• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
American Idea Foundation

American Idea Foundation

Measuring Results, Expanding Opportunity, Improving Lives.

  • Contribute
  • About
    • Paul Ryan
    • Our Team
  • Mission
    • 2024 Progress Report
  • Approach
  • News
    • Blog
    • Press
  • Contact

Validating Reforms that Expand Opportunity

Recap: Ryan rolls out American Renewal with American Enterprise Institute Scholars

November 21, 2022 by Mike

By: AIF Staff

This week, along with 17 scholars, Paul Ryan and Angela Rachidi published American Renewal: A Plan to Strengthen the Social Contract and Save the Country’s Finances. The book contains a comprehensive set of policy solutions to stabilize our debt, modernize our social safety net, revitalize our economy, and restore the promise of upward mobility. The authors believe that by applying conservative principles to our nation’s major fiscal and economic challenges, we can write the next great chapter in American history.

Former Speaker Ryan did a series of interviews and engagements to discuss the aims and objectives of the policies detailed in the book. A brief recap follows.

American Renewal is available for download here.

Video: Paul Ryan discusses new book with ABC News

In an exclusive interview with ABC’s Jon Karl on This Week with George Stephanopoulos, former Speaker Paul Ryan talks about the importance of the policy proposals contained in his new book.

Ryan said in part: “The purpose of putting out this book is to offer a conservative plan to help this country get over its enormous challenges in the 21st century. We have an unsustainable debt. We’re on an unsustainable debt trajectory…. But we’re going to have to make these programs work better. We’re going to have to reform these programs so you and I and the X Generation and generations on down actually have something. That’s the kind of conversation we have to elevate our debate to in our federal and national politics. I think we can because America has always gotten it right at the end of the process, but it has to go through a lot of political machinations.”

Speech: Launching a New Conservative Policy Book with Paul Ryan and Angela Rachidi

With our mediating institutions fraying, debt soaring, and inflation rising in the post-pandemic era, now is the time for policymakers to act—to renew the social contract and place our government programs on strong fiscal footing. Ryan and Rachidi’s book offers policymakers a sweeping set of proposals to ensure long-term prosperity and fiscal health. After offering an overview of the project’s motivation, Ryan and Rachidi are joined by AEI’s Robert Doar to discuss the volume’s proposals in greater depth.

Op-Ed: Wall Street Journal: A Plan to Save our Nation’s Finances

The federal government is making promises to citizens that it can’t keep. The social contract to help the neediest is at risk, as is the implicit promise of the American dream—that each generation will have the chance to do better than the previous one.

The bad news is that our politics are fundamentally unserious. The good news is that a fiscal crisis is still avoidable. But the window of opportunity to prevent it is closing. We are not powerless. Holding off catastrophe is a matter of summoning the will. In “American Renewal: A Conservative Plan to Strengthen the Social Contract and Save the Country’s Finances,” Angela Rachidi and I, along with 18 center-right scholars, outline how leaders can couple reforms to our social safety net with economic growth.

Interviews: In conversations with reporters, Ryan discussed the book and the news of the day. Among the interview highlights….

ABC News: Ryan once again charts his path forward for GOP

[Ryan] said he’s not done trying to find solutions to America’s problems. He’s out with a new book: “American Renewal: A Conservative Plan to Strengthen the Social Contract and Save the Country’s Finances.”

“In this book, we offer very granular solutions to the big problems confronting America,” Ryan said. One of his major concerns, he said, is what he called the unsustainable debt trajectory that America is on. He said his book offers “a conservative plan to help this country get over its enormous challenges.”

Ryan acknowledged that Americans want health and retirement security, but he believes the current programs are unsustainable in the 21st century. “Medicare trust fund goes bankrupt in this decade,” Ryan said. “The Social Security trust fund goes bankrupt in 2032.”

But Ryan, the self-proclaimed optimist, believes these problems are solvable. “There are changes that you can make to the Social Security system today that [guarantees] people counting on this program will always have those benefits,” he said. “We’re going to have to reform these programs so that you and I and the next generation on down actually have something. That’s the kind of conversation we have to elevate our debate to I think in our federal, national politics, and I think we can because America has always gotten it right at the end of the process.”

