Economy
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9/6/2011 | Economy
CNS News
The real unemployment rate actually rose in August, according to the Department of Labor, belying the fact that the official unemployment rate, 9.1 percent, remained flat while the economy did not create any new jobs on net last month.
According to the data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, real unemployment rose to 16.2 percent in August, up from 16.1 percent in July and tying the 2011 record set in June.
The real unemployment rate is comprised of three different measures of the labor force that more accurately reflect who is really unemployed, as opposed to the official unemployment rate, which merely measures those who told the government they were unemployed and looking for work in the past month.
The real unemployment rate is comprised of the official unemployment rate, those employed part-time because they cannot find full-time work, and those marginally attached to the labor force: people who have stopped looking for work but would return to the labor force if jobs were available.
Recommended Guests:
Barry Asmus, Senior Economist, National Center for Policy Analysis
David Bossie, President, Citizens United
Dan Celia, Host, "Financial Issues Live" Radio Program
Phil Clements, Managing Director, Center for Christian Business Ethics Today, LLC.
Ward Connerly, Author/Founder and Chairman, American Civil Rights Institute
William Devlin, National President, Redeem The Vote
James Edwards, Cofounder, Olive, Edwards, & Cooper, LLC
Joseph Farah, CEO, Founder, WorldNetDaily
James Gelfand, Senior Manager of Health Policy, U.S. Chamber of Commerce
Lou Giuliano, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer (r, ITT Corporation
Colin Hanna, Colin Hanna, President, Let Freedom Ring USA
Lowman Henry, Chairman & CEO, Lincoln Institute of Public Opinion Research, Inc.
Larry Hunter, President, The Social Security Institute
Phillip Kim, Assistant Professor of Management and Human Resour, University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Business
Joe Murray, Columnist, The Bulletin
Grover Norquist, President, Americans for Tax Reform (ATR)
Chuck Stetson, Co-founder and Managing Director, PEI Funds
Tony Strickland, Taxpayer Advocate
John Weiser, Board Member, Westminster Theological Seminary , In Medias Res
9/6/2011 | Economy
The Hill.com
Looking ahead to the president’s jobs address, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce sent an open letter to the White House and lawmakers Monday identifying measures which it says will boost employment and help stimulate the struggling economy.
Chamber President Thomas Donohue called on the administration and lawmakers to pass pending trade deals, increase spending on infrastructure, ease restrictions on oil drilling and provide temporary tax breaks to corporations.
“There are specific steps Congress and the administration can take right now to spur faster job growth in America’s private sector without adding to the deficit,” wrote Donohue in the letter.
But while many of the measures proposed by the Chamber overlap with ideas floated by the administration, there are also key differences.
Recommended Guests:
Barry Asmus, Senior Economist, National Center for Policy Analysis
David Bossie, President, Citizens United
Dan Celia, Host, "Financial Issues Live" Radio Program
Phil Clements, Managing Director, Center for Christian Business Ethics Today, LLC.
Ward Connerly, Author/Founder and Chairman, American Civil Rights Institute
William Devlin, National President, Redeem The Vote
James Edwards, Cofounder, Olive, Edwards, & Cooper, LLC
Joseph Farah, CEO, Founder, WorldNetDaily
James Gelfand, Senior Manager of Health Policy, U.S. Chamber of Commerce
Lou Giuliano, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer (r, ITT Corporation
Colin Hanna, Colin Hanna, President, Let Freedom Ring USA
Lowman Henry, Chairman & CEO, Lincoln Institute of Public Opinion Research, Inc.
Larry Hunter, President, The Social Security Institute
Phillip Kim, Assistant Professor of Management and Human Resour, University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Business
Joe Murray, Columnist, The Bulletin
Grover Norquist, President, Americans for Tax Reform (ATR)
Chuck Stetson, Co-founder and Managing Director, PEI Funds
Tony Strickland, Taxpayer Advocate
John Weiser, Board Member, Westminster Theological Seminary , In Medias Res
9/1/2011 | Economy, Energy Policy, Oil and Gas
CNS News
In its Final Environmental Impact Statement (FEIS) on the Keystone XL pipeline, which would create thousands of jobs and transport 830,000 barrels of oil a day from Canada to Oklahoma and Texas, a State Department official said its investigation found “no significant impact to most resources” along the path of the 1,700-mile project. But the State Department also said the pipeline could adversely affect the American Burying Beetle, an endangered species.
Kerri-Ann Jones, assistant secretary of the Bureau of Oceans and International Environmental and Scientific Affairs at the State Department, said during an Aug. 26 conference call with reporters that there could be some impact on the bettle’s habitat. The bug was listed as endangered under the Endangered Species Act in 1989.
“The FEIS does have a summary of findings, and what that summary states is that there would be no significant impact to most resources along the proposed pipeline corridor,” Jones said in answering a question from a Washington Post.
Recommended Guests:
Barry Asmus, Senior Economist, National Center for Policy Analysis
David Bossie, President, Citizens United
Dan Celia, Host, "Financial Issues Live" Radio Program
Phil Clements, Managing Director, Center for Christian Business Ethics Today, LLC.
Ward Connerly, Author/Founder and Chairman, American Civil Rights Institute
William Devlin, National President, Redeem The Vote
James Edwards, Cofounder, Olive, Edwards, & Cooper, LLC
Joseph Farah, CEO, Founder, WorldNetDaily
James Gelfand, Senior Manager of Health Policy, U.S. Chamber of Commerce
Lou Giuliano, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer (r, ITT Corporation
Colin Hanna, Colin Hanna, President, Let Freedom Ring USA
Lowman Henry, Chairman & CEO, Lincoln Institute of Public Opinion Research, Inc.
