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(5 Questions- Go! St. Louis founder Nancy Lieberman - Sports)
(WASHINGTON- S&P- Wealth gap is slowing US economic growth)
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Nancy Lieberman founded Go! St. Louis in 2000 and has developed an organization that operates several annual major running events, which include everything from marathons to one-mile run runs for kids.聽This <a href=http://www.buycelinebags.com/celine-doctor-frame-42>Celine Doctor Frame Bags</a> month, the first KT82 Trail Run will be held, stretching from Creve Couer Park to Hermann on the Katy Trail.Lieberman is a member of the Governor's advisory council for health and fitness, Trailnet's leadership council and the St. Louis Civic Pride Foundation. She has competed in seven marathons, dozens of triathlons and on Sept. 7 she will compete in the half Ironman world championship in Mont-Tremblant, Canada. Lieberman also travels extensively and has hiked or climbed the Milford Trek in New Zealand, the Mount Blanc circuit in Europe, the Himalayas, Patagonia and Mt. Kilimanjaro.Here are "5 Questions" for Nancy Lieberman:1. How did the KT82 Trail Run come about?Lieberman: We try to be proactive, innovative and anticipate trends and endurance relays were becoming very popular. Last June we were thinking of doing an endurance relay on the Katy Trail and the governor announced that Missouri was named the best trail state by American Trails for 2013. He came to kick off the 100 Missouri Miles Challenge, and he and I walked and talked about how we could promote and do something together. So, out of that meeting, I decided we'd promote the state trails by putting the endurance relay on the Katy Trail. We put the announcement out in December and the buzz was tremendous. The team component and distance add a new dimension. It's not about individuals doing a PR but bonding and a sense of camaraderie.2. Are there plans for Go! St. Louis to expand, either in terms of the number of events <a href=http://www.buycelinebags.com/celine-luggage-43>Celine Luggage</a> or causes that you support?Lieverman: We will be celebrating our 15th anniversary, and we've always prided ourselves on being innovative and proactive. First and foremost, we believe that health and fitness improve quality of life in St.聽Louis. We started with one major event and blew that out to 10 events in one weekend. We started looking at other things that are fun and make a difference. What we want to do is grow what we have and create unique and different events. We've got our hands full with the trail run. We have four major events a year. We've worked with Cardinals Care the last four or five years. We also have youth programs. As a non-profit, we give back and re-invest in youth programs with about 15,000 kids in three youth initiatives.3. How much of an impact do you think the organization has had on the growth of the running community in St. Louis?Lieberman: I don't have a gauge, but I can say we certainly helped to create the second running boom in the city of St. Louis, resulting in all of these national runs coming in and wanting a piece of the pie. Our job is to stimulate the conversation in getting people off their duffs and getting them to have a more active lifestyle. In maintaining a steadfast approach, we hope we are having an impact.4. Did you have any expectation that Go! St. Louis would grow into what it has become?Lieberman: One of the beauties is that it was all about health and fitness. That's our only objective. That's what we're selling and it's the only thing we have to sell. We started the model that we have. When we started we didn't have deep pockets for sponsoring elite runners. It was about families and fitness and we've grown it that way. We maintain the mission and see what more we can do.5. You compete in a lot of events yourself and do a lot of traveling. What are some of your most memorable journeys?Lieberman: I love  traveling and exploring new countries. A lot of that exploration is through hiking. It's got to be mixed with learning different cultures and meeting people along with hiking. Kilimanjaro was a great experience because we hiked with many of the sherpas and many spoke English, so we learned a lot from them. Traveling serves both purposes of getting exercise and learning about people and culture. This year I qualified for my fourth (half Ironman) championships and what I'm looking forward to is that they're holding it in Canada for the first time.
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WASHINGTON Economists have long argued that a rising wealth gap has complicated the U.S. rebound from the Great Recession.Now, an analysis by the rating agency Standard & Poor's lends its weight to the argument: The widening gap between the wealthiest Americans and everyone else has made the economy more prone to boom-bust cycles and slowed the 5-year-old recovery from the recession.Economic disparities appear to be reaching extremes that "need to be watched because they're damaging to growth," said Beth Ann Bovino, chief U.S. economist at S&P.The rising concentration of income among the top 1 percent of earners has contributed to S&P's cutting its growth estimates for the economy. In part because of the disparity, it estimates that <a href=http://www.louisvuitton-pascher.com>Sac Louis vuitton</a> the economy will grow at a 2.5 percent annual pace in the next decade, down from a forecast five years ago of a 2.8 percent rate.The S&P report advises against using the tax code to try to narrow the gap. Instead, it suggests that greater access to education would help ease wealth disparities.Part of the problem is that educational achievement has stalled in recent decades. More schooling usually translates into higher wages. S&P estimates that the U.S. economy would grow annually by an additional half a percentage point or $105 billion over the next five years, if the average the American worker had completed just one more year <a href=http://www.louisvuitton-pascher.com>LOUIS VUITTON Site Officiel</a> of school.By contrast, S&P concludes, heavy taxes that would be meant to reduce inequality could remove incentives for people to work and cause businesses to hire fewer employees because of the costs involved.The report builds on data from the Congressional Budget Office, the International Monetary Fund and academic economists to explain how income disparities can hurt growth. Many consumers tend to become more dependent on debt to continue spending, thereby worsening the boom-bust cycle. Or they curb their spending, and growth improves only modestly, as it has during the current recovery.Tax data tracked as part of the World Top Incomes Database project reveal just how much the economic chasm has expanded.An American in the top 1 percent of earners had an average income of $1.3 million in 2012, the most recent year for which data are available. Average income jumps to $30.8 million for the top 0.01 percent.Adjusted for inflation, the top 0.01 percent's average earnings have jumped by a factor of seven since 1913. For the bottom 90 percent of Americans, average incomes after inflation have grown by a factor <a href=http://www.louisvuitton-pascher.com>LOUIS VUITTON Homme</a> of just three since 1917 and have declined for the past 13 years.Yet not all economists agree on how much, or even whether, the wealth gap slows growth.Harvard University economist Greg Mankiw wrote in a 2013 paper that "the evidence is that most of the very wealthy get that way by making substantial economic contributions, not by gaming the system."But S&P challenges the notion that a rising tide automatically will lift all boats:"A lifeboat carrying a few, surrounded by many treading water, risks capsizing," it argues.

