As the country navigates and recovers from the COVID-19 pandemic and the economic crisis it caused, we have an unprecedented opportunity to fix systems and policies that were broken long before the novel coronavirus arrived.
The COVID-19 crisis has exposed and magnified economic and societal fault lines that have long been fracturing our nation. These chasms—such as disparities in access to good jobs, quality education, training opportunities, and social capital—often determine whether people are able to keep themselves and their families safe, healthy, and financially secure.
The COVID-19 crisis has also put into plain view just how interdependent we are as people, communities, and economies, and it has exposed what were once seemingly subtle connections among learning, work, and life in unprecedented ways. We must work together to create a more resilient, more prosperous, and more equitable future.
While the United States will once again see safer and better times someday, we should not just focus on bringing things “back to normal.” Prior to COVID-19, economic mobility and advancement were already out of reach for millions. Post-COVID-19, tens of millions more Americans will join the growing list of the economically vulnerable, their opportunities for advancement frozen in place or permanently set back.