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The Gifts and Challenges of the USA 2017

Despite the rhetoric the United States has many gifts and accomplishments that still firmly place as the top country in the world. That being said it also has its flaws and areas that could be dramatically improved.

Some of the gifts and accomplishments that make the United States a world superpower include:

 

With the world’s largest amount of capital on one of the world’s biggest land areas which includes the most arable land of any country, an abundance of natural resources, and one of the biggest populations with one of the highest median incomes in the world to tend to it all, its no wonder the United States is arguably the greatest country on Earth.

However, despite these massive advantages the United States still has room for dramatic improvement even when or especially when compared to the rest of the world.

 

 

Some of the major problems facing the United States include:

 

Healthcare, childcare, student debt, transportation and housing costs are ever present in the life of Americans striving to build wealth and remain middle class. Wage stagnation, trickle down economics, and our burgeoning oligopolies are macroeconomic causes that also suppress the middle and lower classes ability to save and grow. Further compounding the issue the economy has shifted from a manufacturing one to one that relies on the service industry which has not only displaced the majority of working men in America, but also erodes their sense of purpose as service jobs are typically woman dominated. All of these factors has lead to skyrocketing inequality and general disappointment in the direction the economy is headed.

Nonetheless, the United States has the wealth, the resources, the land, and the people to overcome these challenges. Some are a matter of policy direction such as embracing middle out economics instead of trickle down, investing in infrastructure, and offering child care credits that help the middle class grow. Other problems might require more creative solutions such as an expansion of the EITC or replacing it with a basic income, transforming our healthcare system into one that more closely resembles a single payer system, and investing more into colleges and alternative post-secondary education sources such as vocational school.

Regardless, the United States is an a unique position to not only face these challenges, but to embrace them and lead the world as the first major economy to transition from a manufacturing economy to a service economy while still growing its GDP and improving its quality of life.

 

 

 

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