Plus, economic mobility in New Orleans and America's rural future.
View in browser
Brookings Brief

December 4, 2025

A women with a child shopping in a grocery store.

America’s affordability crisis for middle-class families

 

The nation’s affordability crisis has not spared middle-class families, leaving one-third unable to afford basic necessities such as food, housing, and childcare.

 

In a new analysis, Hannah Stephens and Andre Perry examine regional and racial disparities across 160 metropolitan areas and propose policy interventions—from wage growth strategies to targeted subsidies—to help restore middle-class economic security.

Read more

A closer look

share-of-middle-class-families-that-can-afford-basic-necessities-in-160-us-metro-areas (1)
 

More on US economic growth and prosperity

 

Enhancing economic mobility in New Orleans. In new research, Farah Khan analyzes the structural barriers to economic mobility in New Orleans—including racial gaps, concentrated poverty, and shortfalls in education and workforce development—while noting Hurricane Katrina’s lasting impact. Khan proposes a multidimensional policy framework that includes targeted local investments and structural reforms, such as municipal baby bonds, to expand wealth-building opportunities for residents.

 

America’s rural future. This special edition of Reimagine Rural features host Tony Pipa interviewing Tom Halverson, CEO of CoBank and a member of The Brookings-AEI Commission on Rural Prosperity. Halverson reflects on the commission’s visits and public hearings in North Dakota and Minnesota, emphasizing important trends regarding rural youth, agriculture, innovation, and the need for holistic, bipartisan rural policy reform.

 

About Brookings

 

The Brookings Institution is a nonprofit organization based in Washington, D.C. Our mission is to conduct in-depth, nonpartisan research to improve policy and governance at local, national, and global levels. If you were forwarded this email, sign up for the Brookings Brief to stay updated on our latest work.

 
X/Twitter
Facebook
Instagram
LinkedIn
Brookings

The Brookings Institution,1775 Massachusetts Ave NW, Washington, DC 20036

Unsubscribe | Manage newsletter subscriptions 

The conclusions and recommendations of any Brookings publication are solely those of its author(s), and do not reflect the views of the Institution, its management, or its other scholars.