It's Still the Economy, Stupid (e-bog) af Begala, Paul
Begala, Paul (forfatter)

It's Still the Economy, Stupid e-bog

96,23 DKK (inkl. moms 120,29 DKK)
When he took office in 2001, George W. Bush inherited the strongest economy in American history. He inherited the largest federal budget surplus in American history -- and the prospect of paying off the entire national debt in just eight years. He inherited a strong dollar and sound fiscal policy. He inherited a nation whose economy was so strong that commentators who just a decade before were ...
E-bog 96,23 DKK
Forfattere Begala, Paul (forfatter)
Udgivet 11 maj 2010
Længde 208 sider
Genrer Politics and government
Sprog English
Format epub
Beskyttelse LCP
ISBN 9781439130551
When he took office in 2001, George W. Bush inherited the strongest economy in American history. He inherited the largest federal budget surplus in American history -- and the prospect of paying off the entire national debt in just eight years. He inherited a strong dollar and sound fiscal policy. He inherited a nation whose economy was so strong that commentators who just a decade before were predicting American decline were now complaining about American dominance.And yet, Dubya blew it. Squandered everything he'd inherited from President Clinton.We thought if Junior was good at anything, it was inheriting things.It's Still the Economy, Stupid is the story of how America's CEO -- our first MBA president -- has trashed our economy. It shows: How he wasted the surplus on massive tax cuts for the hyper-rich. How he talked down the economy for his short-term political gain, then passed an economic program that has put 1.8 million Americans out of work and cost investors $4.4 trillion. How he abandoned his free-trade rhetoric to adopt protectionist tariffs, effectively raising taxes on consumers. How he walked away from needed investments in education, training, and all the things that make us smarter, safer, and stronger economically. How he plans to go on from here to cripple Social Security and to allow the privileged to avoid even more taxes.It makes you wonder: What do they teach you at Harvard Business School?