The Dispatch: A Conversation with former Speaker Paul Ryan

Ryan: The point of the book is to help raise the level of debate to get America to confront its big policy challenges, so we can have another great American century. If we’re going to be able to compete with the likes of China, and if we’re going to be able to fulfill the legacy of leaving the next generation better off, then we’ve got some serious internal challenges that we have to overcome to make good on this promise. And that should be measured against the fact that if we do nothing, we will walk ourselves into a debt crisis, under which you’ll then have to commit to really ugly austerity economics.

Hugh Hewitt: Hugh talks with former Speaker Paul Ryan about AEI’s new book, American Renewal

Ryan: What we’re trying to do with American Renewal is make it a “call to arms” for conservatives to get ahead of the fiscal and economic challenges in this country. And thank God we have the House so we can start putting our feet in the right direction… First of all, in the House, you can stop bad ideas from making it into law like Build Back Better and that’s a good accomplishment because it’s going to be helpful to the economy and the country. But then you can also start curating policies and ideas to take to the country and give them a really clear, affirming choice of which direction they want to go as a nation.

And so, I’m a think tank guy now. I’m over at the American Enterprise Institute. We put this big book together with 19 scholars and specifically, it’s meant to really get the debate going.

How do you get American Renewal? How do you get people out of poverty, restore upward mobility, keep liberty and freedom alive? And how do you avoid debt crisis in this country? This is the direction we’re on. We’re heading towards that place. We know it and so what can you do to prevent that from happening? What can you do to make sure that the dollar is the world’s reserve currency?

And so, that’s what this book lays out. It lays out program by program, reform by reform, how we would use conservative principles and apply them to these problems.

Deseret News: Is there still room for Paul Ryan’s ideas in the Republican Party?

 In 2022, the members of Congress elected as part of the GOP’s “thin” Republican majority in the U.S. House of Representatives will need to decide if they are going to go the way of Trump or Ryan as they choose what policies they want to try to tackle before the 2024 elections. 

Ryan is betting the GOP is still open to his small-c conservative message. He just helped write a book, along with 18 mostly American Enterprise Institute scholars, titled American Renewal. They make the case that conservatives should rein in spending in Washington D.C. — including by making changes to Medicare and Social Security. 

“America emerged from the 20th century as the world’s sole superpower. We created a material prosperity that the world had never seen before,” he said at the book launch event at the institute on Thursday. “But we are now facing enormous political and economic challenges, both from within and without.”


Real Clear Politics
: Ryan: Entitlement reform ‘not as toxic’ as it used to be

Barely a week after Republicans historically underperformed in the midterm elections, Ryan reports that he remains “optimistic,” even calling himself “a happy warrior.” In an interview with RealClearPolitics, he said that federal fiscal problems are “totally and utterly solvable.”

America need not suffer “a lost generation” of anemic growth and stagnant prosperity, according to Ryan and more than a dozen center-right scholars. They have a plan: A book of white papers “to strengthen the social contract and save the country’s finances.” To avoid the aforementioned Armageddon, Ryan told RCP, the country just needs to “summon the political will and know how to get over this hump…..”

“I’m not too worried about the politics of entitlement reform. What people should be worried about is the politics of ducking entitlement reform,” he said, “and then precipitating a debt crisis, where you have ugly austerity economics on top of those entitlements.”

Leaving these programs as they are, he said, “is the irresponsible thing.” Proposing reforms that “make these programs work better and make this social contract more durable and reliable,” he added, “is not a hard sale.”

For a policy wonk like Ryan, who brought graphs and spreadsheets to press conferences, that kind of salesmanship comes naturally. Three years removed from Congress, the Wisconsin Republican says “the country is yearning for something better.” Now a visiting fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, he said that “this is the perfect time for the center-right movement to get back into the ‘Ideas Factory’ and start curating ideas and policies to take to the country, to win a mandate, and to solve our problems.”