Larry Hunter, President, The Social Security Institute
Phillip Kim, Assistant Professor of Management and Human Resour, University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Business
Joe Murray, Columnist, The Bulletin
Grover Norquist, President, Americans for Tax Reform (ATR)
Chuck Stetson, Co-founder and Managing Director, PEI Funds
Tony Strickland, Taxpayer Advocate
John Weiser, Board Member, Westminster Theological Seminary , In Medias Res
8/29/2011 | Economy
CNS News
Speaking in Jackson Hole, Wyo., yesterday at an economic symposium sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said that the economic recovery in the United States had proved to be “even weaker” than the Federal Open Market Committee had originally thought it was.
Bernanke also reiterated that the committee had recently lowered its expectations for economic growth in the coming quarters.
“[I]t is clear that the recovery from the crisis has been much less robust than we had hoped,” Bernanke said. “From the latest comprehensive revisions to the national accounts as well as the most recent estimates of growth in the first half of this year, we have learned that the recession was even deeper and the recovery even weaker than we had thought; indeed, aggregate output in the United States still has not returned to the level that it attained before the crisis. Importantly, economic growth has for the most part been at rates insufficient to achieve sustained reductions in unemployment, which has recently been fluctuating a bit above 9 percent.”
Recommended Guests:
Barry Asmus, Senior Economist, National Center for Policy Analysis
David Bossie, President, Citizens United
Dan Celia, Host, "Financial Issues Live" Radio Program
Phil Clements, Managing Director, Center for Christian Business Ethics Today, LLC.
Ward Connerly, Author/Founder and Chairman, American Civil Rights Institute
William Devlin, National President, Redeem The Vote
James Edwards, Cofounder, Olive, Edwards, & Cooper, LLC
Joseph Farah, CEO, Founder, WorldNetDaily
James Gelfand, Senior Manager of Health Policy, U.S. Chamber of Commerce
Lou Giuliano, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer (r, ITT Corporation
Colin Hanna, Colin Hanna, President, Let Freedom Ring USA
Lowman Henry, Chairman & CEO, Lincoln Institute of Public Opinion Research, Inc.
Larry Hunter, President, The Social Security Institute
Phillip Kim, Assistant Professor of Management and Human Resour, University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Business
Joe Murray, Columnist, The Bulletin
Grover Norquist, President, Americans for Tax Reform (ATR)
Chuck Stetson, Co-founder and Managing Director, PEI Funds
Tony Strickland, Taxpayer Advocate
John Weiser, Board Member, Westminster Theological Seminary , In Medias Res
8/25/2011 | Economy
Super-low interest rates haven't done what they usually do after a recession. They haven't ignited economic growth or revived the home market or persuaded consumers to spend freely again.
They have, though, caused misery for retirees and others who depend on interest income. Such income plummeted 27 percent from 2008 to last year.
Now, some economists worry that low rates might be hurting the economy itself -- defeating the purpose of the Federal Reserve's low-rate policies. When savers earn less, they spend less. And spending by individuals drives about 70 percent of the U.S. economy.
Those concerns arise 2 1/2 years after the Fed pushed short-term rates to near zero, part of an effort to combat the gravest recession since the 1930s. It's kept rates there since.
The Fed is "turning the faucet, and nothing's coming out," says William Ford, a former president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta. "I don't see any pluses on the plus side of the ledger ... But they're ignoring the strong negative effect that they're having. They're killing savers. Retirees are earning nothing on their life savings."
The Fed this month announced plans to keep short-term rates near zero through mid-2013 unless the economy improves. And in a speech Friday, Chairman Ben Bernanke will likely lay out options for lowering long-term rates even further below the current near-record lows.
Recommended Guests:
Barry Asmus, Senior Economist, National Center for Policy Analysis
David Bossie, President, Citizens United
Dan Celia, Host, "Financial Issues Live" Radio Program
Phil Clements, Managing Director, Center for Christian Business Ethics Today, LLC.
Ward Connerly, Author/Founder and Chairman, American Civil Rights Institute
William Devlin, National President, Redeem The Vote
James Edwards, Cofounder, Olive, Edwards, & Cooper, LLC
Joseph Farah, CEO, Founder, WorldNetDaily
James Gelfand, Senior Manager of Health Policy, U.S. Chamber of Commerce
Lou Giuliano, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer (r, ITT Corporation
Colin Hanna, Colin Hanna, President, Let Freedom Ring USA
Lowman Henry, Chairman & CEO, Lincoln Institute of Public Opinion Research, Inc.
Larry Hunter, President, The Social Security Institute
Phillip Kim, Assistant Professor of Management and Human Resour, University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Business
Joe Murray, Columnist, The Bulletin
Grover Norquist, President, Americans for Tax Reform (ATR)
Chuck Stetson, Co-founder and Managing Director, PEI Funds
Tony Strickland, Taxpayer Advocate
John Weiser, Board Member, Westminster Theological Seminary , In Medias Res
8/24/2011 | Economy
CNS News
Rep. Louie Gohmert (R-Texas) will not vote for a balanced budget amendment proposal unless it includes a cap on federal spending. However, he is undecided whether the amendment absolutely must require a supermajority of Congress to approve a tax hike for him to support it.