Revision as of 07:22, 9 August 2014

@@@ WASHINGTON Economists have long argued that a rising wealth gap has complicated the U.S. rebound from the Great Recession.Now, an analysis by the rating agency Standard & Poor's lends its weight to the argument: The widening gap between the wealthiest Americans and everyone else has made the economy more prone to boom-bust cycles and slowed the 5-year-old recovery from the recession.Economic disparities appear to be reaching extremes that "need to be watched because they're damaging to growth," said Beth Ann Bovino, chief U.S. economist at S&P.The rising concentration of income among the top 1 percent of earners has contributed to S&P's cutting its growth estimates for the economy. In part because of the disparity, it estimates that <a href=http://www.louisvuitton-pascher.com>Sac Louis vuitton</a> the economy will grow at a 2.5 percent annual pace in the next decade, down from a forecast five years ago of a 2.8 percent rate.The S&P report advises against using the tax code to try to narrow the gap. Instead, it suggests that greater access to education would help ease wealth disparities.Part of the problem is that educational achievement has stalled in recent decades. More schooling usually translates into higher wages. S&P estimates that the U.S. economy would grow annually by an additional half a percentage point or $105 billion over the next five years, if the average the American worker had completed just one more year <a href=http://www.louisvuitton-pascher.com>LOUIS VUITTON Site Officiel</a> of school.By contrast, S&P concludes, heavy taxes that would be meant to reduce inequality could remove incentives for people to work and cause businesses to hire fewer employees because of the costs involved.The report builds on data from the Congressional Budget Office, the International Monetary Fund and academic economists to explain how income disparities can hurt growth. Many consumers tend to become more dependent on debt to continue spending, thereby worsening the boom-bust cycle. Or they curb their spending, and growth improves only modestly, as it has during the current recovery.Tax data tracked as part of the World Top Incomes Database project reveal just how much the economic chasm has expanded.An American in the top 1 percent of earners had an average income of $1.3 million in 2012, the most recent year for which data are available. Average income jumps to $30.8 million for the top 0.01 percent.Adjusted for inflation, the top 0.01 percent's average earnings have jumped by a factor of seven since 1913. For the bottom 90 percent of Americans, average incomes after inflation have grown by a factor <a href=http://www.louisvuitton-pascher.com>LOUIS VUITTON Homme</a> of just three since 1917 and have declined for the past 13 years.Yet not all economists agree on how much, or even whether, the wealth gap slows growth.Harvard University economist Greg Mankiw wrote in a 2013 paper that "the evidence is that most of the very wealthy get that way by making substantial economic contributions, not by gaming the system."But S&P challenges the notion that a rising tide automatically will lift all boats:"A lifeboat carrying a few, surrounded by many treading water, risks capsizing," it argues.

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