Fox News
: Ryan Policy Volume: US must catch up to China’s digital currency capability in order to ‘lead the world’:

“American Renewal: A Conservative Plan to Strengthen the Social Contract and Save the Country’s Finances” outlines solutions to America’s emerging fiscal crisis that is “entirely of its own making.” It features policy prescriptions from 19 scholars, mostly from the American Enterprise Institute, and is aimed at pushing concrete solutions that Congress can enact before the country is engulfed in a “debt catastrophe.”

Ryan, R-Wis., told Fox News Digital in an interview ahead of the book’s release that it was “designed to prevent America from going down the path of a debt crisis and losing the dollar as the world’s reserve currency.”

“If we lose the dollar as the world’s reserve currency, it will massively inflict fiscal and monetary damage to our country. It will make it harder for us to finance our government, our social safety net and our economy, frankly, because interest rates will be much higher,” he said. “The fiscal policies in this book are proposals designed to fix these programs so that they’re reliable and solvent and that they don’t go into a debt crisis….”

“If America wants to maintain its place as the keeper of the reserve currency of the world, which gives us huge privileges and advantages as a country, then we too should digitize our dollar so that we have the attributes of a digital dollar, which is frictionless money, which is much more efficient money,” he told Fox News Digital. “But more importantly, show the world how a free society should handle this challenge by having a two-tier system which guarantees the government has no role in the management of our money. Because the Chinese, the way they will manage money, violate privacy and liberty.”

Filed Under: Blog, In The News Tagged With: Validating Reforms that Expand Opportunity

AEI: Ryan & Fellow Conservatives Offer Policy Blueprint to Save America’s Finances & Strengthen the Social Contract

November 17, 2022 by Mike

By: AIF Staff

This morning, Paul Ryan, former Speaker of the House of Representatives and distinguished visiting fellow at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), Angela Rachidi, AEI senior fellow and Rowe Scholar, and 19 scholars published a book entitled: American Renewal: A Conservative Plan to Strengthen the Social Contract and Save the Country’s Finances. 

Download American Renewal by clicking here.

The rationale for the book, in Ryan’s mind, was simple: America’s mediating institutions are fraying, our debt is soaring, and inflation is rising in the post-pandemic era. Now is the time for policymakers to act: They must renew the social contract and place our government programs on strong fiscal footing.

The challenges ahead require a bold conservative vision for a healthy and prosperous America—a vision grounded in a clear understanding of the country’s current circumstances, a grasp of how America’s institutions can rise to meet its challenges, and an unwavering commitment to our founding ideals.  

The book presents a sweeping set of policy proposals that together offer a road map to reform America’s social safety net, the early care and K–12 education system, health and retirement security programs, the tax code, and our monetary system. The policies proposed in this book seek to magnify upward mobility, stabilize our health and retirement programs for future generations, grow the economy, and curb the looming debt crisis.

As Ryan said in the book’s foreword:

“America emerged from the 20th century as the world’s sole superpower, having achieved unprecedented strength and prosperity. Our constitutional republic created a miracle of human progress emulated throughout much of the world. Today, this great American triumph is facing enormous political and economic challenges, from without but also from within.

“The system of self-governance we founded nearly 250 years ago is being challenged worldwide—by China’s repressive regime and other authoritarian strongholds. Totalitarianism, once thought to be consigned to history in the wake of the West’s victory in the Cold War, is back, competing for dominance in our digitized world. The digitally fueled polarization characterizing the free world invites the question of whether democracies can muster the durable political consensus to tackle the major challenges confronting our societies.

“In this third decade of the 21st century, I believe America will face an inflection point. Our fiscal policy is on a collision course with our monetary policy, and the economic devastation resulting from a debt and currency crisis could inflict enormous, possibly irreparable, damage…

“The story of America is one of historic human accomplishment—but the future is not secured. The dollar’s dominance as the world’s reserve currency is in jeopardy of being displaced. Upward mobility is stalling—and in some cases reversing. The twin American ideas that the economic condition of one’s birth does not determine the outcome of one’s life and that each generation is better off than the past generation are no longer true for millions of Americans….