“The most important element is the cap on spending,” Gohmert told CNSNews.com. “If there is no cap on spending, then the balanced budget amendment is a formula for ever- increasing spending and ever-increasing taxing that will just spiral upward and upward again. So there’s got to be included a cap on spending, and best if it’s related to a percentage of GDP. But, absolutely, if there is no cap on spending, I could not vote for it.”
Recommended Guests:
Barry Asmus, Senior Economist, National Center for Policy Analysis
David Bossie, President, Citizens United
Dan Celia, Host, "Financial Issues Live" Radio Program
Phil Clements, Managing Director, Center for Christian Business Ethics Today, LLC.
Ward Connerly, Author/Founder and Chairman, American Civil Rights Institute
William Devlin, National President, Redeem The Vote
James Edwards, Cofounder, Olive, Edwards, & Cooper, LLC
Joseph Farah, CEO, Founder, WorldNetDaily
James Gelfand, Senior Manager of Health Policy, U.S. Chamber of Commerce
Lou Giuliano, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer (r, ITT Corporation
Colin Hanna, Colin Hanna, President, Let Freedom Ring USA
Lowman Henry, Chairman & CEO, Lincoln Institute of Public Opinion Research, Inc.
Larry Hunter, President, The Social Security Institute
Phillip Kim, Assistant Professor of Management and Human Resour, University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Business
Joe Murray, Columnist, The Bulletin
Grover Norquist, President, Americans for Tax Reform (ATR)
Chuck Stetson, Co-founder and Managing Director, PEI Funds
Tony Strickland, Taxpayer Advocate
John Weiser, Board Member, Westminster Theological Seminary , In Medias Res
8/23/2011 | Economy
As a "supercommittee" tries to find $1.5 trillion in new deficit cuts this fall, Republicans will be pressing a far more ambitious goal: passing an amendment to the Constitution to require a balanced federal budget.
The idea is being pushed most forcefully by conservative activists eager to shrink the government and its spending but disappointed with the results they've achieved so far in Washington, where Democrats control both the White House and the Senate.
"Spending cuts and caps are steps in the right direction," said Rep. Pete Sessions, R-Texas. But a balanced budget amendment is "the only permanent solution to control government spending and end our nation's spending-driven debt crisis," Sessions said.
Recommended Guests:
Barry Asmus, Senior Economist, National Center for Policy Analysis
David Bossie, President, Citizens United
Dan Celia, Host, "Financial Issues Live" Radio Program
Phil Clements, Managing Director, Center for Christian Business Ethics Today, LLC.
Ward Connerly, Author/Founder and Chairman, American Civil Rights Institute
William Devlin, National President, Redeem The Vote
James Edwards, Cofounder, Olive, Edwards, & Cooper, LLC
Joseph Farah, CEO, Founder, WorldNetDaily
James Gelfand, Senior Manager of Health Policy, U.S. Chamber of Commerce
Lou Giuliano, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer (r, ITT Corporation
Colin Hanna, Colin Hanna, President, Let Freedom Ring USA
Lowman Henry, Chairman & CEO, Lincoln Institute of Public Opinion Research, Inc.
Larry Hunter, President, The Social Security Institute
Phillip Kim, Assistant Professor of Management and Human Resour, University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Business
Joe Murray, Columnist, The Bulletin
Grover Norquist, President, Americans for Tax Reform (ATR)
Chuck Stetson, Co-founder and Managing Director, PEI Funds
Tony Strickland, Taxpayer Advocate
John Weiser, Board Member, Westminster Theological Seminary , In Medias Res
8/23/2011 | Economy
Associated Press
A new survey says salaried U.S. workers can expect another year of modest raises in 2012.
After increasing salaries by 2.6 percent this year and last year, companies are planning a 2.8 percent bump in 2012, benefits and human resources consultancy Towers Watson reported Monday.
That's somewhat smaller than raises in the last decade. From 2000 to 2006, the year before the Great Recession began, salaries rose an average 3.9 percent for workers who were not executives.
And the modest bump may not help add much buying power for shoppers. In the 12 months through July, prices for consumers have risen 3.6 percent, according to the government's latest calculations.
Salary increases have been small, even though many companies are sitting on huge cash stockpiles. They're being conservative with permanent salary hikes because of uncertainty about the economy and memories of the deep cuts during the recession, said Laura Sejen of Towers Watson
Recommended Guests:
Barry Asmus, Senior Economist, National Center for Policy Analysis
David Bossie, President, Citizens United
Dan Celia, Host, "Financial Issues Live" Radio Program
Phil Clements, Managing Director, Center for Christian Business Ethics Today, LLC.
Ward Connerly, Author/Founder and Chairman, American Civil Rights Institute
William Devlin, National President, Redeem The Vote
James Edwards, Cofounder, Olive, Edwards, & Cooper, LLC
Joseph Farah, CEO, Founder, WorldNetDaily
James Gelfand, Senior Manager of Health Policy, U.S. Chamber of Commerce
Lou Giuliano, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer (r, ITT Corporation
Colin Hanna, Colin Hanna, President, Let Freedom Ring USA
Lowman Henry, Chairman & CEO, Lincoln Institute of Public Opinion Research, Inc.
