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William Shipman

Social Security and Retirement Expert

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William Shipman Biography

William G. Shipman is chairman of CarriageOaks Partners LLC a Massachusetts-based consulting firm specializing in retirement finance. An advocate of Social Security reform in the United States, Shipman has testified before the House Ways and Means Sub-Committee on Social Security and co-authored Promises to Keep: Saving Social Securitys Dream. He is co-chairman of the Cato Project on Social Security Choice and was on the National Advisory Board of Americans Discuss Social Security, a non-profit organization funded by the Pew Charitable Trusts to generate informed debate on the issue. He also served as a delegate to the White House Conference on Social Security. His research has been published by the Financial Analysts Journal, The Journal of Investing, The Wall Street Journal, the National Center for Policy Analysis, The Heritage Foundation and the Cato Institute as well as numerous other publications and was named one of its outstanding papers by The Journal of Investing.

Shipman has discussed and debated public policy issues before the United Nations and both the Joint Economic Committee and House Budget Committee Task Force on Social Security of the United States Congress as well as the Australian Parliament. He has given well over 300 speeches across six continents and twenty-one countries and has consulted on retirement finance reform with government officials from Australia, China, Poland, the United States and Russia as well as the European Commission. He recently was invited by the government of the Russian Federation to be a member of its Supervisory Council for the Institute for Social Insurance Development. And the Ministry of Labour and Social Security of the Peoples Republic of China has invited him to be a visiting professor at the Ministrys Social Insurance Institute. The government of China has also published Promises to Keep in Chinese.

Prior to establishing CarriageOaks, Shipman spent more than 30 years in institutional financial research, consulting and investment management. He was a principal of State Street Global Advisors, a Trustee of the SSgA Funds, a founding partner of H. C. Wainwright Co., Economics and a general partner of H.C. Wainwright & Co. He serves on the Board of Directors of The Institute for Research on the Economics of Taxation, Washington, DC. Shipman received his degree in psychology from Syracuse University. A pilot and student of the martial arts, Shipman holds a 3rd Degree Black Belt in Kempo Karate.

Speaking Topics
  • What is the Role of the Individual, of the Government, in a Free Society?

    What is the role of the individual in a free society? What is the role of the government in a free society? Under our system of government, with specific reference to the Constitution, the federal government has limited powers beyond which they reside with the states and the individual. A rational system would have the government provide goods and services that it can deliver more efficiently than the private sector and leave all other provisions to the private sector. Unfortunately, from this perspective our system is irrational, at least in some cases. The federal government provides retirement income in the form of Social Security. The private sector does as well through defined benefit and defined contribution plans. Relative to DB and DC plans, Social Security is terribly inefficient. That is to say benefits are very low relative to the payroll taxes that finance them. Social Security is a bad deal.

    And that is why it is mandatory. If it were voluntary, most people would leave it for the more efficient defined contribution model.

    The Social Security debate is emblematic of the role of government in our lives. With irrefutable evidence that Social Security is a bad deal, we are not free to leave it. We are not free to spend the equivalent of our payroll taxes on a more efficient structure. We like to think of ourselves as free, but in this particular case we are not. And this is not a trivial case: 80 percent of workers pay more in payroll taxes than they do in income taxes and for which they receive very little. Again, what is the role of the individual, of the government, in a free society?

    Shipman will share with you his experiences with congress, his testimonies to congressional committees and his plan to allow all workers to remain with Social Security or leave it.

  • Why Europe is Becoming Less Important to the United States

    Europe has long been a strategic and economic partner of the United States. Its economic success in many ways contributes to ours. Conversely, its failure can influence ours. Europe, in fact, is failing. Although there are numerous reasons for this, one is most significant and not well understood. Europe, Germany specifically, is the birthplace of entitlements. Entitlements are promises to provide benefits to the population sometime in the future, commonly during retirement. These benefits are generally retirement income, commonly called Social Security and health care subsidies. Giving one a promise of future benefits allows the government to spend more currently than it could if it provided the same benefit in the present. This is not so, of course, if governments funded such promises, but they havent and they dont.

    As these promises were historically made and actually kept over decades, populations became dependent on them and somewhat rightfully considered them their right. Nowhere is this more prevalent than in Europe. Being entitled to government benefits is now part of Europeans cultural DNA. The problem, however, is that the promises can no longer be kept because European economies and demographics preclude it.

