New evidence of how hard it is to change U.S. health care
Jan 5, 2021

New evidence of how hard it is to change U.S. health care

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Amazon, Berkshire Hathaway and JPMorgan Chase put an end to their Haven joint health care venture. Plus, today's Senate runoff elections and the future of American economic policy. And, how the pandemic is changing perceptions of multigenerational households.

Segments From this episode

How the Georgia election results could affect the pace of spending, relief and recovery in the U.S. economy in 2021

“I think if the Democrats win, then I think you do get more stimulus, and probably faster economic recovery during 2021,” said David Kelly, chief global strategist at JP Morgan Funds. “I do think that we should recognize that even if we do get more stimulus, I think a lot of other things that we need to change in the long run — how do you balance the budget? How do you actually increase taxes when you need to do so? How do you reform immigration? These tough questions, I don’t think they’re going to be answered by Washington either way. We are in an era of partisan populism and that really makes it hard to make any tough choices in Washington.”

Multigenerational households make good economic sense

The most recent numbers we have show 20% of the American population is living in multigenerational households.
"The multigenerational home is a safety net, yes. But the bigger story is the compelling economics of multiple generations living under one roof," says Marketplace senior economics contributor Chris Farrell.
Morsa Images via Getty Images

Music from the episode

Power - Instrumental Nicholas Britell

The team

Victoria Craig Host, BBC
Stephen Ryan Senior Producer, BBC
Jonathan Frewin Producer, BBC
Daniel Shin Producer
Jay Siebold Technical Director
Brian Allison Engineer
Meredith Garretson Morbey Senior Producer
Erika Soderstrom Producer
Rose Conlon Producer
Alex Schroeder Producer