Created by: roberto.c.alfredo in united-states on Nov 20, 2025, 4:03 AM
A Mobility State for an Age of Inequality
America’s real crisis is not just inequality; it is the collapse of mobility in a high-churn, high-immigration society. The old promise—work hard, play by the rules, move up—now feels like a rumor for millions juggling gig jobs, locked out of housing markets, or stuck with obsolete skills. We do not need nostalgic protectionism or minimalist fatalism. We need a mobility state: public policy designed not to freeze people in place with bigger cushions, but to equip them to move—across jobs, regions, and life stages—without falling through the cracks.
The New Inequality: Resilience, Not Just Income
Today’s inequality is less about static wealth gaps and more about who has buffers against constant change. Asset owners ride appreciating houses and stocks; everyone else faces volatile pay, algorithm-driven schedules, and benefits that vanish when the job does. Automation, platforms, and global competition reward the adaptable and punish the exposed. The result is a divide in agency: some treat layoffs as detours; others never recover.
Why Obvious Fixes Keep Dying
Americans broadly support making retraining easier, benefits portable, or housing less gated. Yet reforms stall because of:
- Structural veto points and regulatory capture
- Cultural skepticism of “big government”
- Partisan branding wars (“socialism” vs. “welfare”)