    Even a casual observer of current events recognizes that governments around the world have made promises they cannot reasonably keep. This is especially true in Europe, Greece being the poster boy, although it is true in other regions of the world. The economies of European countries are stagnant, their debts are oppressive and their entitlement spending is unsustainable. Furthermore, their populations are ageing and shrinking. This is why the United States is looking eastward with the intent of establishing stronger relations with Japanthe second largest economy in the world as measured by GDP per capita and Chinathe second largest economy in the world as measured by GDP. Although this redirection of interest is understandable, it is fraught with its own dangers because Japan is also aging and shrinking. In just 13 years Japan, demographically speaking, will be the oldest country in the world. By the end of the century its population will have declined 60 percent.

  • How Wealth Produces Poverty and What to Do About It

    Social Security benefits are provided by taxing workers payroll. But as countries prosper, life expectancy increases and fertility rates fall leaving fewer workers relative to retirees. This results in the fact that the entire financial structure that supports Social Security is crumbling. This is especially true in Europe and Japan, two very important economies and strategic partners to the U.S. The fertility rate that replaces the population is 2.1. Below 2.1, populations shrink, above, they grow. Fertility rates in Europe average about 1.3, while in Japan 1.2. Europe and Japan are shrinking and at the same time aging; the number of workers relative to retirees is shrinking. Beyond this, Japans total population is expected to decline by 60 percent by the end of this century. Shipman will share the details that support these points and will also explain how to avoid the catastrophe they portend.

  • Social Security Reform: An Unprecedented Global Challenge

    Many Americans think Social Security is an American invention, a social policy unique to our country. They are terribly misguided. Social Security is a child of the Industrial Revolution and was first implemented in Germany in 1889. The idea of a large government entitlement has spread throughout the world and now about 70 percent of all countries have systems much like ours. They are all financed through payroll taxes, provide very low benefits relative to costs and have unfunded liabilities well in excess of countries sovereign debt. Globally, Social Security is a ticking time bomb. The relevant questions are will it explode or will nations figure out a way to dismantle the bomb. Either way, no one will escape.

    In his speech, Shipman will explain how we got to this critical point, what factors drive the escalating problem and, importantly, how to solve the problem. Shipman has shared his extensive experience with hundreds of audiences across 21 countries and six continents. Given our recent public awareness that entitlements can crush our economy and ultimately our freedom, Shipmans comments are now particularly important.

FAQs
  • How do I book William Shipman to speak at my event?

    Our experienced booking agents have successfully helped clients around the world secure speakers like William Shipman for speaking engagements, personal appearances, product endorsements, or corporate entertainment since 2002. Click the Check Availability button above and complete the form on this page to check availability for William Shipman, or call our office at 1.800.698.2536 to discuss your upcoming event. One of our experienced agents will be happy to help you get speaking fee information and check availability for William Shipman or any other speaker of your choice.
  • What are the speaker fees for William Shipman

    Speaking fees for William Shipman, or any other speakers and celebrities, are determined based on a number of factors and may change without notice. The estimated fees to book William Shipman are $10,000 - $20,000 for live events and available upon request for virtual events. For the most current speaking fee to hire William Shipman, click the Check Availability button above and complete the form on this page, or call our office at 1.800.698.2536 to speak directly with an experienced booking agent.
  • What topics does William Shipman speak about?

    William Shipman is a keynote speaker and industry expert whose speaking topics include Business, Consulting, Economy and Finance, Finance, Futurism, Health and Wellness, Political Speakers.
  • Where does William Shipman travel from?

    William Shipman generally travels from Boston, MA, USA, but can be booked for private corporate events, personal appearances, keynote speeches, or other performances. For more details, please contact an AAE Booking agent.
  • Who is William Shipman’s agent?

    AAE Speakers Bureau has successfully booked keynote speakers like William Shipman for clients worldwide since 2002. As a full-service speaker booking agency, we have access to virtually any speaker or celebrity in the world. Our agents are happy and able to submit an offer to the speaker or celebrity of your choice, letting you benefit from our reputation and long-standing relationships in the industry. Please click the Check Availability button above and complete the form on this page including the details of your event, or call our office at 1.800.698.2536, and one of our agents will assist you to book William Shipman for your next private or corporate function.
  • What is a full-service speaker booking agency?

