Daily Digest – February 2: Trade Shouldn’t Mean Higher Drug Prices

February 2, 2015

Roosevelt First is our weekday morning email featuring the Daily Digest.


Don’t Trade Away Our Health (NYT)

Roosevelt Institute Chief Economist Joseph Stiglitz argues that the Trans-Pacific Partnership’s intellectual property agreements will raise drug prices unnecessarily and slow innovation.

Obama Veers Left (Politico)

Ben White speaks to Roosevelt Institute Fellow Mike Konczal about the president’s budget. Konczal says this budget takes the focus off the deficit as a be-all,-end-all problem.

Obama’s New Budget Proves the Grand Bargain is Finally Dead (Vox)

Matt Yglesias explains why the Obama administration has, in this budget, stopped playing to potential compromises and showdowns and focused on what the president actually wants to achieve.

A Simple Guide to Obama’s New Proposals for Spending and Taxes (WaPo)

Max Ehrenfreund breaks down the main points in the Obama budget and explains how taxes would change in order to pay for programs like funded preschool and investment in infrastructure.

U.S. Growth Rate Slips to 2.6% Raising Doubts About Strength of Economy (The Guardian)

Rupert Neate reports on the final numbers for the fourth quarter of 2014, which showed slower growth than economists had expected. Still, overall GDP growth for the year was higher than 2013.

How Tipping Helped Make Sexual Harassment the Norm for Female Servers (In These Times)

Jenny Brown says that workers who rely on tips often have no choice but to put up with harassment, as discussed in a new report from Restaurant Opportunities Centers United.

Uber and Lyft Drivers May Have Employee Status, Judge Says (Bloomberg)

In two different lawsuits, judges have indicated that they are unconvinced that drivers for these services are merely consumers of a software platform, reports Karen Gullo.