Elizabeth Warren’s Economic Plan: Break Things That Are Fixed

Elizabeth Warren’s Economic Plan: Break Things That Are Fixed

Elizabeth Warren’s Economic Plan

As the presidential candidate known to have a sweeping plan for everything, Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s favorite and most overused phrase is “big, structural change.”​

​”Our country is in a time of crisis—the time for small ideas is over,” she said emphatically at a podium in June at the California Democratic Convention. “The entire structure of our system has favored the rich and the powerful, pick any issue you care about and it is painfully obvious.”​

​According to the 70-year-old Harvard Law School professor famous for grilling bank executives and spearheading the creation of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), America’s problems, like gun violence and the racial wealth gap, are all connected to one thing, and that is “power concentrated

in the hands of the wealthy and the well-connected.”

Her message is simple: the system is rigged and it must be broken and remade. Once seen as a radical philosophy, it appears the direction a section of voters may be leaning toward in response to the current administration and disappointment in other Democratic leaders.​

​Every candidate vying for the highest office will have their economic proposals scrutinized, but Warren’s understanding of how the world works means her economic plan is front and center, key to all her other plans and thus a significant part of her vision for the country. To her, the single biggest structural change America needs to create a more equitable, safe and prosperous society is of its financial and economic system. (It may also be why her agenda is one of the most detailed we have so far.)​

Big, Big, Big​

Warren has coined the term “economic patriotism” to describe a government prioritizing the interests of regular workers and middle-class people over those of the financial sector and giant, multinational corporations.​

​”For decades, Washington has lived by a simple rule: If it’s good for Wall Street, it’s good for the economy,” she wrote in a Medium post arguing that the financial sector has been sucking value out of the economy instead of benefiting it. If elected, the staunch opponent of easing post-crisis reform will target private equity firms so that they are “on the hook” for bad investments instead of exiting with tidy profits, expand postal banking for underserved families and appoint Fed governors that will introduce a real-time-payment system for everyday transfers

even if it hurts large banks. She also desires new executive compensation rules for the banking industry and a reenergized Financial Stability Oversight Council to monitor and curb leveraged corporate lending that has reached record levels. The “carried interest loophole” allows investment fund managers to count carried interest, or their share of the fund’s profit, as capital gains for taxation, and Warren plans to close it. also This is something President Trump has pledged to do as well.​

​Warren will also go after powerful monopolies in the tech, banking and agricultural sectors by reversing anti-competitive mergers, passing legislation so that large tech platforms, like Alphabet Inc.’s (GOOG) Google Search and Amazon.com Inc.’s (AMZN) Marketplace, are legally considered platform utilities, breaking up vertically integrated agribusinesses, like Tyson Foods Inc. (TYSN), and pushing for the passing of her 21st century Glass-Steagall Act, which would prevent investment banks from accessing taxpayer-subsidized insurance.​ She also supports cannabis legalization and banning for-profit prisons.​

Household debt and welfare​

Warren wants to slash household debt, which is at an all-time high, by raising wages and bringing down costs like rent, health care, child care, etc.. She would like to raise the federal minimum wage to $15, close the race and gender pay gap, and empower workers by supporting unions and allowing them to elect at least 40% of board members at large U.S. corporations.​

​Student debt has reached $1.5 trillion in the U.S., and Warren introduced a bill recently that would cancel $640 billion of it, helping 95% of the 45 million people burdened. She also wants to make tuition free at all public technical schools, two-year colleges, and four-year colleges.​

​Since the debt ceiling is a dogged concern, Warren wants to get rid of it or have it automatically

get raised based on the government’s spending decisions.​

​Warren says she will fight for a single-payer, Medicare for All system as was also proposed by rival Sen. Bernie Sanders. She says it would cost $52 trillion over a decade, including $20.5 trillion of new federal spending, and also save Americans $11 trillion over the same period. Providers, like doctors and hospitals, would receive smaller payments and drug prices would also be brought down

Trade and Manufacturing​

While Trump’s strategy for helping U.S. trade and manufacturing is quite simplistic and focused on fixing trade deficits with tariffs, Warren wants America’s trade policy to be dictated by the need to protect workers, farmers and the environment.​

​”America enters into trade negotiations with enormous leverage because America is the world’s most

attractive market,” she wrote in another Medium post referencing economic patriotism. “As President,

I won’t hand America’s leverage to big corporations to use for their own narrow purposes — I’ll use it

to create and defend good American jobs, raise wages and farm income, combat climate change, lower

drug prices, and raise living standards worldwide.” ​

​What does this look like in terms of policy?

Transparent trade negotiations with more involvement of the public, representatives from labor,

environmental, and consumer groups on advisory committees, labor and environmental standards

for trade partners, a multilateral agreement to protect domestic green policies from WTO challenges,

border carbon adjustment, reduced exclusivity periods for drugs in trade deals,

fair prices for American goods and country-of-origin labeling rules, enhanced border inspection

requirements for food imports, ending Investor-State Dispute Settlement (ISDS), laws ensuring imposed

duties benefit workers, a new federal office to promote American clean energy products abroad etc.

She also believes in preparing the American economy for the possibility of a no-deal Brexit.​

​When it comes to manufacturing, Warren proposes a Green Manufacturing Plan that would see the

government invest $2 trillion over the next ten years in green research, manufacturing, and exporting.

We’ll look at how she plans to pay for this and other plans in the next section.​​

How she will pay for all of it​

Warren’s Green Manufacturing Plan would be paid for with a Real Corporate Profits Tax that would

prevent corporations from abusing loopholes. Under this plan, large U.S. companies that report more

than $100 million in profits (domestic and foreign) to investors would be charged 7% on every dollar

of profit above it in addition to its liabilities under the current tax laws. Research by left-leaning

University of California-Berkeley economists cited by Warren’s campaign says this tax would

raise $1 trillion in ten years.​

​When it comes to her health care plan, Warren promises

“not one penny in middle-class tax increases. A new Employer Medicare Contribution program would raise $8.8 trillion. Companies would send 98% of the amount they usually spend on employee health insurance to the federal government. Businesses with less than 50 employees would be exempt unless they already pay for health care, and

large companies with extremely high executive compensation and stock buyback rates would contribute more.​

​The rest of the money would be raised through a variety of ways including better tax enforcement, tax on the

higher take-home pay of employees, a tax on financial transactions, fees on large banks, a minimum 35% tax

on foreign corporate earnings, eliminating accelerated depreciation of assets of companies and a wealth tax.​

​Warren’s proposed Wealth Tax legislation is also a new concept to most Americans. Essentially an additional tax of 2-6% on household net worth over $50 million, it is expected to raise $3 trillion over ten years and affect 0.1% of the population. Enforcement would require additional investments in the IRS.​​

How much attention should we be paying?​

Although she was an underdog by most standards, Warren’s campaign has gained ground, and her numbers have been steadily improving. She came in second place in the October-November YouGov, NBC News/Wall Street Journal and Fox News polls. A July PerryUndem survey of close to 2000 Democrats reported on by Vox suggested that the strongest candidate in the party is Warren. Her campaign, which has refused donations from PACs or federally registered lobbyists, has raised over $60 million.​

​Even if she fails in her bid to win the Democratic primary, some of her more popular ideas could

be adopted by other candidates paying attention to what resonates with voters. Should Warren

remain a senator, it’s possible her campaign will be as impactful as her career so far.​

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