Larry Hunter, President, The Social Security Institute
Phillip Kim, Assistant Professor of Management and Human Resour, University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Business
Joe Murray, Columnist, The Bulletin
Grover Norquist, President, Americans for Tax Reform (ATR)
Chuck Stetson, Co-founder and Managing Director, PEI Funds
Tony Strickland, Taxpayer Advocate
John Weiser, Board Member, Westminster Theological Seminary , In Medias Res
8/19/2011 | Economy, Governmental Control
CNS News
The Obama Administration’s new fuel economy standards will cause the retail price of average motor vehicles to increase over $11,000, according to a study conducted by the Center for Automotive Research.
“A fuel economy standard of 37.6 mpg is associated with a price increase of $5,244, 18.1 percent higher than the 2009 National Automobile Dealers Association (NADA) average price of $28,966. A fuel economy standard of 40.8 mpg is associated with a price increase of $6,770, 23.4 percent higher than the 2009 NADA price,” says their report called, “The U.S. Automotive Market and Industry in 2025.”
“A fuel economy standard of 44.8 mpg is associated with a price increase of $8,214, 28.4 percent higher than the 2009 NADA price. The fourth fuel economy standard of 49.6 mpg is associated with an $11,290 increase in retail price. It is assumed that manufacturers and dealers will pass on the cost increase in fuel economy and safety technology to the consumer, at a retail price equivalent.”
The Obama administration’s new fuel economy standards would require automakers to produce cars and light trucks with an average fuel economy of 54.5 mpg by 2025. The Center for Automotive Research says their study is “the result of 11 months of effort and investigation by researchers at CAR in 2010-2011.”
Recommended Guests:
Barry Asmus, Senior Economist, National Center for Policy Analysis
David Bossie, President, Citizens United
Dan Celia, Host, "Financial Issues Live" Radio Program
Phil Clements, Managing Director, Center for Christian Business Ethics Today, LLC.
Chuck Colson, Prison Fellowship
Ward Connerly, Author/Founder and Chairman, American Civil Rights Institute
Tom DeLay, Former House Majority Leader, United States House of Representatives
William Devlin, National President, Redeem The Vote
Chuck Donovan, Senior Research Fellow-DeVos Center for Religion a, The Heritage Foundation
James Edwards, Cofounder, Olive, Edwards, & Cooper, LLC
Steve Elliott, President, Grassfire.org
Joseph Farah, CEO, Founder, WorldNetDaily
Frank Gaffney, Founder and President , Center for Security Policy
James Gelfand, Senior Manager of Health Policy, U.S. Chamber of Commerce
Lou Giuliano, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer (r, ITT Corporation
Rick Green, President, Torch of Freedom Foundation
Colin Hanna, Colin Hanna, President, Let Freedom Ring USA
Lowman Henry, Chairman & CEO, Lincoln Institute of Public Opinion Research, Inc.
Larry Hunter, President, The Social Security Institute
Phillip Kim, Assistant Professor of Management and Human Resour, University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Business
Cliff Kincaid, President, America's Survival, Inc.
Jennifer Marshall, Director of Domestic Policy Studies, The Heritage Foundation
Gary Marx, Executive Director, Judicial Confirmation Network
Ryan Messmore, William E. Simon fellow in Religion and a Free Soc, The Heritage Foundation
Joe Murray, Columnist, The Bulletin
Grover Norquist, President, Americans for Tax Reform (ATR)
Phyllis Schlafly, President and Founder, Eagle Forum
Chuck Stetson, Co-founder and Managing Director, PEI Funds
Tony Strickland, Taxpayer Advocate
Lorianne Updike, President & Executive Director, The Constitutional Sources Project
John Weiser, Board Member, Westminster Theological Seminary , In Medias Res
8/18/2011 | China, Economy
The Washington Post
China’s new rich love luxury products — imported French handbags, Italian sports cars — and even more, they love to show off their bling.
That seems to be creating headaches for China’s Communist rulers, who after three decades of exhorting their subjects to get rich are facing growing discontent over a widening income gap. Officials now talk about making sure wealth is more evenly distributed, and how to get the rich to tone it down.
As the global economy melts down, and China tries to accelerate its shift to a more consumer-led growth model, Beijing’s leaders see luxury items as a lucrative revenue source. Many Chinese now buy luxury products in Hong Kong or abroad to avoid China’s high taxes, so officials are debating a move to slash tariffs to encourage consumers to shop at home.
But government is loath to be seen as taking any new measures to support the sliver of the population that can afford that pricey new Hermes bag or latest Ferrari, and has delayed any decision on cutting tariffs, according to Chinese media reports and industry analysts.
Recommended Guests:
Barry Asmus, Senior Economist, National Center for Policy Analysis
David Bossie, President, Citizens United
Dan Celia, Host, "Financial Issues Live" Radio Program
Phil Clements, Managing Director, Center for Christian Business Ethics Today, LLC.
Ward Connerly, Author/Founder and Chairman, American Civil Rights Institute
William Devlin, National President, Redeem The Vote
James Edwards, Cofounder, Olive, Edwards, & Cooper, LLC
Joseph Farah, CEO, Founder, WorldNetDaily
James Gelfand, Senior Manager of Health Policy, U.S. Chamber of Commerce
Lou Giuliano, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer (r, ITT Corporation
Colin Hanna, Colin Hanna, President, Let Freedom Ring USA
Lowman Henry, Chairman & CEO, Lincoln Institute of Public Opinion Research, Inc.
