Who Will Pay? How to Keep Governments from Going Broke

with

Peter Heller

Author, Who Will Pay? Coping with Aging Societies, Climate Change and Other Long-Term Fiscal Challenges; and Deputy Director, Fiscal Affairs Department, International Monetary Fund

Photo of Peter HellerPolicymakers today confront a number of profound developments, whose significance is certain to increase over the next several decades. Some of these are widely anticipated: demographic and climate change, the scarcity of natural resources, and public health. Other structural issues, such as globalization, rapid technology change, and security threats, will continue to transform the world economy.

Who Will Pay?, recently profiled in The Economist, makes the case that, despite the fact that generating debate, let alone action, on such thorny issues is not easy, governments need to enact policy changes now to take account of the potential fiscal consequences of these developments. Who Will Pay? argues that a multi-pronged approach is vital, involving strengthened analyses, greater attention to long-term issues and risk factors in the budget framework, institutional reforms that try to address the myopic political economy biases of politicians and the public, and a blend of aggregate belt tightening and sectoral policy reforms.

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William Frenzel
Leon Panetta

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Maya MacGuineas

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Barry Anderson
Roy Ash
Thomas L. Ashley
Charles Bowsher
Dan L. Crippen
Cal Dooley
Willis D. Gradison, Jr.
William H. Gray, III
Ted Halstead
James R. Jones
James T. Lynn
Lou Kerr
James T. Mclntyre Jr.
David Minge
Marne Obernauer, Jr.
June O'Neill
Rudolph G. Penner
Timothy Penny
Peter G. Peterson
Robert Reischauer
Alice Rivlin
James C. Slattery
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David Stockman
Paul A. Volcker
Carol Cox Wait
Joseph R. Wright, Jr.

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Henry Bellmon
Elmer Staats
Robert S. Strauss