
AND I THINK IT'S BECAUSE PEOPLE
FEEL LIKE I AM STILL AT WORK.
I'VE MADE A COMMITMENT TO GO
BACK.
I'M GETTING PAID DURING THIS
PERIOD, I HAVE -- I'M MAKING A
TRANSITION PLAN TO GO BACK TO
WORK, AND THAT IS WHY YOU SEE
GREATER RETURN TO WORK AFTER
PAID LEAVE THAN AFTER UNPAID
LEAVE.
WHEN PEOPLE ARE THINKING, LOOK,
IT'S UNPAID, I'M JUST GOING TO
QUIT, AND I'M GOING TO DEAL WITH
IT.
THEY DON'T KNOW WHETHER I WANT
EIGHT WEEKS OR 12 WEEKS, OR 16
WEEKS OR 20, IT DOESN'T MAKE A
DIFFERENCE WHETHER I QUIT OR
DON'T.
YEAH, I COULD GO BACK TO MY JOB,
BUT THERE'S A LOT OF JOBS I CAN
GET.
THAT IS WHY WE SEE TOO MANY
PEOPLE QUITTING AND THEN IT
TURNS OUT, THAT A LOT OF PEOPLE
DO FEEL LIKE IT'S EXHAUSTING
BEING HOME WITH A KID, AND IT
WOULD BE BETTER TO JUST GO BACK
TO WORK.
IF YOU DON'T HAVE A JOB, THE
IDEA OF FINDING A JOB BECOMES
OVERWHELMING, AND SO YOU END UP
WITH THIS PROBLEM THAT THEN, YOU
KNOW, IT'S THREE YEARS LATER,
AND THEY'RE JUST THINKING ABOUT
TRYING TO GO BACK TO WORK.
SO I DON'T -- THE NO I DON'T
THINK JOB PROTECTION IS ENOUGH.
AND I THINK JOB PROTECTION IS
THEISTIC YESTERDAY WICKED FOR US
TO ADDRESS WHEN IT COMES
STICKIEST FOR US TO ADDRESS WHEN
IT COMES TO BUSINESS.
IT MADE SENSE FOR GOOGLE TO
PROVIDE SOME SORT OF PAID FAMILY
LEAVE FOR THAT KIND OF
EMPLOYMENT, BUT FOR MORE LOW
SKILLED JOBS THAT MIGHT BE
EVENTUALLY REPLACED WITH
AUTOMATION, HOW DO YOU THINK
PAID FAMILY LEAVE MIGHT AFFECT
THOSE WORKERS?
OR YOU THINK THERE'S GOING TO BE
LESS OF A NEED FOR A PUBLICLY
FUNDED PROGRAM LIKE THAT.
MS. STEVENSON: SO I THINK
THAT IT'S SORT OF ODD TO MIX
THIS IN WITH SORT OF AUTOMATION.
ALTHOUGH, IF YOU WANT TO SAY,
WELL, YOU KNOW, AS WORKERS
BECOME COST MORE AND MORE, THEN
MAYBE I SHOULD JUST DEEPEN MY
CAPITAL INVESTMENT TO MAKE SURE
MY WORKERS ARE MORE PRODUCTIVE
AND USE FEWER WORKERS.
SOME OF THAT -- I THINK THAT IS
A DEBATE FOR A DIFFERENT
DISCUSSION.
I THINK THE BIG ISSUE IS WHAT
DOES THIS COST EMPLOYERS?
FOR EMPLOYERS, WE HAVE ALREADY
DISCUSSED IT.
IF IT IT'S PAID FOR A PAYROLL
TAX, IT'S COMING OUT OF WORKERS
WAGES.
ONE EXCEPTION TO THAT IS MINIMUM
WAGE WORKERS.
IF YOU'RE MAKING THE MINUTE IN
UM WAGE, THEY CAN'T LOWER YOUR
WAGE BECAUSE THEY'RE PAYING
ANOTHER TAX ON YOUR BEHAVE.
I THINK THERE'S A BIG BODY OF
LITERATURE THAT SAYS THAT THE
MINIMUM WAGES THAT WE HAVE RIGHT
NOW THERE AREN'T ANY BIG
UNEMPLOYMENT EFFECTS OF RAISING
COMPENSATION COSTS.
