Topic: Douglas Holtz-Eakin
Jim Tankersley writes, "If you bat .300, you're going to win the National League [batting title]. But if you bat .100 as an economist in D.C...
Chrysler deserves to be applauded this week for returning $7.6 billion in bailout cash it received during the economic crisis six years ahead of...
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republican lawmakers on Wednesday criticized the commission that investigated the 2007-2009 financial crisis for not producing a report that all of its members could endorse.The Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission was set up by Congress in May 2009 and it ...
As members of the House get set to vote on repealing the Obamacare--any time now-- many of the law's supporters say it will greatly impact the...
So the GOP alternative to the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission report is online: Financial Crisis Primer: Questions and Answers on the causes of...
article released on September 21, 2010 is "Analysis: According to Isabel Sawhill, "a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution", "If the conventional wisdom is right and Republicans do very well, then the president will not offer up more stimulus because HE KNOWS ...
The title of a recently released Yahoo! "For economist Douglas Holtz-Eakin, a (former) top adviser to 2008 GOP presidential nominee John McCain, "no one has the luxury of saying we're not going to worry about this. Again, we have to wonder ...
Growing deficits and higher debt lead to weakened creditworthiness, higher interest rates and higher inflation. But, Bill Gross is no stranger to metaphorical excess so let's not get hung up on that. But, Gross is suggesting that higher debt, deficits and ...
If John McCain were president, the current stimulus would look far different from the colossal, deficit-building spending scheme implemented by the administration of President Barack Obama.. So says the Arizona senator's campaign economic guru, Douglas Holtz-Eakin, who, post-election, is president of ...
Obama says adviser's remarks reinforce dangers of McCain health planBarack Obama's presidential campaign claimed Tuesday that comments by a top adviser to John McCain reinforced Obama's contention that millions would be worse off if they lose employer-sponsored health coverage ...