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You'll gain real-world insights into how economics impacts your daily life with this easy-to-follow online course. This crash course is based on the acclaimed textbook Economy, Society, and Public Policy by CORE Econ, tailored to help you grasp key concepts without feeling overwhelmed.
Whether you're new to economics or just want to deepen your understanding, this course covers the basics and connects them to today’s pressing issues—from inequality to public policy decisions.
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President Barack Obama speaks to U.S. mayors Friday in the East Room of the White House in Washington, DC.
MANDEL NGAN/AFP/Getty Images
(AP) - Invoking his own name-and-shame policy,
President Barack Obama warned the nation's mayors on Friday that he
will "call them out" if they waste the money from his massive
economic stimulus plan.
"The American people are watching," Obama told a gathering of
mayors at the White House. "They need this plan to work. They
expect to see the money that they've earned -- they've worked so
hard to earn -- spent in its intended purposes without waste,
without inefficiency, without fraud."
New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin attends an address by President Barack Obama to U.S. mayors Friday in the East Room of the White House in Washington, DC.
MANDEL NGAN/AFP/Getty Images
In the days since the White House and Congress came to terms on
the $787 billion economic package, the political focus has shifted
to how it will work. Obama has staked his reputation not just on
the promise of 3.5 million jobs saved or created, but also on a
pledge to let the public see where the money goes.
His budget chief this week released a 25,000-word document that
details exactly how Cabinet and executive agencies, states and
local organizations must report spending. It is a system meant to
streamline reports so they can be displayed on the administration's
new Web site, Recovery.gov.
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Using his presidential pulpit, Obama demanded accountability,
from his friends in local government as well as his own agencies.
He said the new legislation gives him tools to "watch the
taxpayers' money with more rigor and transparency than ever," and
that he will use them.
"If a federal agency proposes a project that will waste that
money, I will not hesitate to call them out on it, and put a stop
to it," he said. "I want everyone here to be on notice that if a
local government does the same, I will call them out on it, and use
the full power of my office and our administration to stop it."
"The American people are watching. ... They expect to see the money ... spent in its intended purposes without waste,
without inefficiency, without fraud."
Miami Mayor Manny Diaz, who leads the U.S. Conference of Mayors,
said he welcomed Obama's warning.
"Absolutely. We get called out every day at the local level,"
Diaz said, drawing laughs from other mayors in a gathering with
reporters on the White House driveway. "We have plenty of
constituents who will be doing that before the president does."
Mayors of both parties said they appreciated the invitation to
meet with Obama, Vice President Joe Biden and a handful of Cabinet
secretaries. They cautioned, though, that the stimulus plan will
only work if leaders at the state level direct the money to their
cities in a clear, timely way.
The economic plan will inject a sudden boost of cash into
transportation, education, energy and health care. Beyond new
spending, it aims to aid people through a package of tax cuts,
extended unemployment benefits and short-term health insurance
help. The cost will be added to a growing budget deficit.
Obama said government leaders have asked for the "unprecedented
trust of the American people."
"With that comes unprecedented obligations to spend that money
wisely, free from politics and free from personal agendas," he
said.
The president did not specify how, exactly, he would call out
one of his own agencies or a local government about wasteful
projects.
(Copyright 2009 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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President Barack Obama speaks to U.S. mayors Friday in the East Room of the White House in Washington, DC.
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