Word: sectored
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...attack unemployment by making the Government the employer of last resort and which he considered inflationary in its original form. He has also argued for some form of jawboning as well as wage and price guideposts to help control inflation. Whenever possible, however, he prefers to let the private sector work by itself, free of Government restraints. In fact, while Schultze remains every bit the zealous social reformer that he was as Lyndon Johnson's Budget Director, he has lately been preaching a free-market version of social activism. He has urged the Government to rely less...
...testimony earlier this year before a Senate subcommittee on the Humphrey-Hawkins bill, and in the Godkin Lectures on the essentials of government delivered at Harvard last month, Charles Schultze spelled out some of his ideas on the different roles of government and the private sector...
More startling are the social changes. Since my card will go to no more than half a dozen or so bona fide nuclear American families, it has been selected with little thought for that sturdy but dwindling sector of the populace. The other folks require a special kind of protocol. On my list, for example, are a number of unmarried men and women who are living together. A single card will go to each couple; it will be enclosed in an envelope addressed to both. What about single women who are practically living with married men? Two cards, individually addressed...
...could be at a point where presidential attitude will mean more than a new program, where the White House interest could count more than additional spending. The main engine of this nation remains the private sector. It is fueled by vision and inspiration as well as gain...
...Ford victory would almost certainly produce a battle of the Potomac: the White House v. the Democratic Congress. On the key issue of fighting unemployment, Congress wants to create public service jobs, while Ford counts on an expanded economy to put more people to work in the private sector. The President's pay-as-you-go philosophy underlies his proposal to cut taxes by close to $10 billion, but only if Congress agrees to reduce spending by a similar amount. Of course, Congress will not-and so it will go. Indeed, the fight has already begun. Congress has raised...