Regaining America's Competitive Edge
Once the world’s uncontested manufacturing powerhouse, the United States today must contend with stiff international competition for innovation, markets, and talent. An expert panel looks at ways to boost competitiveness—through fiscal, immigration, and education reform.
Overview
Once the world’s uncontested manufacturing and high-tech powerhouse, the United States must today contend with stiff international competition for markets, innovation, and talent. To regain its edge, America needs serious-minded and long-range reforms in K-12 education, the tax code, and immigration policies, an expert panel said.
“We need to recruit the best and brightest,” noted school reformer Paul Vallas, a former superintendent of schools in Chicago and Philadelphia. Vallas also stressed performance-based measures to reward good teachers and punish bad ones, and he emphasized the importance of “universal early childhood development” to give children the foundation they need to become good students.
On education, performance standards tied to salary bonuses is needed to attract and retain good teachers, especially in fields where private-sector pay is highly competitive, former Lockheed-Martin CEO Norm Augustine said. “A great physics teacher should be paid more than a good physics teacher who should be paid more than a phys ed teacher,” he said.
Immigration policies should also be reformed to keep advanced-degree graduates in science and math in the United States, Jan Rivkin of Harvard Business School said. “We should staple a green card to the degree of each foreign Ph.D. in engineering and science,” he said.
Immigration reform is needed to enhance America’s industrial and greater economic competitiveness, former Michigan Governor John Engler said. “It is in the national interest to have a comprehensive immigration reform bill now,” he said.
Educational improvements are needed not only at the primary, or K-12, level, but throughout the course of workers’ careers, as industries adapt to swiftly changing markets, Deborah Wince-Smith of the Council on Competitiveness said. Students should be encouraged to pursue careers in manufacturing, as well, she added. “Manufacturing is safe, strong, and surging, not dumb and dangerous,” she said, citing exciting new frontiers in nanotechnology, materials science, and bioengineering.
Tax reform is essential to enhancing corporate America’s edge, said many of the panelists. The corporate tax rate should be lowered to levels that allow private-sector competition with the rest of the world, but at the same time the loopholes and deductions that corporations have used to effectively pay lower taxes need to be closed, they said.
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Speakers
Jane Harman
John Engler
Norm Augustine
Paul Vallas
Education Reformer and Former Superintendent of the Recovery School District of Louisiana
Jan Rivkin
Deborah L. Wince-Smith
David Wessel
Director of the Hutchins Center on Fiscal and Monetary Policy and Senior Fellow, Economic Studies, Brookings Institution; Contributing Correspondent, Wall Street Journal
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