Plus, the imperial presidency unleashed, and a key driver U.S. disinflation.
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Brookings Brief

July 19, 2024

Buffalo Bayou Park in Houston flooded after Hurricane Beryl
Why isn’t Hurricane Beryl inspiring bipartisan climate action?

 

In the southern United States, the ripple effects of a devastating natural disaster are still occurring. Houston residents, who were already impacted by Hurricane Beryl, are facing a severe heat wave that is amplifying the damages of the hurricane and increasing the risk of death.

 

Overlapping, extreme events such as these are becoming more and more common in America, pushing climate change from an amorphous threat happening “somewhere else,” to an infrastructural and economic problem happening to the nation at large.

 

Manann Donoghoe and Andre M. Perry argue that Democrats and Republicans need to take the climate threat seriously and reignite a bipartisan platform for action grounded in disaster risk reduction.

Read more
 

More research and commentary

 

The imperial presidency unleashed. “Understandably, most of the analysis of Trump v. United States has been on its domestic implications. But the potential foreign policy ramifications are also significant,” write Sarah Binder, James Goldgeier, and Elizabeth N. Saunders in Foreign Affairs.

 

U.S. disinflation and the COVID supply shock. Inflation is declining more rapidly than most expected in America. Robin Brooks, Peter R. Orszag, and William E. Murdock III highlight how the sheer size of pandemic-era supply chain disruptions helps to explain disinflation.

 

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