Skip to main content
University of California Press

About the Book

Examining why society should pool and spread the financial risk that individual families now bear.
 
Over the past sixty years, businesses and government have increasingly offloaded financial risk onto US households. The toll has pushed tens of millions of people to the financial breaking point, worsened social inequity, and jeopardized US democracy. In Sharing Risk, consumer advocate and scholar Patricia A. McCoy draws on the nation’s traditions of risk sharing to argue that society should lift up families by pooling and spreading the financial risks that they now must bear alone. 
 
Most policy discussions of financial stress on households look at the milestones of economic well-being in isolation: making ends meet, homeownership, quality health care, financing college, and a secure retirement. McCoy offers the first integrated examination of how risk sharing can enable families to realistically achieve all five goals without sacrificing one for another. She makes specific policy recommendations and shows how risk sharing, with its long and venerable history that includes Social Security and the Affordable Care Act, would provide economic well-being for all.

About the Author

Patricia A. McCoy, a founder of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, is Liberty Mutual Insurance Professor at Boston College Law School.

Reviews

"This book provides an amazing blueprint of policy changes necessary to build the America we all want to live in—where hard work pays off and people can take care of their families without constant financial worries. It offers both big ideas and immediately actionable policy changes to build our country into a place where all can thrive. Everyone involved in making policy should read this book, then act on something in it."—Gail Hillebrand, retired division leader of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau