Strapped: Why America's 20- and 30-Somethings Can't Get Ahead by Tamara Draut

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: January 2006
  • 288pp
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: January 2006
    • Publisher: Doubleday Publishing
    • Format: Hardcover, 288pp

    Synopsis

    Drowning in student loans? Can’t afford to get married, buy a home, have children? Up to your ears in credit card debt? At last, a book for the under-35 generation that explains why it’s not their fault, and what can be done about it.

    Strapped offers a groundbreaking look at the new obstacle course facing young adults. Getting ahead, argues commentator and policy maven Tamara Draut, is getting harder. A college degree is the new high school diploma–and costs a fortune to obtain. Good jobs are scarcer thanks to stagnant wages and disappearing benefits. And, the cost of everything–starter homes, health coverage, child care–keeps going up. Witty and wise, Strapped brims with ideas for fashioning a new kind of America in which every young person can go to college, buy a home, and start a family. The future starts here.

    Publishers Weekly

    It's hard to believe: "Today's college grads are making less than the college grads of thirty years ago." In fact, men aged 25 to 34 with bachelor's degrees are making just $6,000 more than those with high school diplomas did in 1972. This is just one of the many shocking statistics uncovered by Draut, a think-tank adviser and media pundit, in this incisive and revealing look at why today's young adults find financial independence so difficult. With catchy terms such as "debt-for-diploma" and "paycheck paralysis," Draut shows why this age group's ability to accomplish the traditional adult markers of school, career and family is stagnating. Her presentation features the one-two punch of well-sourced data and a series of stories from a diverse group of interview subjects to prove her thesis that depressed wages, inflated educational costs, soaring credit card debt and skyrocketing health and child-care expenses present nearly insurmountable obstacles to young adults' success. While Draut's conclusions take conservative politicians to task, they are hardly polemical, and her analysis and solutions are refreshingly free of glib how-to advice. Her book should be a jarring wake-up call to both the generation affected most by the current economic reality and the policy makers facing the consequences for decades to come. (Jan.) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

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    Biography

    Tamara Draut is Director of the Economic Opportunity Program at Demos, a national think tank headquartered in New York City. Her research and writing have appeared in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, USA Today, and Newsweek. A frequent commentator, Draut has appeared on CNN Headline News, CNN's Lou Dobbs Tonight, CNBC's Closing Bell, and ABC's World News Tonight. She lives in New York City with her husband.

    Customer Reviews

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    • Ratings: 2Reviews: 2

    Strapped: Why America's 20- and 30-Somethings Can't Get Aheadby Anonymous

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    October 29, 2007: I'd rate this book as disappointing. The author seemed to talk in circles and made the same points over and over again. It may have been in an attempt to hammer home her point, but it was very redundant. The author seemed to blame a lot of young adults' financial issues on student loans. And, while this may be part of the problem, she all but ignored the fact that many Americans are in debt simply because of their own irresponsibility and poor spending habits.

    Strapped: Why America's 20- and 30-Somethings Can't Get Aheadby Anonymous

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    January 26, 2006: As a very recent father, my wife and I have gone through precicely what this incredibly well researched and well written book address. Despite our two income household we were worried sick about being able to afford to have our child. Tamara addresses head on the common critiqe levelled by the proverbial bad parent of society that 'kids today are over indulgent and its all their own fault anyways'. I was shocked by some of the reviewers of this book that they had the audacity to level that 'old chestnut' of quit complaining life's hard and you did it to yourself (who thinks a CDs a luxury anyways?). The only conclusion I could reach was that they had not really bothered to read the book at all...that their presuppositions prevented any actual analysis (like harping on why Higher Ed costs have risen???Irrelevant to the books entire premise) What Draut cogently lays out is that there are measurable differences in todays world that make starting out more expensive and more difficult for 'young adults'. Tamara's purpose is to give a generation the collective knowledge that it isn't just them...that for a vast majority of them who work extremely hard and play by the rules, a headwind does exist that was not there a generation ago. Ultimately, I think she is saying keep working hard, but be sure to engage in the process and plug back in and lets see what solutions exist to remove as much of that headwind as is sensible, policy wise, to do so. Housing is more expensive, raising a child is more expensive, those at the bottom of the payscale have less job security--those things are real- and Draut makes this unquestionable with her expert use of statistics. The book was as didactic as it was cathartic and its about time our generation emerged with a reasoned voice and said we can make it easier for those that follow--I think Mrs. Draut has provided the foundation for that awakening. My wife and I are going to keep working hard--like almost all of our generation--and raise our kids properly, as we always have. And thanks to 'Strapped', we can now drown out those harmful voices of inter-generational shame, and substitute them with humanizing FACTS that show us we are not alone...the headwind might not go away, but this book has made us aware of it and allowed us to understand it...and that I think is Draut's real gift to us all with this great book.