Economics alumnus runs for Senate seat

Noted economist, fund manager, entrepreneur, race car builder, and UCONN alumnus Warren Mosler is seeking the office of US Senate to add ‘fixed the US economy’ to his long list of accomplishments. Mosler, a native of Connecticut who graduated from Storrs with a B. A. in Economics in 1971 is running for the US Senate seat being vacated by Senator Christopher Dodd.

Since graduation, Warren has spent 37 years in various financial institutions from Manchester, Hartford, New York, Chicago, and South Florida, including the founding III Offshore Advisors in 1982 and, in 1983, AVM L.P., a broker/dealer providing advanced financial services to large institutional clients. During these years he developed numerous investing strategies utilizing US Government securities and created the mortgage swap and euro swap futures contract. He maintains strong connections to the academic world as Co-Founder, along with L. Randall Wray, of the Center for Full Employment And Price Stability at the University of Missouri in Kansas City. Mosler also has supported research projects and graduate students at the London School of Economics, the New School, Harvard University, and the University of Newcastle, Australia. Additionally, Warren is an Associate Fellow at the University of Newcastle, Australia. Warren is the author of numerous publications, of which the latest is ‘The Seven Deadly Innocent Frauds of Economic Policy’ (Mosler, 2010), which challenges several contemporary assumptions about the relationship between government spending, federal debt, and taxation and opens the door to an immediate return to economic prosperity.

Warren is the original contemporary proponent of what has come to be called Modern Monetary Theory (MMT). MMT begins with the operational fact that Federal taxes serve to regulate aggregate demand, rather than to raise revenue per se, and that funds to pay Federal taxes indeed originate from government spending itself. Warren’s campaign platform is based on three proposals designed to fix the nation’s economy within 90 days. The three proposals are as follows:


  1. Declare a “payroll tax holiday” where the U.S. Treasury will suspend deduction of all FICA taxes. That means the take home pay of someone earning $50,000 a year will rise by approximately $325 per month, fixing the economy from the bottom up, vs the current top-down bailout method.
  2. An unrestricted $500 per capita Federal revenue sharing distribution to all the State governments. This proposal mean about $1.75 billion for Connecticut.
  3. Fund an $8/hr. National Service Jobs program for anyone willing and able to work to facilitate the transition from unemployment to private sector employment, as the first two proposals will cause the large increases in private sectors business sales that quickly translates into the millions of new jobs we desperately need.

Since leaving Connecticut for Wall Street in 1976, Warren has lived and worked in New York City, Chicago, South Florida, and the US Virgin Islands. Additionally, while in Florida, he founded Mosler Automotive, which produces the world’s top performing sport cars. Warren returned to Connecticut this year to run for the US Senate solely as a matter of conscience, and not ambition. He sees himself as uniquely qualified to fix the economic problems facing the US economy.


4 thoughts on “Economics alumnus runs for Senate seat

  1. Thanks for the kind words!

    See http://www.moslerforsenate.com and note the endorsements, thanks. Many more on the way.

    The 7 Deadly Innocent Frauds of Economic Policy can be found at
    http://www.moslereconomics.com in the left margin

    Volunteers wanted.

    I am available to address students and faculty and need everyone’s help to get the word out that operationally, Federal spending is not constrained by revenues, and that taxes function to regulate aggregate demand, and not to raise revenues per se.

    Thanks!

    Warren Mosler, class of 1971

  2. Thanks for the kind words!

    See http://www.moslerforsenate.com and note the endorsements, thanks. Many more on the way.

    The 7 Deadly Innocent Frauds of Economic Policy can be found at
    http://www.moslereconomics.com in the left margin

    Volunteers wanted.

    I am available to address students and faculty and need everyone’s help to get the word out that operationally, Federal spending is not constrained by revenues, and that taxes function to regulate aggregate demand, and not to raise revenues per se.

    Thanks!

    Warren Mosler, class of 1971

  3. I’ve been reading Warren’s economic work for a few years. He sees things so clearly! Most people seem to have trouble with them at first, because they’re so simple, but sometimes the simplest ideas are the most powerful. Warren understands, probably better than anyone I’ve ever met, how government finance actually works and why the US government can easily restore prosperity if our elected officials will just stop playing politics and let go of the deficit bogey.

  4. I’ve been reading Warren’s economic work for a few years. He sees things so clearly! Most people seem to have trouble with them at first, because they’re so simple, but sometimes the simplest ideas are the most powerful. Warren understands, probably better than anyone I’ve ever met, how government finance actually works and why the US government can easily restore prosperity if our elected officials will just stop playing politics and let go of the deficit bogey.

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