Larry Hunter, President, The Social Security Institute
Phillip Kim, Assistant Professor of Management and Human Resour, University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Business
Joe Murray, Columnist, The Bulletin
Grover Norquist, President, Americans for Tax Reform (ATR)
Chuck Stetson, Co-founder and Managing Director, PEI Funds
Tony Strickland, Taxpayer Advocate
John Weiser, Board Member, Westminster Theological Seminary , In Medias Res
8/17/2011 | Economy
CNS News
Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack repeated the White House claim that food stamps and other forms of government welfare are stimulus programs in disguise, stating that when government gives out money, it is creating jobs.
“But I should point out that when you talk about the SNAP program or the food stamp program, you have to recognize that it’s also an economic stimulus,” Vilsack said Tuesday on MSNBC’s Morning Joe program. (SNAP is the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.)
“If people are able to buy a little more in the grocery store, then someone has to stock it, shelve it, process it, package it, ship it,” he said. “All of those are jobs. It’s the most direct stimulus you can get in the economy during these tough times.”
Recommended Guests:
Barry Asmus, Senior Economist, National Center for Policy Analysis
David Bossie, President, Citizens United
Dan Celia, Host, "Financial Issues Live" Radio Program
Phil Clements, Managing Director, Center for Christian Business Ethics Today, LLC.
Ward Connerly, Author/Founder and Chairman, American Civil Rights Institute
William Devlin, National President, Redeem The Vote
James Edwards, Cofounder, Olive, Edwards, & Cooper, LLC
Joseph Farah, CEO, Founder, WorldNetDaily
James Gelfand, Senior Manager of Health Policy, U.S. Chamber of Commerce
Lou Giuliano, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer (r, ITT Corporation
Colin Hanna, Colin Hanna, President, Let Freedom Ring USA
Lowman Henry, Chairman & CEO, Lincoln Institute of Public Opinion Research, Inc.
Larry Hunter, President, The Social Security Institute
Phillip Kim, Assistant Professor of Management and Human Resour, University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Business
Joe Murray, Columnist, The Bulletin
Grover Norquist, President, Americans for Tax Reform (ATR)
Chuck Stetson, Co-founder and Managing Director, PEI Funds
Tony Strickland, Taxpayer Advocate
John Weiser, Board Member, Westminster Theological Seminary , In Medias Res
8/17/2011 | Economy, Healthcare
The Washington Times
The Massachusetts health care law signed five years ago by then-Gov. Mitt Romney has extended insurance coverage to most residents, but health care premiums continued to outpace inflation by rising an average of 5-10 percent each year and lawmakers face the challenge of how to pay for it all.
The program has done nothing to contain health care costs, and some are questioning its sustainability.
Recommended Guests:
Barry Asmus, Senior Economist, National Center for Policy Analysis
Michael Barry, Director of Pastoral Care, Cancer Treatment Centers of America in Phila.
David Bossie, President, Citizens United
Twila Brase, President and Co-founder, Citizens' Council on Healthcare Freedom
Dan Celia, Host, "Financial Issues Live" Radio Program
Phil Clements, Managing Director, Center for Christian Business Ethics Today, LLC.
Ward Connerly, Author/Founder and Chairman, American Civil Rights Institute
Marjorie Dannenfelser, President and Chairman of the Board, Susan B. Anthony List
William Devlin, National President, Redeem The Vote
James Edwards, Cofounder, Olive, Edwards, & Cooper, LLC
Joseph Farah, CEO, Founder, WorldNetDaily
James Gelfand, Senior Manager of Health Policy, U.S. Chamber of Commerce
Lou Giuliano, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer (r, ITT Corporation
Colin Hanna, Colin Hanna, President, Let Freedom Ring USA
Lowman Henry, Chairman & CEO, Lincoln Institute of Public Opinion Research, Inc.
Larry Hunter, President, The Social Security Institute
Phillip Kim, Assistant Professor of Management and Human Resour, University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Business
Joe Murray, Columnist, The Bulletin
Grover Norquist, President, Americans for Tax Reform (ATR)
Chuck Stetson, Co-founder and Managing Director, PEI Funds
Tony Strickland, Taxpayer Advocate
John Weiser, Board Member, Westminster Theological Seminary , In Medias Res
8/15/2011 | Economy, Healthcare
OneNewsNow
Last year's numbers from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services show that fraud is getting out of hand, as the Medicare program handed out $48 billion in improper payments that represent nearly 40 percent of all government waste reported by federal agencies.
Dr. J. Scott Ries, vice president of the Christian Medical Association (CMA), acknowledges that some healthcare providers are dishonest. But as one who once had a private practice, Ries estimates that at least 50 percent of inappropriate charges come from honest mistakes due to the ''endless paperwork of government-run insurance."
"It can be a little bit like trying to cut down Sherwood Forest with a pocket knife," he compares.
Dr. J. Scott RiesThe CMA vice president recognizes the need for a system of checks, balances, and accountability, "but right now, the government system is so heavily weighted with bureaucratic processes that mistakes are bound to happen, [as are] mistakes that lead up to increased costs," he notes. "Doctors are worried about making mistakes and being tagged with that fraud label [all because of] an innocent mistake."
But he insists that more government control is not the answer.
Recommended Guests:
Barry Asmus, Senior Economist, National Center for Policy Analysis
Michael Barry, Director of Pastoral Care, Cancer Treatment Centers of America in Phila.
David Bossie, President, Citizens United
Twila Brase, President and Co-founder, Citizens' Council on Healthcare Freedom
Dan Celia, Host, "Financial Issues Live" Radio Program
Phil Clements, Managing Director, Center for Christian Business Ethics Today, LLC.