“America is facing a fiscal crisis entirely of its own making. All of this is well-known. All of this was predictable. All of this is avoidable. But we are where we are. And, today, our politics are fundamentally unserious. That’s the bad news.

“The good news is that these problems are solvable. And we are not helpless or powerless before them. The solutions to these monumental challenges are achievable; it’s a matter of summoning the will….

“This book is a joint effort at offering solutions to America’s generational challenge. It is a plan to confront our main socioeconomic problems with specific, concrete, achievable policy solutions—ones that restore our social contract while avoiding a debt catastrophe. This needs to be done for us, and it especially needs to be done for future generations. The American idea needs defenders.”

Click here to download American Renewal: A Conservative Plan to Strengthen the Social Contract and Save the Country’s Finances.  

Filed Under: Blog, In The News Tagged With: Validating Reforms that Expand Opportunity

On You Might be Right podcast, Ryan discusses fiscal policy & strengthening the social safety net with Tennessee Govs. Bredesen and Haslam

October 6, 2022 by Mike

By: AIF Staff

Washington, DC – Last month, former Democratic Governor Phil Bredesen and former Republican Governor Bill Haslam of Tennessee recently launched a podcast called, You Might be Right, featuring guests from the left and the right presenting their views on major issues facing the nation. The Tennessee Governors, who launched the podcast in conjunction with the University of Tennessee’s Howard Baker Center for Public Policy, are focused on finding common ground, listening to various perspectives, and arriving at potential policy solutions through conversations with experts.

Paul Ryan, the President of the American Idea Foundation and former Speaker of the House, was one of the first guests on You Might be Right, joining Governors Haslam and Bredesen for a discussion on our nation’s fiscal policy.

During the interview, Ryan detailed his experience advancing proposals to balance the budget and strengthen programs like Medicare and Social Security so they are on sounder financial footing.  He also talked about why our nation needs to solve the debt crisis in order to maintain a social safety net for current and future generations of Americans.

Listen to the full podcast interview with Speaker Ryan here.Excerpts of Ryan’s responses follow.

Ryan on why the national debt should be everyone’s concern

“It matters because in 10 to 20 years, around mid-century, we will not be able to afford our social contract. If we think that America is polarized today, just wait for if and when we lose our reserve currency status.

We can’t afford to bond finance our social contract, which is health and retirement security for all Americans, a safety net for the poor, Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid. We won’t be able to afford those things. [In a debt crisis,] we would have to cut those benefits in real time for real people who have organized their lives around them and who are living on these programs – just think of the chaos if that were to occur. It will make today’s polarization look like nothing.

My mother-in-law passed away 10 years ago, but she used to always say this thing that stuck with me: “A stitch in time saves nine.” This is one of those issues where if you get it right early enough, you can dodge a debt crisis. You could dodge that bullet and our country can keep its promises to its people, which is health and retirement security and the social safety net.

[On our current course,] we won’t be able to keep that promise. We have so many unfunded liabilities and the government is making promises to what I call the “three generation window” of retirees, workers, and their kids and these are promises that can’t be kept. So, we need to reform these programs so that we can make sure we keep these promises. It’s that simple in my mind.”

Ryan on reforming entitlements by keeping promises to current retirees & making prospective reforms for future seniors

“The question is: Can you put in place reforms today that apply to people before they retire with important changes to these programs so they still meet their missions quite well?…

Like I said, I passed these bills in the House as budget resolutions, but we never got close to getting them actually into law, which involves the Senate and the President of course. But the way I went about [generating support for these bills] is by educating Members of Congress and having Members of Congress go to their constituents and have town-hall meetings to talk about this problem, to talk about why it’s bad, and why fixing it early is the way to go. And [talk about] that these reforms we are proposing, they make the programs stronger, better off, and don’t affect people in or near retirement.