    AAE Speakers Bureau is a full-service speaker booking agency, meaning we can completely manage the speaker’s or celebrity’s engagement with your organization from the time of booking your speaker through the event’s completion. We provide all of the services you need to host William Shipman or any other speaker of your choice, including offer negotiation, contractual assistance, accounting and billing, and event speaker travel and logistics services. When you book a speaker with us, we manage the process of hosting a speaker for you as an extension of your team. Our goal is to give our clients peace of mind and a best-in-class service experience when booking a speaker with us.
  • Why is AAE Speakers Bureau different from other booking agencies?

    If you’re looking for the best, unbiased speaker recommendations, paired with a top-notch customer service experience, you’re in the right place. At AAE Speakers Bureau, we exclusively represent the interests of our clients - professional organizations, companies, universities, and associations. We intentionally do not represent the speakers we feature or book. That is so we can present our clients with the broadest and best performing set of speaker options in the market today, and we can make these recommendations without any obligation to promote a specific speaker over another. This is why when our agents suggest a speaker for your event, you can be assured that they are of the highest quality with a history of proven success with our other clients.
Check Availability

Tell us about your event!

During normal business hours, we respond to most inquiries within 4 hours.

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This website is a resource for event professionals and strives to provide the most comprehensive catalog of thought leaders and industry experts to consider for speaking engagements. A listing or profile on this website does not imply an agency affiliation or endorsement by the talent.

All American Entertainment (AAE) exclusively represents the interests of talent buyers, and does not claim to be the agency or management for any speaker or artist on this site. AAE is a talent booking agency for paid events only. We do not handle requests for donation of time or media requests for interviews, and cannot provide celebrity contact information.

If you are the talent and wish to request a profile update or removal from our online directory, please submit a profile request form.

Social Security and Retirement Expert

Travels From:
Boston, MA, USA
Speaking Fee:

William Shipman Biography

William G. Shipman is chairman of CarriageOaks Partners LLC a Massachusetts-based consulting firm specializing in retirement finance. An advocate of Social Security reform in the United States, Shipman has testified before the House Ways and Means Sub-Committee on Social Security and co-authored Promises to Keep: Saving Social Securitys Dream. He is co-chairman of the Cato Project on Social Security Choice and was on the National Advisory Board of Americans Discuss Social Security, a non-profit organization funded by the Pew Charitable Trusts to generate informed debate on the issue. He also served as a delegate to the White House Conference on Social Security. His research has been published by the Financial Analysts Journal, The Journal of Investing, The Wall Street Journal, the National Center for Policy Analysis, The Heritage Foundation and the Cato Institute as well as numerous other publications and was named one of its outstanding papers by The Journal of Investing.

Shipman has discussed and debated public policy issues before the United Nations and both the Joint Economic Committee and House Budget Committee Task Force on Social Security of the United States Congress as well as the Australian Parliament. He has given well over 300 speeches across six continents and twenty-one countries and has consulted on retirement finance reform with government officials from Australia, China, Poland, the United States and Russia as well as the European Commission. He recently was invited by the government of the Russian Federation to be a member of its Supervisory Council for the Institute for Social Insurance Development. And the Ministry of Labour and Social Security of the Peoples Republic of China has invited him to be a visiting professor at the Ministrys Social Insurance Institute. The government of China has also published Promises to Keep in Chinese.

Prior to establishing CarriageOaks, Shipman spent more than 30 years in institutional financial research, consulting and investment management. He was a principal of State Street Global Advisors, a Trustee of the SSgA Funds, a founding partner of H. C. Wainwright Co., Economics and a general partner of H.C. Wainwright & Co. He serves on the Board of Directors of The Institute for Research on the Economics of Taxation, Washington, DC. Shipman received his degree in psychology from Syracuse University. A pilot and student of the martial arts, Shipman holds a 3rd Degree Black Belt in Kempo Karate.

William Shipman Speaking Topics

  • What is the Role of the Individual, of the Government, in a Free Society?

    What is the role of the individual in a free society? What is the role of the government in a free society? Under our system of government, with specific reference to the Constitution, the federal government has limited powers beyond which they reside with the states and the individual. A rational system would have the government provide goods and services that it can deliver more efficiently than the private sector and leave all other provisions to the private sector. Unfortunately, from this perspective our system is irrational, at least in some cases. The federal government provides retirement income in the form of Social Security. The private sector does as well through defined benefit and defined contribution plans. Relative to DB and DC plans, Social Security is terribly inefficient. That is to say benefits are very low relative to the payroll taxes that finance them. Social Security is a bad deal.

