Policy: Trump's policies might be described as populist - nationalist; his support of such ideas as a Muslim travel ban, border wall,
massive spending on infrastructure, and limited engagement with other countries, is in conflict with traditional GOPE priorities.
Not exact matches
A great deal of
spending on infrastructure, the One Belt One Road for example, which is a
massive infrastructure project — trillions of dollars a year for the next ten years, and they are building roads, essentially think of Marco Polo
on a bullet train, and that's what we're seeing.
This is further evidence that telecom players have a tough time competing in the
massive public cloud space, where Amazon, Google, and Microsoft
spend multiple billions of dollars a year
on key
infrastructure.
From November
on, Wall Street's excitement over Trump's campaign promises to greatly increase
infrastructure spending and build a
massive wall across the border to Mexico led to huge stock gains.
It is also fair to point out that this move continues a three - or four - year long period in which the biggest public cloud providers got bigger by virtue of
massive spending on their own data center
infrastructure and smaller players scrambled to stay relevant.
On the
spending side of the ledger, the priorities have been agriculture support (after two weak monsoons), rural development
spending,
infrastructure investments and a
massive structural shift to direct benefit transfers deposited in the bank accounts of beneficiaries — made possible by the extraordinary biometric identity card program (Aadhaar) covering 950 million people, and the impressive financial inclusion initiative which has opened over 200 million new bank accounts for impoverished families.
Oil - rich Qatar is
spending heavily
on infrastructure, even as it goes deeper into debt, claiming the
massive spending is aimed at creating a knowledge - based economy.
After his re-election in 2014, Cuomo reinvented himself as a full - throated economic populist, pushing through a minimum wage hike and a paid family leave program, and unveiling
massive infrastructure spending plans and a proposal for free public college tuition — though he has been light
on details about funding.
New & required capital
spending on infrastructure will inevitably demand
massive private, or public - private, investment.
Still any movement towards
massive infrastructure spending and tax cuts will lead to inflationary pressures
on the U.S. economy and this could mean additional rate increases by Federal Reserve Chair, Janet Yellen.