This is kind of the key political promise: Not affecting people in or near retirement, because they’re just about to retire. They have made these promises and they banked on [receiving the benefits] sooner or later. We’re not going to be able to make good on those promises [for much longer] and that’s why I worry we don’t have a whole lot of time for where we can still say something that makes this politically viable, which is it’s not going to impact current retirees. It’s going to be prospective. We’re getting pretty close to the time where we may not be able to do that and then it gets really difficult.”

Ryan on how health and retirement security programs can be improved

“We can make these programs actually work better and pass these reforms so they’re phased in over time, so they’re gradual and expected, so they’re not too disruptive to people in their lives. There’s one thing – and this is where I’m going to sound like a Republican ideologue, but if we do this, it will be because Congress and the country accepts the private sector being involved in delivering these services, so they are publicly-financed, publicly-managed but with a private sector delivery system.

And honestly, it’s not really Social Security. In this case, it’s Medicare. It’s the healthcare entitlements. It’s the Affordable Care Act, Medicaid, and Medicare. That’s the game in town. That’s a debt crisis.

And so, we need a patient-centered health care system with private sector delivery systems that have value-based purchasing, true transparency on value, and an economic incentive for patients to act on that value. This helps tame health inflation and bend the cost curve.

And frankly, Medicare is really the big enchilada. I think the only way to go is a premium support system, and a premium support system like the Federal Employee Health Benefit Program. It’s sort of a defined contribution to a person for their premiums in a guaranteed-issue Medicare system. It provides more for the poor and the sick, less for the healthy and the wealthy. You means-test it, you risk-adjust it, but it’s fixed. According to the Congressional Budget Office, according to all the best budget projections, it’s really the only way to save Medicare from bankruptcy without resorting to rationing and price controls.”

Ryan on how policymakers can solve the debt problem

“This was always my theory: You have to have people run for office talking about this issue, educating people about this issue, and then offering a solution to this issue. So if they win that office, they then have earned the moral authority or the right to put these reforms into place.

When I became Speaker in 2015, I wasn’t looking for the job. Actually, I was kind of drafted into it. One of my conditions for doing this job, and it’s a great way to go into a job, was I said we had to have a plan and an agenda that we run on. We called it The Better Way and we put it out there. We had health and entitlement reform plans for all these programs. We had tax reforms…. House Republicans ran on it in 2016…. Somebody needs to run on doing this, then get elected and then go do it.”

Ryan on how fixing the debt will unlock the next great American century

“All roads lead back to getting our debt under control and the way you get your debt under control is you solve our entitlement programs. If you solve these problems, you can have health and retirement security in America for all Americans. You can have a great vibrant economy, a social safety net for the poor, and get this thing under control. We can do it so these problems can be fixed with prospective policies but we don’t have the politics or anywhere close to it today to get there. That is the problem we have right now.”

Ryan on his evolution on criminal justice reform

“Criminal justice reform is probably the one issue that came to my mind the best… I came to Congress in 1998 and it was Clinton and Biden, along with Republicans, saying we needed to be tough on crime. We needed three strikes and you’re out and mandatory minimum sentences.

We were really tough on crime and we passed all these laws to crack down on crime and we overshot. I didn’t really know that until 2014-2015 when I started doing all these listening sessions around the county and I learned that we were putting people away in jail for a long time and it was making these communities worse off. It was making people worse off and there were better alternatives like drug courts and the rest.

So, I learned that I was wrong in how I thought about criminal justice and it was over a course of about a two-year period of my researching this and my learning from governors, frankly, that sort of helped me learn this lesson and then change my position on it and we ended up passing criminal justice reform in 2017 and 2018.”

Filed Under: Blog, In The News, Press Release Tagged With: Validating Reforms that Expand Opportunity

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Page 3
  • Page 4
  • Page 5
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 13
  • Go to Next Page »

Footer

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Contribute
  • About
    • Paul Ryan
    • Our Team
  • Mission
    • 2024 Progress Report
  • Approach
  • News
    • Blog
    • Press
  • Contact
Copyright © 2023 American Idea Foundation. Inc. All rights reserved.