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President Obama promised that the brunt of any financial reckoning will fall mostly only on those making more than $250,000 annually. Under his healthcare plan, the economic agony starts at income levels that fall much lower than that.
Under ObamaCare, it will be not only the rich that President Obama singles out, but also families who are considered middle class.
The U.S. economy has grown considerably over the past three decades. However, there is a prevailing sentiment that the middle class and the poor have been left behind. Our results show evidence of considerable improvement in material well-being for both the middle class and the poor over the past three decades.
It will be middle class families, rather than the rich, that will be most harmed by President Obama's health care plan.
Is the American middle class fighting for its life? Is there truly a "middle class squeeze"? If such books as Lou Dobbs's The War on the Middle Class are any indication, the American middle class is hanging on by a thread. But is this story accurate? Do available data support...
Free-lunch myths should not distract us from the challenge at hand. The fiscal imbalance must be addressed through a bipartisan agreement that includes broad tax increases and entitlement cuts.
Consumption data and the topline GDP numbers suggest that the middle class has been doing fine.
While safety concerns about drugs purchased over the Internet may be overblown, concerns that the equalization of drug prices will decrease drug innovation are understated.