    And that is why it is mandatory. If it were voluntary, most people would leave it for the more efficient defined contribution model.

    The Social Security debate is emblematic of the role of government in our lives. With irrefutable evidence that Social Security is a bad deal, we are not free to leave it. We are not free to spend the equivalent of our payroll taxes on a more efficient structure. We like to think of ourselves as free, but in this particular case we are not. And this is not a trivial case: 80 percent of workers pay more in payroll taxes than they do in income taxes and for which they receive very little. Again, what is the role of the individual, of the government, in a free society?

    Shipman will share with you his experiences with congress, his testimonies to congressional committees and his plan to allow all workers to remain with Social Security or leave it.

  • Why Europe is Becoming Less Important to the United States

    Europe has long been a strategic and economic partner of the United States. Its economic success in many ways contributes to ours. Conversely, its failure can influence ours. Europe, in fact, is failing. Although there are numerous reasons for this, one is most significant and not well understood. Europe, Germany specifically, is the birthplace of entitlements. Entitlements are promises to provide benefits to the population sometime in the future, commonly during retirement. These benefits are generally retirement income, commonly called Social Security and health care subsidies. Giving one a promise of future benefits allows the government to spend more currently than it could if it provided the same benefit in the present. This is not so, of course, if governments funded such promises, but they havent and they dont.

    As these promises were historically made and actually kept over decades, populations became dependent on them and somewhat rightfully considered them their right. Nowhere is this more prevalent than in Europe. Being entitled to government benefits is now part of Europeans cultural DNA. The problem, however, is that the promises can no longer be kept because European economies and demographics preclude it.

    Even a casual observer of current events recognizes that governments around the world have made promises they cannot reasonably keep. This is especially true in Europe, Greece being the poster boy, although it is true in other regions of the world. The economies of European countries are stagnant, their debts are oppressive and their entitlement spending is unsustainable. Furthermore, their populations are ageing and shrinking. This is why the United States is looking eastward with the intent of establishing stronger relations with Japanthe second largest economy in the world as measured by GDP per capita and Chinathe second largest economy in the world as measured by GDP. Although this redirection of interest is understandable, it is fraught with its own dangers because Japan is also aging and shrinking. In just 13 years Japan, demographically speaking, will be the oldest country in the world. By the end of the century its population will have declined 60 percent.

  • How Wealth Produces Poverty and What to Do About It

    Social Security benefits are provided by taxing workers payroll. But as countries prosper, life expectancy increases and fertility rates fall leaving fewer workers relative to retirees. This results in the fact that the entire financial structure that supports Social Security is crumbling. This is especially true in Europe and Japan, two very important economies and strategic partners to the U.S. The fertility rate that replaces the population is 2.1. Below 2.1, populations shrink, above, they grow. Fertility rates in Europe average about 1.3, while in Japan 1.2. Europe and Japan are shrinking and at the same time aging; the number of workers relative to retirees is shrinking. Beyond this, Japans total population is expected to decline by 60 percent by the end of this century. Shipman will share the details that support these points and will also explain how to avoid the catastrophe they portend.

  • Social Security Reform: An Unprecedented Global Challenge

    Many Americans think Social Security is an American invention, a social policy unique to our country. They are terribly misguided. Social Security is a child of the Industrial Revolution and was first implemented in Germany in 1889. The idea of a large government entitlement has spread throughout the world and now about 70 percent of all countries have systems much like ours. They are all financed through payroll taxes, provide very low benefits relative to costs and have unfunded liabilities well in excess of countries sovereign debt. Globally, Social Security is a ticking time bomb. The relevant questions are will it explode or will nations figure out a way to dismantle the bomb. Either way, no one will escape.

    In his speech, Shipman will explain how we got to this critical point, what factors drive the escalating problem and, importantly, how to solve the problem. Shipman has shared his extensive experience with hundreds of audiences across 21 countries and six continents. Given our recent public awareness that entitlements can crush our economy and ultimately our freedom, Shipmans comments are now particularly important.

FAQs on booking William Shipman

  • How do I book William Shipman to speak at my event?

