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Economy
Hillary Clinton’s 2016 economic plan focuses on increasing middle-class incomes. (www.hillaryclinton.com) Clinton’s first step is to implement this by promoting economic growth.(www.hillaryclinton.com) She will give tax cuts to the middle class as well as small businesses, establish an infrastructure bank, and fund more scientific research. (www.hillaryclinton.com) Women would enter the workforce, making companies having to pay for a family to leave.(www.hillaryclinton.com) The college Affordability Plan would spend $35 billion annually to refinance student debt and pay states to guarantee the student's tuition. (www.hillaryclinton.com) The National Infrastructure Plan would assign $27.5 billion annually to improve rods, bridges, public transit, rail, airports, the Internet, and water systems. (www.hillaryclinton.com) The Expanded Child Care Plan and the Early Education Plan would spend $27.5 billion a year in order for states to make all preschool available to all 4-year-olds and expand Early Head Start.(www.hillaryclinton.com) Expanded Funding for IDEA would spend $16.6 billion a year to look and treat children with disabilities.(www.hillaryclinton.com) The Energy Plan would pay $9 billion annually in order to fix oil pipelines, reduce carbon emissions, and fund health and retirements for coal workers.(www.hillaryclinton.com) Clinton’s second step is to organize fair growth.(www.hillaryclinton.com) She would like to raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour, increase workers’ benefits, expand overtime, and inspire businesses to share profits with employees.(www.hillaryclinton.com) This would help students and teachers as well as unions and collective bargaining.(www.hillaryclinton.com) Clinton wants to intensify the Affordable Care Act, job training, decrease college and healthcare costs.(www.hillaryclinton.com)