Is Obama Good for Business?

We better start asking now. Business Week writes:

So what would an Obama Presidency look like for business? “It would be a pragmatic, center-left administration,” says Democratic political strategist Steve McMahon, who is unaligned with a Presidential candidate this year. “He’s been pretty clear that business would have a seat at the table, but business wouldn’t be able to buy all the chairs.”
Obama’s record in the Senate is thin, but it does hold some indicators of where he might go as President. Obama has sponsored bills backing a host of traditional Democratic causes, from union labor to alternative fuel to the earned income tax credit. In one move that was unpopular among business executives, Obama sponsored a bill to give shareholders a nonbinding proxy vote on executive pay. Obama voted for a free-trade pact with Peru that contained provisos to protect the Peruvian environment and Peruvian labor. That’s popular stuff with the American left, but hard to take if you’re a U.S. business owner who wants costs to stay low in your new Peru operation. And in a reflection of the Democratic Party’s drift away from pure free-trade positions, Obama says he would look to amend the NAFTA trade agreement to add similar protections to the Clinton-era pact.

In October, George Will profiled Austan Goolsbee, one of Obama’s top economic advisers.

Posted by on February 14th, 2008 at 11:09 am


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