Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Tier 4 — Narrative / commentaryIndustry / policy report

Between the Green New Deal and Business-as-Almost-Usual: A Clean Energy Stimulus That Suits the Circumstances

David M. Hart

2020

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Summary

This 2020 policy report by David M. Hart, published by ITIF (Information Technology and Innovation Foundation), examines the design of clean energy stimulus in the context of post-pandemic economic recovery. The paper appears to position itself between two poles: the more transformative ambitions of a Green New Deal framework and a business-as-usual approach, analysing intermediate policy design options. As suggested by the title and source, the work likely addresses how clean energy stimulus can balance ambition with practical economic constraints.

UK applicability

The paper's focus on United States stimulus policy design and sectoral economic trade-offs has limited direct applicability to UK conditions, though comparative analysis of stimulus design principles may inform UK policy discussions around green recovery and clean energy investment frameworks.

Key measures

Policy framework comparisons; economic stimulus design criteria; sectoral coverage and investment scope

Outcomes reported

The paper examines alternative approaches to clean energy stimulus policy, positioning itself between more ambitious green transformation and incremental business-focused approaches. It appears to assess policy design options and their economic and sectoral implications.

Theme
Policy, governance & rights
Subject
Food & agricultural policy
Study type
Policy
Study design
Policy report
Source type
Industry/policy report
Status
Published
Geography
United States
System type
Other
Catalogue ID
BFmokjo2nj-g97bc5

Topic tags

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