Elizabeth Schulze is a multiplatform reporter at ABC News based in
Washington, D.C. Her reporting regularly appears on “Good Morning
America,” “World News Tonight with David Muir,” ABC News Live,
and all ABC News television and audio affiliates.

Schulze is the host of the ABC News Live series “Ca$hing In with
Elizabeth Schulze,” which breaks down how decisions by economic
policymakers in Washington impact Americans’ pocketbooks. She also
fills in as a guest host of ABC’s flagship daily podcast “Start
Here” and as a co-anchor of ABC News’ network shows “World News
Now” and “America This Morning.”

Schulze also played a key part of the team covering the 2020
presidential and 2022 midterm elections, the Jan. 6 Capitol attack,
and the second impeachment trial of former President Donald Trump for
ABC NewsOne and ABC Audio. She has led ABC News’ network coverage of
the debt ceiling debate, the failure of Silicon Valley Bank, and the
impact of inflation on the U.S. and global economy.

Prior to joining ABC in 2020, she worked at CNBC, covering economics,
financial markets and technology for eight years. She was a
correspondent at CNBC International, based in London, for over two
years. Before relocating to London, Schulze was based at CNBC’s
global headquarters in New Jersey, where she was responsible for the
Federal Reserve beat.

In addition to reporting on the business sector, she has traveled
across the country for breaking news stories, including the Senate
race in Georgia, violent threats against election workers in
Pennsylvania, and Hurricane Ida in Louisiana. In July 2023, she
traveled with President Joe Biden to the NATO Summit in Lithuania.

Throughout her career, Schulze has moderated panels and interviews
across Europe and the Middle East with chief executives and top
policymakers, including at the IMF Annual Meetings in Washington,
D.C.; the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland; and Web Summit
in Lisbon, Portugal.

A Minnesota native, Schulze graduated magna cum laude with a double
major in journalism and international studies from Northwestern
University’s Medill School of Journalism.
