The Free-Market Family: How the Market Crushed the American Dream (and How It Can Be Restored)

The Free-Market Family: How the Market Crushed the American Dream (and How It Can Be Restored)

by Maxine Eichner

Narrated by Jane Oppenheimer

Unabridged — 12 hours, 44 minutes

The Free-Market Family: How the Market Crushed the American Dream (and How It Can Be Restored)

The Free-Market Family: How the Market Crushed the American Dream (and How It Can Be Restored)

by Maxine Eichner

Narrated by Jane Oppenheimer

Unabridged — 12 hours, 44 minutes

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Overview

US families have been pushed to the wall. At the bottom of the economic ladder, poor and working-class adults aren't forming stable relationships and can't give their kids the start they need because of low wages and uncertain job prospects. Toward the top, professional parents' lives have become a grinding slog of long hours of paid work. Meanwhile their kids are overstressed by pressure to succeed and get into good colleges. In this provocative book, Maxine Eichner argues that these very different struggles might seem unconnected, but they share the same root cause: the increasingly large toll that economic inequality and insecurity are taking on families.

It's government rather than families that's to blame, Eichner persuasively contends. Since the 1970s, politicians have sold families out to the wrongheaded notion that the free market alone best supports them. In five decades of "free-market family policy," they've scrapped government programs and gutted market regulations that had helped families thrive. The consequence is the steady drumbeat of bad news we hear about our country today: the opioid epidemic, skyrocketing suicide and mental illness rates, "deaths of despair," and mediocre student achievement scores. Meanwhile, politicians just keep telling families to work a little harder.

The Free-Market Family documents US families' impossible plight, showing how much worse they fare than families in other countries. It then demonstrates how politicians' free-market illusions steered our nation wildly off course. Finally, it shows how, using commonsense measures, we can restructure the economy to work for families, rather than the reverse. Doing so would invest in our children's futures, increase our wellbeing, reknit our social fabric, and allow our country to reclaim the American Dream.


Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher

"Painstakingly documents the plight of U.S. mothers and fathers from many economic backgrounds, career fields, and geographic regions." — Gracy Olmstead, Mere Orthodoxy

"The real problem is not that American families are failing. It's that our government is failing American families. Maxine Eichner's powerful new book shows how a policy approach grounded in free-market fantasies has made it harder to raise kids than in almost any rich nation-and how that can and must change."-Jacob S. Hacker, Stanley B. Resor Professor of Political Science, Yale University, and author of The Great Risk Shift: The New Economic Insecurity and the Decline of the American Dream

"The United States imagines itself to be deeply pro-family. But Maxine Eichner demonstrates just how far our reality falls short of that aspiration, outlining what real pro-family policies would look like. Above all, she offers a compelling version of the American dream, focusing not on GDP but on GHP-the growth of human potential-of every American."-Anne-Marie Slaughter, CEO, New America

"Provocative, beautifully written, and illuminating-and directly addressed to some of the most important issues of our time. Highly recommended!"-Cass R. Sunstein, Robert Walmsley University Professor, Harvard University, and author of On Freedom

"This book is an absolute must read. Packed with rigorous data and compelling stories of how American families are stretched to the breaking point, Maxine Eichner makes a convincing case that, far from a nation that values families, our free market approach stacks the deck against them - to the detriment of us all. To those who say we can't afford to support American families, Eichner shows that we can't afford not to, and that nothing is more crucial to the future of this country and the reinvigoration of the American Dream." -Brigid Schulte, award-winning journalist, author of the New York Times bestselling Overwhelmed: Work, Love & Play when No One has the Time, and director of The Better Life Lab at New America

"No families suffer more under our 'free-market family policy,' Eichner shows, than the poor, disproportionately African American families who, in spite of their best efforts, face powerful, intersectional, racial, gendered, and economic obstacles to providing what their families need. This book is a vivid account of the way our current social order is falling far short and therefore squandering the potential of our most vulnerable children, subjecting their parents to harrowing lives, and rending our social fabric in ways that will make it very difficult to repair." -Angela Onwuachi-Willig, Dean and Professor of Law, Boston University School of Law

Library Journal

09/01/2019

Eichner (law, Univ. of North Carolina; The Supportive State) claims that Americans are unhappy because economic forces are disrupting the family, an institution central to her view of human flourishing. The first part presents extensive, data-driven support for her argument that the country's market-based family policy is inconsistent with child development research on the value of stability and caretaking. The next section describes the history of welfare policy and reform. International comparisons feature prominently, and profiles of struggling families bring the material to life. Later chapters lay out a profamily policy agenda organized around principles of public investment in childcare, moderation of extreme inequality, a strengthened social safety net, and labor market policy emphasizing work-life balance. VERDICT Covering similar economic themes as those in Jacob S. Hacker's The Great Risk Shift but in a more personal and maternal voice, this work is likely to resonate most with readers interested in the case for profamily social policy.—Jennifer M. Miller, Univ. of Southern California, Los Angeles

Product Details

BN ID: 2940172857416
Publisher: Brilliance Audio
Publication date: 03/17/2020
Edition description: Unabridged
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