I'M NOT VERY CONCERNED THERE.
I THINK THAT THE WAY TO THINK
ABOUT THE COST -- AND WITH
SOMEBODY STEPPING AWAY FROM THE
WORKFORCE FOR HOWEVER MANY WEEKS
IT'S GOING TO BE.
WE'RE NOT TALK ABOUT FORCING THE
EMPLOYER TO PAY FOR IT.
WE'RE TALKING ABOUT PAYING FOR
IT THROUGH A PAYROLL TAX WHICH
IS THE INCIDENTS FALLS ON
WORKERS.
SO THEN THE QUESTION IS WHICH
WORKERS ARE WE TALKING ABOUT
THAT WE'RE MOST CONCERNED ABOUT?
I'M NOT WORRIED ABOUT THE ONES
THAT CAN BE REPLACED BY
AUTOMATION.
A ALTHOUGH THE OF THOSE THEY'RE
NOT -- THEIR WORKERS ARE EASY
FOR THEM TO HIRE.
HAVING A GAP WHERE SOMEBODY
STEPS AWAY FOR 12 WEEKS AND THEN
COMES BACK ISN'T THAT COSTLY FOR
THEM.
I AM MORE WORRIED ABOUT YOU
KNOW, A COMPANY THAT RELIES ON
REALLY KNOW HOW TO GET THROUGH
THE PERIOD OF LEAVE WITHOUT
HIRING SOMEBODY ELSE, BUT THEY
CAN'T REALLY AFFORD TO HOLD ON
TO 13 PEOPLE, SO DO THEY HAVE TO
GO THROUGH A TEMP AGENCY?
HOW DO THEY MANAGE THAT?
WHAT ARE THE TRAINING COSTS OF
GETTING SOMEBODY UP TO SPEED?
CAN THEY SHARE THE BURDEN?
I DO THINK A LOT OF BUSINESSES
WORK THAT OUT PRACTICALLY EVERY
SINGLE DAY.
IF YOU WORK WITH 12 PEOPLE,
THEY'RE KIND OF LIKE A FAMILY.
IT'S HARD TO WORK WITH SOMEBODY
WHEN YOU ONLY WORK WITH 12
PEOPLE.
I KNOW YOU ONLY -- YOU JUST HAD
A BABY -- EVEN THOUGH IT'S HARD
FOR ME AS AN ECONOMIST TO WORK
ON HOW THEY FIGURE IT OUT.
THEY SORT OF HAVE TO BASED ON
INTERPERSONAL RELATIONSHIPS.
I DON'T THINK WE NEED TO WORRY
THAT SOMEHOW PAID FAMILY LEAVE
IS GOING TO BRING ON THE ROBOT
REVOLUTION.
MR. BIGGS: I DO A LOT OF WORK
IN PUERTO RICO WHERE THEY HAVE
EIGHT WEEKS OF MATERNITY LEAVE
PAID FOR BY THE EMPLOYER AND I'M
JUST PULLING GOVERNMENT STATS
OUT OF MY HEAD.
FOR THE GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES,
ANY GIVEN TIME IS ONE OUT OF 400
EMPLOYEES IS OUT ON MATERNITY
LEAVE.
BUT THERE'S OTHER TERMS THAT ARE
MORE THAN IMPORTANT IN TERMS OF
THE EMPLOYER'S WHETHER THEY TRY
TO AUTOMATE A TASK OR NOT.
I SUSPECT IT'S A MARGINAL
EFFECT.
WITH THAT, I THINK THAT ENDS
OUR CONVERSATION FOR TODAY.
THANK YOU BOTH SO MUCH FOR
SPENDING THE TIME ON THIS GREAT
DISCUSSION AND THANKS TO ALL OF
YOU FOR JOINING US THIS
AFTERNOON.
I KNOW AFTER THIS, OUTSIDE IN
THE GREAT HALL WE WILL BE HAVING
A SHORT LITTLE RECEPTION.
I HOPE ALL OF YOU WILL JOIN US
OUT THERE.
BEFORE WE END, PLEASE JUST HELP
ME THANKING PROFESSOR STEVENSON,
AND DR. BIGGS ONE LAST TIME.
MS. STEVENSON: THANK YOU FOR
ORGANIZING THIS.
IT'S GREAT.