Forgive Us Our Debts
By Andrew L. YarrowVice President and Director of the Washington Office,
Public Agenda
Yale University Press
(In bookstores between mid-April and early May.
Pub Date: May 15, 2008)
In this immensely timely book, Andrew Yarrow brings the sometimes eye-glazing discussion of national debt down to earth, explaining in accessible terms why federal debt is rising (and will soon rise much faster), what effects it may have on Americans if debt is not brought under control, why our government borrows, and what it will take to pay it all back.
The picture Yarrow paints should concern all Americans. Specifically, he brings to light how rising Medicare, Social Security, and other spending on one hand, and insufficient government revenues on the other, make a mockery of fiscal responsibility. Deficits and debt, Yarrow asserts, are crowding out spending on needed investments in science, environment, infrastructure, and other domestic discretionary programs and could severely harm our nation's and our citizens' future.
But he makes clear that this does not have to be a doomsday scenario. If we act in a bipartisan fashion to restore fiscal health, our legacy to the next generation can be much more than trillions of dollars of IOUs.
Andrew L. Yarrow is vice president and Washington director of Public Agenda, and teaches modern U.S. history at American University. He was previously a longtime reporter for The New York Times. Dr. Yarrow has published extensively during the last 25 years, including "Latecomers: Children of Parents Over 35" (The Free Press, 1991), frequent op-eds, and many popular and scholarly articles. His next book, "Measure of America," is to be published by Yale University Press in 2009. A resident of Bethesda, MD, he also has worked for the Brookings Institution, the U.S. government, and several international organizations. He received his Ph.D. in history from George Mason University and an MPA from Harvard University.
Read an excerpt from the book.
Watch video clips of Andy Yarrow talking about his new book:
- What are the long term consequences of the federal debt crisis on the American economy?
- What are the moral implications of the federal debt?
- Who is to blame for the federal budget crisis?
Read selected op-eds and articles by Andrew Yarrow:
- Beyond Civics and the 3 R's: Teaching Economics in the Schools History of Education Quarterly
- Everlasting Debt From the AARP Bulletin print edition - July 7, 2008
- The immorality of our national debt Baltimore Sun - June 10, 2008
- Healthy, Wealthy and Wise? The Huffington Post - June 05, 2008
- How National Debt is Contributing to Public Disenchantment with Government Huffington Post - April 28, 2008
- It's Our Fault, Too Washington Post - April 12, 2008
- Early retirement selfish, unpatriotic Baltimore Sun - March 26, 2008
- Making tax day less painful The Washington Times - March 26, 2008
- Demand Deficit Reduction The Miami Herald - April 10, 2006
- Citizenship means giving something back Denverpost.com - May 06, 2007
- Taking care of business, taking care of America BaltimoreSun - July 25, 2006
- Clifford Geertz, Cultural Anthropologist, Is Dead at 80 The New York Times - Novenmber 1, 2006
- Chump-Change Budget Cuts Los Angeles Times - Novenmber 12, 2005
- America's Story BaltimoreSun - May 16, 2006
- Americans losing faith in college education Philadelphia Daily News Op/Ed - July 12, 2007
- Reach out to American Indians the other 364 days of the year BaltimoreSun - Novenmber 22, 2007
- Lets get children moving toward a healthier future BaltimoreSun - March 09, 2006
- Alpha moms and helicopter parents San Francisco Chronicle - June 11, 2006
- Teaching or trashing values The Washington Times - Feb 13, 2007
- The Big Postwar Story: Abundance and the Rise of Economic Journalism Journalism History - Summer 2006
- Utopia Lost Los Angeles Times - Feb 25, 2006
Check out the Facing Up to the Nation's Finances initiative, where people from across America are coming together to affect our nation's financial future.
View multimedia outlining America's fiscal challenge.
See the interview with Andrew Yarrow talking about Forgive Us Our Debts.
Bob Edwards Weekend: Andrew Yarrow, Ahn Trio - Jun 21, 2008
ABC Radio: Money Talk - July 19, 2008
Get started on taking action by knowing what some of the key choice to be made on planning our nation's financial future with issue guides on Social Security, Medicare/Medicaid, government accountability and managing the debt.
Check out another book from Public Agenda on America's fiscal challenges: Where Does the Money Go? Your Guided Tour to the Federal Budget Crisis
Get blogging at the Facing Up to the Nation's Finances blog.
Find out how you can take action on charting America's financial future.
Read what some of the experts are saying about Andrew Yarrow's new book:
- "Andrew Yarrow blends his skills as a journalist, historian, and policy insider to address issues absolutely critical to our future and that of our children. Don't just read it; make sure your neighbor does, as well."
-Dr. C. Eugene Steuerle, co-director, Urban Institute-Brookings Institution Tax Policy Center, and former deputy assistant secretary of the Treasury under President Reagan - "There's good debt and bad debt. Either can be handled responsibly or left for others to worry about. God grant us the wisdom to recognize the difference and to do the right thing. Meanwhile, read Andrew Yarrow's uniquely clear-eyed look at the issue."
-Jared Bernstein, Director of the Living Standards Program, Economic Policy Institute - "Andrew Yarrow''s Forgive Us Our Debts should be mandatory reading for everyone who cares about America''s future economic health. Andrew''s concise, clearly written prose explains why deficits really do matter, for all of us, and for our children and grandchildren."
-Charles Kolb, President, The Committee for Economic Development - "Yarrow uses his journalist's talent for language and his deep knowledge of American history and public policy to show in understandable and lively prose the dangerous economic consequences of America's huge impending tsunami wave of federal debt. And as he explains, we must act now to control entitlements and return our nation's finances to long-term sustainability not just for economic reasons but also for moral reasons - to restore the sacred compact between the generations."
-Stuart Butler, Vice President, Domestic and Economic Policy Studies, The Heritage Foundation - "The budget deficit and the mounting federal debt is such a huge problem facing America today, yet most Americans do not see it that way. Politicians win votes by promising more tax cuts and more government spending-at least implicitly suggesting to the public that these policies come without cost. This book is an overdue "wake-up call," and Andrew Yarrow's writing is captivating and compelling; Yarrow brilliantly overcomes the challenges of making budget policy sound interesting to real people. This book will open the eyes of Americans to the severe reality of our fiscal situation, so that we might be more willing to forgo the instant gratification of deficit-financed tax cuts and spending for the sake of our children and grandchildren. Andrew Yarrow's book is a godsend for fiscally-responsible politicians, who need support for their tough, true talk about necessary choices and tradeoffs, so that they will be appropriately supported at the polls by Americans who care about the future."
-Diane Lim Rogers, Chief Economist, House Budget Committee










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