President Donald Trump says he is "very strongly" considering hiring CNBC commentator Larry Kudlow as the director of his National Economic Council, replacing Gary Cohn. Kudlow told the Wall Street Journal that he accepted Trump's job offer and that an announcement could come Thursday.
Kudlow's media career, including a column called "Kudlow's Corner," leaves a long trail of forecasts for the U.S. economy, some of which proved accurate and others that fell short. He's supported much of Trump's agenda but criticized some key elements of it.
Here's a collection of key comments:
Kudlow on the 2007-09 Financial Crisis:
In 2005, he said "all the bubbleheads" looking for a housing-price crash in Las Vegas and Naples, Florida, and the wider economy, would be proven wrong.
By December 2007, the month the National Bureau of Economic Research later dated the start of the recession, he was arguing there was no recession and that the "Bush boom continues."
"The pessimistas are a persistent bunch," he said.
Kudlow on Inflation:
He predicted in 2010 that Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen would spur higher inflation, which didn't happen.
In 2014 he argued lower oil prices are unambiguously good — versus the Fed's and most economists' view that there are winners and losers to lower oil prices as the U.S. has become a bigger producer.