Sentences with phrase «economic policy circles»

Not exact matches

Aides do point to Carson's experience on corporate boards (which he says he will resign from now that he's running for president) and the business experience of members of his inner circle, such as Jeff Reeter, Carson's national finance chairman, a managing partner at Northwestern Mutual, as guideposts for his philosophy: the campaign's economic policy will be business - friendly.
Cohn's resignation sounded alarm bells in establishment circles in Washington and on Wall Street, where many viewed the former Goldman Sachs executive as a steadying influence on economic policy inside the Trump White House.
He criticized Cuomo's economic development policies, especially upstate - focused initiatives that he believes have benefited only those in the governor's circle of friends.
The disapproval of the Kingsbridge Armory project, which supporters say would have brought 2,200 jobs to the northern Bronx, not only set the Bloomberg administration's economic development agenda back, but it also assured some of the city's progressive circles that the council was ready to take up a broader living wage policy.
The idea of a scientist shortage is «almost universally accepted [in political circles], and there's almost no one in Washington and no one on the Hill who says that there's a glut of scientists,» says Ron Hira, a policy expert at the Rochester Institute of Technology in New York and a research associate at the Economic Policy Institute in Washingtonpolicy expert at the Rochester Institute of Technology in New York and a research associate at the Economic Policy Institute in WashingtonPolicy Institute in Washington, D.C.
«While globalization has created a great deal of debate in economic, policy, and grassroots circles, many aspects of the phenomenon remain unexplored.
With the paralysis of the climate treaty process and American legislation capping greenhouse gases, a direct focus on energy innovation as a climate, economic and security strategy is gaining some traction in policy circles.
San Francisco pols are ahead of the curve, proposing a gas tax — a close cousin of the carbon tax — to fight global warming... In policy circles, a carbon tax is a no brainer, embraced by lefties like Stark and conservatives like former Bush economic advisor Gregory Mankiw.
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