Ward Connerly, Author/Founder and Chairman, American Civil Rights Institute
Marjorie Dannenfelser, President and Chairman of the Board, Susan B. Anthony List
William Devlin, National President, Redeem The Vote
James Edwards, Cofounder, Olive, Edwards, & Cooper, LLC
Joseph Farah, CEO, Founder, WorldNetDaily
James Gelfand, Senior Manager of Health Policy, U.S. Chamber of Commerce
Lou Giuliano, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer (r, ITT Corporation
Colin Hanna, Colin Hanna, President, Let Freedom Ring USA
Lowman Henry, Chairman & CEO, Lincoln Institute of Public Opinion Research, Inc.
Larry Hunter, President, The Social Security Institute
Phillip Kim, Assistant Professor of Management and Human Resour, University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Business
Joe Murray, Columnist, The Bulletin
Grover Norquist, President, Americans for Tax Reform (ATR)
Chuck Stetson, Co-founder and Managing Director, PEI Funds
Tony Strickland, Taxpayer Advocate
John Weiser, Board Member, Westminster Theological Seminary , In Medias Res
8/11/2011 | Economy, Governmental Control
Associated Press
The Obama administration may turn thousands of government-owned foreclosures into rental properties to help boost falling home prices.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency said Wednesday it is seeking input from investors on how to rent homes owned by government-controlled mortgage companies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and the Federal Housing Administration.
The U.S. government rescued Fannie and Freddie in September 2008 and has funded them since the financial crisis. The mortgage giants own or guarantee about half of the nation's mortgages and nearly all new mortgages.
Recommended Guests:
Barry Asmus, Senior Economist, National Center for Policy Analysis
David Bossie, President, Citizens United
Dan Celia, Host, "Financial Issues Live" Radio Program
Phil Clements, Managing Director, Center for Christian Business Ethics Today, LLC.
Chuck Colson, Prison Fellowship
Ward Connerly, Author/Founder and Chairman, American Civil Rights Institute
Tom DeLay, Former House Majority Leader, United States House of Representatives
William Devlin, National President, Redeem The Vote
Chuck Donovan, Senior Research Fellow-DeVos Center for Religion a, The Heritage Foundation
James Edwards, Cofounder, Olive, Edwards, & Cooper, LLC
Steve Elliott, President, Grassfire.org
Joseph Farah, CEO, Founder, WorldNetDaily
Frank Gaffney, Founder and President , Center for Security Policy
James Gelfand, Senior Manager of Health Policy, U.S. Chamber of Commerce
Lou Giuliano, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer (r, ITT Corporation
Rick Green, President, Torch of Freedom Foundation
Colin Hanna, Colin Hanna, President, Let Freedom Ring USA
Lowman Henry, Chairman & CEO, Lincoln Institute of Public Opinion Research, Inc.
Larry Hunter, President, The Social Security Institute
Phillip Kim, Assistant Professor of Management and Human Resour, University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Business
Cliff Kincaid, President, America's Survival, Inc.
Jennifer Marshall, Director of Domestic Policy Studies, The Heritage Foundation
Gary Marx, Executive Director, Judicial Confirmation Network
Ryan Messmore, William E. Simon fellow in Religion and a Free Soc, The Heritage Foundation
Joe Murray, Columnist, The Bulletin
Grover Norquist, President, Americans for Tax Reform (ATR)
Phyllis Schlafly, President and Founder, Eagle Forum
Chuck Stetson, Co-founder and Managing Director, PEI Funds
Tony Strickland, Taxpayer Advocate
Lorianne Updike, President & Executive Director, The Constitutional Sources Project
John Weiser, Board Member, Westminster Theological Seminary , In Medias Res
8/9/2011 | Economy
OneNewsNow
According to one conservative leader, a recent opinion article written by House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) illustrates the philosophical divide between the way liberals and conservatives view job creation.
"Unlike the GOP," Pelosi's article claims the "Democrats will focus on jobs," now that the debate over the debt ceiling is done. The San Francisco Democrat writes that Republicans refuse to propose job-creating legislation, while at the same time voting "no" on ten job initiatives brought to the floor by Democrats.
"Conservatives know that this economy is capable of thriving if you put the right framework around it and you let job creators and entrepreneurs go out there and do what they know had to do best," contends Tim Chapman, chief operating officer of Heritage Action.
But right now, he says, those job creators and entrepreneurs are worried because the national framework is tenuous due to a debt-to-gross domestic product ratio that is wildly out of control. As a result, Chapman says they cannot free themselves to do anything about it.
Recommended Guests:
Barry Asmus, Senior Economist, National Center for Policy Analysis
David Bossie, President, Citizens United
Dan Celia, Host, "Financial Issues Live" Radio Program
Phil Clements, Managing Director, Center for Christian Business Ethics Today, LLC.
Ward Connerly, Author/Founder and Chairman, American Civil Rights Institute
William Devlin, National President, Redeem The Vote
James Edwards, Cofounder, Olive, Edwards, & Cooper, LLC
Joseph Farah, CEO, Founder, WorldNetDaily
James Gelfand, Senior Manager of Health Policy, U.S. Chamber of Commerce
Lou Giuliano, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer (r, ITT Corporation
Colin Hanna, Colin Hanna, President, Let Freedom Ring USA
Lowman Henry, Chairman & CEO, Lincoln Institute of Public Opinion Research, Inc.
