Most Americans are feeling downbeat about the state of the economy, and conservative donor Charles Koch thinks that he has the answer.
Koch, the CEO and chairman of Koch Industries, laid out his prescription for the economy in a USA Today op-ed Wednesday. His views are largely in line with the mainstream GOP, blaming excessive government regulation, Obamacare, and government benefit programs for the lackluster economy.
But Koch also blasts the kind of corporate welfare that some Republicans continue to defend. “Too many businesses focus on getting subsidies and mandates from government rather than creating value for customers,” he writes. With the Koch brothers’ help, such subsidies have become an increasingly popular target of more libertarian and tea party-oriented wing of the GOP: The Koch-funded campaign against the Export-Import Bank, for instance, has made major inroads in the party.
He also suggests that parts of the safety net that have been in place since the New Deal have been harmful. “Costly programs, such as paying able-bodied people not to work, are addictive disincentives,” Koch writes. “By undermining people’s will to work, our government has created a culture of dependency and hopelessness. This is most unfair to vulnerable citizens who suffer even as we say they are receiving ‘benefits.’” While Koch doesn’t name particular programs, his piece hyperlinks to stories on food stamps and welfare programs.
Conservatives are hoping that such arguments will help their political prospects come November as Americans are still largely gloomy about the economy—and blame Washington for the problems.
A new WSJ/NBC poll found that 64% of Americans are dissatisfied with the state of the economy. The poll, which surveyed 1,000 adults between July 30 and August 3, also found that Americans are pessimistic about the country’s economic future: 60% saw America as being in a state of decline, and 76% said they did not feel confident that life for the next generation would be better.









