Excerpt from Bill Clinton’s Remarks in the October 11, 1992, Presidential Debate

Governor Clinton: My plan, notwithstanding my opponent's ad, my plan triggers in at gross incomes, family incomes of $200,000 and above. And then we want to give modest middle-class tax relief to restore some fairness, especially to middle-class people with families with incomes of under $60,000.

In addition to that, the money that I raise from upper income people and from asking foreign corporations just to pay the same income on their income earned in America that American corporations do will be used to give incentives back to upper income people. I want to give people permanent incentives on investment tax credit like President Kennedy and the Congress inaugurated in the early sixties to get industry moving again; a research and development tax credit; a low-income housing tax credit; a long-term capital gains proposal for new business and business expansions.

We've got to have no more trickle-down. We don't need across-the-board tax cuts for the wealthy for nothing; we need to say, here's your tax incentive if you create American jobs the old-fashioned way.

Use the excerpt to answer the question.

Presidential candidate Bill Clinton criticizes and seeks to move away from

A.
Keynesianism.

B.
supply-side economics.

C.
capitalism.

D.
protectionism.

B. supply-side economics.