Larry Hunter, President, The Social Security Institute
Phillip Kim, Assistant Professor of Management and Human Resour, University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Business
Joe Murray, Columnist, The Bulletin
Grover Norquist, President, Americans for Tax Reform (ATR)
Chuck Stetson, Co-founder and Managing Director, PEI Funds
Tony Strickland, Taxpayer Advocate
John Weiser, Board Member, Westminster Theological Seminary , In Medias Res
8/9/2011 | Economy
CNBC
The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell by 635 points Monday, Asia followed suit and Europe is expecting losses of up to 6 percent following the downgrade of U.S. debt by ratings agency Standard & Poor’s.
Whether the move by S&P can be wholly blamed for the heavy selling of stocks is open to question, but the market is now asking how the Federal Reserve will react when it meets today to discuss its response at its monthly meeting.
Last month, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke outlined four actions he could take: More quantitative easing; cutting interest on excess reserves; buying longer-dated bonds; or giving guidance on when he will begin to shrink the Fed’s balance sheet. Following the huge losses for stocks since late last week, the Fed's Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) will on Tuesday have to take all options very seriously.
“Judging from the experience with (the second round of quantitative easing, or QE2), another round of asset-purchases might be the Fed’s best option to resuscitate the stock market in the short-term,” Harm Bandholz, the chief U.S. economist at Unicredit Research, said in a note to clients following what he described as “Black Monday.”
Recommended Guests:
Barry Asmus, Senior Economist, National Center for Policy Analysis
David Bossie, President, Citizens United
Dan Celia, Host, "Financial Issues Live" Radio Program
Phil Clements, Managing Director, Center for Christian Business Ethics Today, LLC.
Ward Connerly, Author/Founder and Chairman, American Civil Rights Institute
William Devlin, National President, Redeem The Vote
James Edwards, Cofounder, Olive, Edwards, & Cooper, LLC
Joseph Farah, CEO, Founder, WorldNetDaily
James Gelfand, Senior Manager of Health Policy, U.S. Chamber of Commerce
Lou Giuliano, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer (r, ITT Corporation
Colin Hanna, Colin Hanna, President, Let Freedom Ring USA
Lowman Henry, Chairman & CEO, Lincoln Institute of Public Opinion Research, Inc.
Larry Hunter, President, The Social Security Institute
Phillip Kim, Assistant Professor of Management and Human Resour, University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Business
Joe Murray, Columnist, The Bulletin
Grover Norquist, President, Americans for Tax Reform (ATR)
Chuck Stetson, Co-founder and Managing Director, PEI Funds
Tony Strickland, Taxpayer Advocate
John Weiser, Board Member, Westminster Theological Seminary , In Medias Res
8/8/2011 | Economy
CNS News
John Chambers, managing director of Standard & Poor’s, says politics played a part in S&P’s decision to lower the nation’s credit rating for the first time in U.S. history.
“Although the political settings in the United States are still strong, they are not as strong as we had thought previously compared to some other highly rated governments,” Chambers told Fox & Friends on Monday.
“There really is, well, as President Obama -- who characterized the political system as ‘dysfunctional’ -- I think that’s a goo
Recommended Guests:
Barry Asmus, Senior Economist, National Center for Policy Analysis
David Bossie, President, Citizens United
Dan Celia, Host, "Financial Issues Live" Radio Program
Phil Clements, Managing Director, Center for Christian Business Ethics Today, LLC.
Ward Connerly, Author/Founder and Chairman, American Civil Rights Institute
William Devlin, National President, Redeem The Vote
James Edwards, Cofounder, Olive, Edwards, & Cooper, LLC
Joseph Farah, CEO, Founder, WorldNetDaily
James Gelfand, Senior Manager of Health Policy, U.S. Chamber of Commerce
Lou Giuliano, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer (r, ITT Corporation
Colin Hanna, Colin Hanna, President, Let Freedom Ring USA
Lowman Henry, Chairman & CEO, Lincoln Institute of Public Opinion Research, Inc.
Larry Hunter, President, The Social Security Institute
Phillip Kim, Assistant Professor of Management and Human Resour, University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Business
Joe Murray, Columnist, The Bulletin
Grover Norquist, President, Americans for Tax Reform (ATR)
Chuck Stetson, Co-founder and Managing Director, PEI Funds
Tony Strickland, Taxpayer Advocate
John Weiser, Board Member, Westminster Theological Seminary , In Medias Res
8/5/2011 | Economy
Wall Street Journal
Bank of New York Mellon Corp. on Thursday took the extraordinary step of telling large clients it will charge them to hold cash.
The unusual move means some U.S. depositors will have to pay to keep big chunks of money in a bank, marking a stark new phase of the long-running global financial crisis.
The shift is also emblematic of the strains plaguing the U.S. economy. Fearful corporations and investors have been socking away cash in their bank accounts rather than put it into even the safest investments.
The giant bank, which specializes in handling funds for financial institutions and corporations, will begin assessing a fee next week on customers that have been flooding the bank with dollars, Bank of New York told clients in a note reviewed by The Wall Street Journal.
The decision won't affect individual savers, who already are stuck with near zero interest rates as the Federal Reserve keeps rates low to support a soft economy. But it is a glaring sign that corporate executives, bank leaders and money-market fund managers are fleeing from risk and hoarding cash as the recovery
Recommended Guests:
Barry Asmus, Senior Economist, National Center for Policy Analysis
David Bossie, President, Citizens United
Dan Celia, Host, "Financial Issues Live" Radio Program
Phil Clements, Managing Director, Center for Christian Business Ethics Today, LLC.