    Our experienced booking agents have successfully helped clients around the world secure speakers like William Shipman for speaking engagements, personal appearances, product endorsements, or corporate entertainment since 2002. Click the Check Availability button above and complete the form on this page to check availability for William Shipman, or call our office at 1.800.698.2536 to discuss your upcoming event. One of our experienced agents will be happy to help you get speaking fee information and check availability for William Shipman or any other speaker of your choice.
  • What are the speaker fees for William Shipman

    Speaking fees for William Shipman, or any other speakers and celebrities, are determined based on a number of factors and may change without notice. The estimated fees to book William Shipman are $10,000 - $20,000 for live events and available upon request for virtual events. For the most current speaking fee to hire William Shipman, click the Check Availability button above and complete the form on this page, or call our office at 1.800.698.2536 to speak directly with an experienced booking agent.
  • What topics does William Shipman speak about?

    William Shipman is a keynote speaker and industry expert whose speaking topics include Business, Consulting, Economy and Finance, Finance, Futurism, Health and Wellness, Political Speakers.
  • Where does William Shipman travel from?

    William Shipman generally travels from Boston, MA, USA, but can be booked for private corporate events, personal appearances, keynote speeches, or other performances. For more details, please contact an AAE Booking agent.
  • Who is William Shipman’s agent?

    AAE Speakers Bureau has successfully booked keynote speakers like William Shipman for clients worldwide since 2002. As a full-service speaker booking agency, we have access to virtually any speaker or celebrity in the world. Our agents are happy and able to submit an offer to the speaker or celebrity of your choice, letting you benefit from our reputation and long-standing relationships in the industry. Please click the Check Availability button above and complete the form on this page including the details of your event, or call our office at 1.800.698.2536, and one of our agents will assist you to book William Shipman for your next private or corporate function.
  • What is a full-service speaker booking agency?

    AAE Speakers Bureau is a full-service speaker booking agency, meaning we can completely manage the speaker’s or celebrity’s engagement with your organization from the time of booking your speaker through the event’s completion. We provide all of the services you need to host William Shipman or any other speaker of your choice, including offer negotiation, contractual assistance, accounting and billing, and event speaker travel and logistics services. When you book a speaker with us, we manage the process of hosting a speaker for you as an extension of your team. Our goal is to give our clients peace of mind and a best-in-class service experience when booking a speaker with us.
  • Why is AAE Speakers Bureau different from other booking agencies?

    If you’re looking for the best, unbiased speaker recommendations, paired with a top-notch customer service experience, you’re in the right place. At AAE Speakers Bureau, we exclusively represent the interests of our clients - professional organizations, companies, universities, and associations. We intentionally do not represent the speakers we feature or book. That is so we can present our clients with the broadest and best performing set of speaker options in the market today, and we can make these recommendations without any obligation to promote a specific speaker over another. This is why when our agents suggest a speaker for your event, you can be assured that they are of the highest quality with a history of proven success with our other clients.

William Shipman is a keynote speaker and industry expert who speaks on a wide range of topics such as What is the Role of the Individual, of the Government, in a Free Society?, Why Europe is Becoming Less Important to the United States, How Wealth Produces Poverty and What to Do About It and Social Security Reform: An Unprecedented Global Challenge. The estimated speaking fee range to book William Shipman for your event is $10,000 - $20,000. William Shipman generally travels from Boston, MA, USA and can be booked for (private) corporate events, personal appearances, keynote speeches, or other performances. Similar motivational celebrity speakers are Maddy Dychtwald, Susan Dentzer, Thomas Frey, Jim Jorgensen and Todd Buchholz. Contact All American Speakers for ratings, reviews, videos and information on scheduling William Shipman for an upcoming live or virtual event.

William Shipman Speaking Topics

  • What is the Role of the Individual, of the Government, in a Free Society?

    What is the role of the individual in a free society? What is the role of the government in a free society? Under our system of government, with specific reference to the Constitution, the federal government has limited powers beyond which they reside with the states and the individual. A rational system would have the government provide goods and services that it can deliver more efficiently than the private sector and leave all other provisions to the private sector. Unfortunately, from this perspective our system is irrational, at least in some cases. The federal government provides retirement income in the form of Social Security. The private sector does as well through defined benefit and defined contribution plans. Relative to DB and DC plans, Social Security is terribly inefficient. That is to say benefits are very low relative to the payroll taxes that finance them. Social Security is a bad deal.

    And that is why it is mandatory. If it were voluntary, most people would leave it for the more efficient defined contribution model.

