Skip to main content

Aspen Institute Logo

  • Publications »
  • Conference Centers »
  • Press Center »
  • Support Us »
  • Society of Fellows »
  • About the Institute
  • Events
  • Our Policy Work
  • Leadership Programs
  • Seminars
  • Our People
  • Multimedia
Events

Past Event

Events

  • Events Calendar »
  • Aspen Events »
  • New York Events »
  • Society of Fellows Events »
  • Past Events »
  • Find Events on Facebook »

Events Calendar

2010
3
22
Previous Month
March 2010
Next Month
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031   

View All Events »

Topics

Finance, Social Policy
Comeback America by David M. Walker

Gildenhorn Book Series with David M. Walker

January 28, 2010Washington, DC

Take Aways

  • View Photos »

David Walker discusses his new book, Comeback America. President and CEO of the Peter G. Peterson Foundation, David Walker is a leading thinker and advocate for federal financial responsibility.

Event Information

  • Date

    Thursday, January 28, 201012:00 pm to 1:30 pm

  • Location

    Washington, DC

  • Contact

    Rachel Sommers Phone: 202.736.2299

He spoke with Financial Times Washington commentator Clive Crook about taxes, health care, social security, and fiscal responsibility.

“Americans have a big-government appetite and want a small-government tax payment,” said David M. Walker, president and CEO of the Peter G. Peterson Foundation, Thursday as part of the Institute’s Alma and Joseph Gildenhorn Book Series. “It won’t work,” he continued, and people who think that it will work are “delusionary and would get an ‘F’ in math!” In his new book, Comeback America: Turning the Country Around and Restoring Fiscal Responsibility, Walker argues for spending freezes, a presidential fiscal commission, higher taxes, and a total reformation of how the government conducts business.
 
“There is no party of fiscal responsibility,” Walker told moderator Clive Crook, Washington columnist at the Financial Times, adding that several members of Congress are “profiles in cowardice.” Walker was particularly struck by the congressional quagmire on health care reform: “If there is one thing that will bankrupt America,” he said, “it’s out-of-control health care.” And Walker was quick to point out that the United States spends double per capita on health care compared with the rest of the world—with below-average results. “If health care were a house, it would be mortgaged to the hilt and headed for foreclosure.”
 
Walker was just as hard on the tax code. He detailed his own vexing experience as a certified public accountant filling out his family’s taxes by hand and without software. “Because I want to challenge Congress to do the same,” Walker exclaimed. “If congressmen had to do their own taxes, we’d have tax reform real quick.”
 
But Walker did express a great deal of hope that financial responsibility is possible, because, as he put it, “the majority of Americans are in the sensible center.” He also noted that there may finally be the political will to make big reforms because “people now know what a rainy day looks like.”

Event Videos

Book Talk Featuring David Walker
See video
View the Video »
  • Find Us on Facebook »
  • Contact »
  • Multimedia »
  • Privacy Policy »

© 2009 Aspen Institute