Ward Connerly, Author/Founder and Chairman, American Civil Rights Institute
William Devlin, National President, Redeem The Vote
James Edwards, Cofounder, Olive, Edwards, & Cooper, LLC
Joseph Farah, CEO, Founder, WorldNetDaily
James Gelfand, Senior Manager of Health Policy, U.S. Chamber of Commerce
Lou Giuliano, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer (r, ITT Corporation
Colin Hanna, Colin Hanna, President, Let Freedom Ring USA
Lowman Henry, Chairman & CEO, Lincoln Institute of Public Opinion Research, Inc.
Larry Hunter, President, The Social Security Institute
Phillip Kim, Assistant Professor of Management and Human Resour, University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Business
Joe Murray, Columnist, The Bulletin
Grover Norquist, President, Americans for Tax Reform (ATR)
Chuck Stetson, Co-founder and Managing Director, PEI Funds
Tony Strickland, Taxpayer Advocate
John Weiser, Board Member, Westminster Theological Seminary , In Medias Res
8/5/2011 | Economy
CNBC
Mortgage finance giant Fannie Mae said it would ask for an additional $5.1 billion from taxpayers as a weaker housing market causes continued losses on loans made prior to 2009.
The largest U.S. residential mortgage funds provider on Friday also reported a second-quarter net loss attributable to common shareholders of $5.2 billion, or 90 cents per share.
It forecast continued weakness ahead, with high unemployment and foreclosures expected to put more downward pressure on home prices.
Fannie Mae paid back $2.3 billion in dividends to taxpayers in the second quarter, reducing its net capital draw to $2.8 billion. Since the firm was seized by the U.S. Treasury in 2008, it has needed about $104 billion in government capital injections, although it has paid back about $14.7 billion in dividends.
Recommended Guests:
Barry Asmus, Senior Economist, National Center for Policy Analysis
David Bossie, President, Citizens United
Dan Celia, Host, "Financial Issues Live" Radio Program
Phil Clements, Managing Director, Center for Christian Business Ethics Today, LLC.
Ward Connerly, Author/Founder and Chairman, American Civil Rights Institute
William Devlin, National President, Redeem The Vote
James Edwards, Cofounder, Olive, Edwards, & Cooper, LLC
Joseph Farah, CEO, Founder, WorldNetDaily
James Gelfand, Senior Manager of Health Policy, U.S. Chamber of Commerce
Lou Giuliano, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer (r, ITT Corporation
Colin Hanna, Colin Hanna, President, Let Freedom Ring USA
Lowman Henry, Chairman & CEO, Lincoln Institute of Public Opinion Research, Inc.
Larry Hunter, President, The Social Security Institute
Phillip Kim, Assistant Professor of Management and Human Resour, University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Business
Joe Murray, Columnist, The Bulletin
Grover Norquist, President, Americans for Tax Reform (ATR)
Chuck Stetson, Co-founder and Managing Director, PEI Funds
Tony Strickland, Taxpayer Advocate
John Weiser, Board Member, Westminster Theological Seminary , In Medias Res
8/4/2011 | Economy, Healthcare
Politico
The debt ceiling agreement could jeopardize millions of dollars, and perhaps billions, in initiatives from President Barack Obama’s health care reform law if the super committee can’t come up with required spending cuts.
Many of the pots of money in the law — one of the Democrats’ most prized pieces of legislation — could get trimmed by the debt deal’s sequestration, or triggered cuts. The funds for prevention programs and community health centers, grants to help states set up insurance exchanges and co-ops, and money to help states review insurance rates could be slashed across the board if the panel can’t find enough cuts this fall.
Funding for the temporary high-risk pools for pre-existing conditions could be sliced, too, as well as grants to improve maternal and child health. And as previously reported by POLITICO, the law’s cost-sharing subsidies — which are supposed to help low-income people pay their out-of-pocket expenses — could face the ax, too.
Recommended Guests:
Barry Asmus, Senior Economist, National Center for Policy Analysis
Michael Barry, Director of Pastoral Care, Cancer Treatment Centers of America in Phila.
David Bossie, President, Citizens United
Twila Brase, President and Co-founder, Citizens' Council on Healthcare Freedom
Dan Celia, Host, "Financial Issues Live" Radio Program
Phil Clements, Managing Director, Center for Christian Business Ethics Today, LLC.
Ward Connerly, Author/Founder and Chairman, American Civil Rights Institute
Marjorie Dannenfelser, President and Chairman of the Board, Susan B. Anthony List
William Devlin, National President, Redeem The Vote
James Edwards, Cofounder, Olive, Edwards, & Cooper, LLC
Joseph Farah, CEO, Founder, WorldNetDaily
James Gelfand, Senior Manager of Health Policy, U.S. Chamber of Commerce
Lou Giuliano, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer (r, ITT Corporation
Colin Hanna, Colin Hanna, President, Let Freedom Ring USA
Lowman Henry, Chairman & CEO, Lincoln Institute of Public Opinion Research, Inc.
Larry Hunter, President, The Social Security Institute
Phillip Kim, Assistant Professor of Management and Human Resour, University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Business
Joe Murray, Columnist, The Bulletin
Grover Norquist, President, Americans for Tax Reform (ATR)
Chuck Stetson, Co-founder and Managing Director, PEI Funds
Tony Strickland, Taxpayer Advocate
John Weiser, Board Member, Westminster Theological Seminary , In Medias Res