    The Social Security debate is emblematic of the role of government in our lives. With irrefutable evidence that Social Security is a bad deal, we are not free to leave it. We are not free to spend the equivalent of our payroll taxes on a more efficient structure. We like to think of ourselves as free, but in this particular case we are not. And this is not a trivial case: 80 percent of workers pay more in payroll taxes than they do in income taxes and for which they receive very little. Again, what is the role of the individual, of the government, in a free society?

    Shipman will share with you his experiences with congress, his testimonies to congressional committees and his plan to allow all workers to remain with Social Security or leave it.

  • Why Europe is Becoming Less Important to the United States

    Europe has long been a strategic and economic partner of the United States. Its economic success in many ways contributes to ours. Conversely, its failure can influence ours. Europe, in fact, is failing. Although there are numerous reasons for this, one is most significant and not well understood. Europe, Germany specifically, is the birthplace of entitlements. Entitlements are promises to provide benefits to the population sometime in the future, commonly during retirement. These benefits are generally retirement income, commonly called Social Security and health care subsidies. Giving one a promise of future benefits allows the government to spend more currently than it could if it provided the same benefit in the present. This is not so, of course, if governments funded such promises, but they havent and they dont.

    As these promises were historically made and actually kept over decades, populations became dependent on them and somewhat rightfully considered them their right. Nowhere is this more prevalent than in Europe. Being entitled to government benefits is now part of Europeans cultural DNA. The problem, however, is that the promises can no longer be kept because European economies and demographics preclude it.

    Even a casual observer of current events recognizes that governments around the world have made promises they cannot reasonably keep. This is especially true in Europe, Greece being the poster boy, although it is true in other regions of the world. The economies of European countries are stagnant, their debts are oppressive and their entitlement spending is unsustainable. Furthermore, their populations are ageing and shrinking. This is why the United States is looking eastward with the intent of establishing stronger relations with Japanthe second largest economy in the world as measured by GDP per capita and Chinathe second largest economy in the world as measured by GDP. Although this redirection of interest is understandable, it is fraught with its own dangers because Japan is also aging and shrinking. In just 13 years Japan, demographically speaking, will be the oldest country in the world. By the end of the century its population will have declined 60 percent.

  • How Wealth Produces Poverty and What to Do About It

    Social Security benefits are provided by taxing workers payroll. But as countries prosper, life expectancy increases and fertility rates fall leaving fewer workers relative to retirees. This results in the fact that the entire financial structure that supports Social Security is crumbling. This is especially true in Europe and Japan, two very important economies and strategic partners to the U.S. The fertility rate that replaces the population is 2.1. Below 2.1, populations shrink, above, they grow. Fertility rates in Europe average about 1.3, while in Japan 1.2. Europe and Japan are shrinking and at the same time aging; the number of workers relative to retirees is shrinking. Beyond this, Japans total population is expected to decline by 60 percent by the end of this century. Shipman will share the details that support these points and will also explain how to avoid the catastrophe they portend.

  • Social Security Reform: An Unprecedented Global Challenge

    Many Americans think Social Security is an American invention, a social policy unique to our country. They are terribly misguided. Social Security is a child of the Industrial Revolution and was first implemented in Germany in 1889. The idea of a large government entitlement has spread throughout the world and now about 70 percent of all countries have systems much like ours. They are all financed through payroll taxes, provide very low benefits relative to costs and have unfunded liabilities well in excess of countries sovereign debt. Globally, Social Security is a ticking time bomb. The relevant questions are will it explode or will nations figure out a way to dismantle the bomb. Either way, no one will escape.

    In his speech, Shipman will explain how we got to this critical point, what factors drive the escalating problem and, importantly, how to solve the problem. Shipman has shared his extensive experience with hundreds of audiences across 21 countries and six continents. Given our recent public awareness that entitlements can crush our economy and ultimately our freedom, Shipmans comments are now particularly important.

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During normal business hours, we respond to most inquiries within 4 hours.

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Speakers Similar to William Shipman

This website is a resource for event professionals and strives to provide the most comprehensive catalog of thought leaders and industry experts to consider for speaking engagements. A listing or profile on this website does not imply an agency affiliation or endorsement by the talent.

All American Entertainment (AAE) exclusively represents the interests of talent buyers, and does not claim to be the agency or management for any speaker or artist on this site. AAE is a talent booking agency for paid events only. We do not handle requests for donation of time or media requests for interviews, and cannot provide celebrity contact information.

If you are the talent and wish to request a profile update or removal from our online directory, please submit a profile request form.

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