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The U.S. government should use low-cost loans and risk-sharing with banks to incentivize strategic industries.
The U.S. strategy should involve subsidizing massive products to let the industrial base bootstrap itself.
The U.S. government should consider a Marshall Plan for America to revitalize cities with tech jobs and advanced manufacturing.
The U.S. should focus on reindustrializing and reskilling its workforce to adapt to technological changes and maintain economic growth.
The U.S. should use its capital market strengths to support industries aligned with national priorities, using strategies like low-cost loans and risk-sharing with banks.
The U.S. could benefit from adopting a strategy similar to China's, which includes subsidizing key industries and creating strategic frameworks for industrial growth.
It's going to take a lot of work to undo those decades of bad trade and tax policy that gave corporations every single day the upper hand. I want to see employers competing for workers. That's a good thing. It's how you get rising wages, which get spent in the community and then create growth for everyone, whether in Santa Fe or Columbus.
The U.S. should use tariffs and economic policies to correct the structural imbalance created by Chinese subsidies.
Scott Galloway reflects on America's societal structure, where success is rewarded with significant wealth, but failure can lead to hardship, highlighting a comfort with winners and losers.
Scott Galloway argues that America's ability to hire and fire easily contributes significantly to its innovation. He believes that the freedom to fail and take risks gives the US an edge over Europe.