Published on
Friday, August 30, 2019
Sanders has introduced a $16.3
trillion Green New Deal plan to avert climate catastrophe and create 20 million
jobs in the process
The U.S. government took
decisive action and spent trillions
of dollars to bail out Wall Street banks in the midst of the 2008
financial crisis, but it has refused to do the same to rescue the planet from
climate catastrophe—a fact Sen. Bernie Sanders highlighted in a pithy tweet on
Friday.
"If the environment were
a bank," wrote the 2020 Democratic presidential candidate, "it would
have been saved already."
Estimates of the size of the
Wall Street bailout vary widely. When Federal Reserve loans are included in the
bailout figures, some estimates put the total number as
high as $29 trillion.
Sanders' Green New Deal plan,
which the senator released last
week, would aim to invest $16.3 trillion in a decade-long effort to transition
the U.S. economy to 100 percent renewable energy and create 20 million
well-paying union jobs.
According to the Sanders
campaign, the proposal would "pay for itself over 15 years" by hiking
taxes on the rich and large corporations, slashing military spending, and
boosting economic activity with massive public investment.
On top of the human costs of
climate inaction, the economic toll would be "unacceptable," the
Sanders campaign notes in
its Green New Deal platform.
"Economists estimate that
if we do not take action, we will lose $34.5 trillion in economic activity by
the end of the century," the platform states. "And the benefits are
enormous: by taking bold and decisive action, we will save $2.9 trillion over
10 years, $21 trillion over 30 years, and $70.4 trillion over 80 years."
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