Experts

Matt Miller

Senior Fellow, Center For American Progress

Right now, businesses approach all their issues as if they were in a silo. We need to see more integrated approaches that recognize the interconnectedness of the world's problems. Read More

The author talks about the many woes facing newspapers and magazines. Read More

The author says he isn’t doing anything all that innovative. Read More

Forbes editor Matt Miller envisions the post-crisis CEO. Read More

The author scopes the economic rise of the East. Read More

The author talks about innovation and the auto industry’s dire straits. Read More

The author says the ambiguity of changing jobs is something college graduates should be comfortable with. Read More

Matt Miller on finding reconciliation in the heathcare debate. Read More

The author talks about reframing how we see ourselves vis-à-vis the globe. Read More

The author sees an opportunity in a tax on carbon. Read More

The author says overseas ideas will inevitably influence the United States moving forward. Read More

The author shares his vision for a better education system. Read More

Matt Miller on big government and high taxes. Read More

The idea that the US has an economic meritocracy is a fallacy, the author says. Read More

Matt Miller on the rising costs of baby boomers Read More

Matt Miller on incubating skepticism. Read More

The author explains his approach to identifying the dead ideas we love. Read More

About Matt Miller

Matt Miller

Matt Miller is a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress; a contributing editor at Fortune; and the host of "Left, Right & Center," public radio's popular week-in-review program. Miller's first book, The Two Percent Solution: Fixing America's Problems In Ways Liberals And Conservatives Can Love, was published in 2003, and was a Los Angeles Times bestseller. His latest book, The Tyranny Of Dead Ideas, was published by Henry Holt/Times Books in January 2009. Miller served as Senior Advisor to the Director of the Office of Management and Budget from 1993 to 1995. He lives with his family in Los Angeles.

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