As the Wall Street Journal called our economic plan, supply-side economics for the working man, is resonating in Minnesota and here in Missouri and across this country.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
We are focused on Main Street, on supporting economic conditions - plentiful jobs and stable prices - that help all Americans.
We find that no matter what country we're in, if we hit the right economic notes and appeal to the mass market, we're able to build the business very, very rapidly.
On Wall Street, financial crisis destroys jobs. Here in Washington, it creates them. The rest is just details.
The business of America is business.
Economics is a strange science. Our subject deals with some of the most important as well as mundane issues that impinge on the human condition.
We can go back to economic plans that are only designed to benefit the wealthiest among us, like Mitt Romney. Or we can keep moving forward with President Obama's vision for a growing economy that works for middle-class families in North Carolina and all across the country. For me, for North Carolina and for America, it's an easy choice.
Under capitalism each individual engages in economic planning.
Although we work through financial markets, our goal is to help Main Street, not Wall Street.
From the 1970s, there has been a significant change in the U.S. economy, as planners, private and state, shifted it toward financialization and the offshoring of production, driven in part by the declining rate of profit in domestic manufacturing.
Narrative drives most of economics. Everything seems to be part of a story, and how that story is told often leads to critical error.
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