
"Not only is this America's 250th year, but it is a year when competing visions for America's economic future are coming to a head,"
"are willing to throw out capitalism and try something different,"
"don't start the day thinking about politics. They have customers to serve and employees to serve and markets they're trying to conquer, and they have a constantly changing landscape to figure out."
"If one party likes one kind of energy and the other party likes the other kind of energy, how do I know what I'm building? It's more uncertainty and unpredictability and wanting to know what the rules of the road are,"
America's 250th year coincides with competing visions for its economic future, creating a hinge point for policy choices. Voter frustration about affordability and job opportunities has increased openness to alternatives to capitalism. Business leaders report damaging regulatory overreach, high tariffs, and political micromanagement that impede growth. A pro-abundance, market-oriented approach that embraces global exchange of goods, services, talent, culture, and ideas is presented as a path to prosperity. Businesspeople face investment uncertainty when parties favor different energy policies, increasing demand for predictable rules of the road.
Read at Axios
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