Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Obama's Plan: Where's Your Opportunity? Part I

On this day, January 20, 2008, Barack Obama is inaugurated as President of the United States.

In 2006, Rahm Emanual http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/10/27/obamas-chief-of-staff-rah_n_138240.html, then a US Congressman from Illinois, penned The Plan: Big Ideas for America (The subtitle has since been altered, and is now “Big Ideas for Change in America.”) www.readtheplan.com with fellow Clinton White House veteran and liberal journalist Bruce Reed http://www.ndol.org/ndol_ci.cfm?kaid=86&subid=191&contentid=3420. The book purports “a new social contract for the twenty-first century (Page xviii)” by way of eight high level directions they prescribe.

Emanuel and Reed split loyalties in the 2008 US Presidential election. Reed worked with Senator Hillary Clinton, penning the debate zinger, “change you can Xerox (
http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1108/15314.html).” Emanuel threw his support to fellow Illinoisan Barack Obama and was selected to be the new President’s Chief of Staff immediately upon the conclusion of the campaign. With the appointment of Senator Clinton to lead the State Department and multiple additional Clinton White House veterans to other posts, the split between the authors seems to have been temporary; the shared ideology intact.

As Obama’s actions reinforce his belief in the tenets put forth by Emanuel and Reed, as similarities exist between The Plan and Obama‘s Blueprint for Change booklet, and as he enters office on the wings of a broad mandate, small business owners and entrepreneurs have an opportunity to choose where they operate on the change curve. In a broad sense and at a high level, over the next several weeks this blog will dedicate itself to identifying the opportunities and challenges for these people and their businesses.

Objectivity will be a goal. Experts will be consulted and interviewed. Each topic will be addressed, as will changes that have occurred since publication--most significantly and consistently, the growing financial crisis that, three years ago, only a few had the courage to acknowledge and still fewer to confront.

The prongs of The Plan are:
  1. Universal Citizen Service - “All Americans between the ages of eighteen and twenty-five should be asked to serve their country by going through three months of basic civil defense training and community service (P. 54).”
  2. Universal College Access - “[W]e will give the states tuition grants to make college free for those willing to work, serve and excel (P. 55).”
  3. Universal Retirement Savings - “From now on, every job ought to come with a 401(k) (P. 55).”
  4. Universal Children’s Health Care - “[C]ut the cost of health care so that every business can afford it and every child in America can at least get it (P. 55).”
  5. Ending “Corporate Welfare” - The authors' central strategy to fund the aforementioned goals (P. 56).
  6. Tax Reform - Simplify the tax code (P. 138), establish a corporate flat tax of 35 percent (P. 138) and increase the overall tax burden on the wealthy while decreasing it on families earning less than $100,000.00 per year (P. 145).
  7. Winning the War on Terror - “[A]dding to the special forces…expanding the US Army by 100,000 more troops…a new GI Bill (P. 56),” and other reforms.
  8. A New Energy Policy - “[A] sweeping campaign to develop new energy technologies (P. 56)” centered around decreasing dependence on foreign oil by emphasizing hybrid vehicles (P. 167).
Next week’s post will analyze the Universal Citizen Service notion, and suggest its potential impact on small businesses. Eventually, we will explore The Obama/Biden Blueprint for Change, and compare and contrast it with The Plan and current events.

Again, the goal of these explorations will be to identify and illuminate the opportunities for small businesses; to provide an opportunity to ride on the crest of the wave of change.

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