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THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
For Immediate Release June 1, 1997
RADIO ADDRESS BY THE PRESIDENT TO THE NATION
The Map Room
THE PRESIDENT: Good morning. I've just returned from Europe where I
commemorated the 50th Anniversary of the Marshall Plan, which joined
America's investment to Europe's commitment to rebuild, and in so doing,
helped to spark 50 years of prosperity, not only for Europe, but for
America as well.
I also had the opportunity to discuss with leaders of Europe the
present success of our economy and what we can do together to promote
prosperity in the new democracies of Central and Eastern Europe in ways
that will ensure their prosperity and ours for the next 50 years.
This morning I want to talk with you about the new economic policy we
brought to America for the last four and a half years and how our
balanced budget and tax cut plans can help in creating jobs, raising
incomes, strengthening business and moving America forward in the years
to come.
Recall for a moment what America's economy looked like four years ago:
high unemployment, few new jobs, stagnant wages, exploding budget
deficits. I took office determined to replace trickle-down economics
with invest-and-grow economics. There were three principal elements to
our strategy: Reduce the budget deficit, and invest in the education,
training and security of working men and women and our children, and
open new markets for American-made goods and services through tough
trade agreements.
I believe all three were necessary to create the conditions for private
sector prosperity and to ensure that all our people have the opportunity
to reap the rewards of growth. We made tough, often controversial,
decisions in 1993 and afterward to implement our new invest-and-grow
economic policy. Some fine members of Congress lost their seats because
they had the courage to change course and vote for the future.
But just look at the results. Today our confidence has returned and
our economy leads the world. In 1992, the deficit was $290 billion.
Today, we expect it to drop to $67 billion, a 77 percent reduction. In
1992, unemployment averaged 7.5 percent. Today, it's 4.9 percent -- the
lowest in 24 years.
In 1992 there were few new jobs. Since then, the economy has produced
12.1 million of them, including the most ever in a single presidential
term. And while the years before our plan took effect saw sluggish
growth, yesterday we learned that in the first quarter of this year the
economy grew at a 5.8 percent rate -- the highest in a decade.
Inflation is at a 30-year low; business investment, a 30-year high.
Each year we've had a record number of new businesses started. Wages
are rising. In the last two years, over half the new jobs have paid
higher than average wages, and inequality among working people has seen
the biggest drop since the 1960s. Our economy is the healthiest in a
generation.
All this didn't just happen. We've had better-managed,
more-competitive businesses, more-productive working people; the
entrepreneurial spirit of small business; a Federal Reserve committed
both to low inflation and to economic growth; and continued advances in
technology.
Americans' hard work and high energy, smart decisions and tough
choices, and our invest-and-grow strategy -- all these have worked
together to produce this success.
Now in the coming months, America will have to decide whether to stick
with this strategy. Will we continue to engage the world economy by
continuing to give normal trading status to China? Will Congress give
the President the tools necessary to open new markets abroad for
American products through tough new trade agreements? And, above all,
will we finish the job of balancing the budget while protecting our
values?
Earlier this month I reached agreement with the leaders of Congress on
a bipartisan balanced budget plan that will continue our economic
strategy into the next century. This is a balanced budget plan that
also is in balance with our values. It will eliminate the budget
deficit by 2002, honor our parents by securing the Medicare Trust Fund
for a decade, preserve our environment through strong enforcement in the
cleanup of 500 toxic waste sites, and protect the next generation by
extending health insurance coverage to as many as 5 million uninsured
children. And, most important of all, it will invest in the skills of
our people through the most significant increase in higher education
since the G.I. Bill half a century ago, the expansion of Head Start and
an investment in higher national academic standards for our children.
Both Houses of Congress moved forward on this budget before they left
town for the Memorial Day recess. I was pleased that a strong majority
of both parties supported this bipartisan plan. When Congress gets back
to work, it's time to finish the job of enacting the broad outlines of
the budget plan. Then in the weeks to come, Congress will fill in the
details and begin writing this budget and its tax cut into law. I want
a tax cut that helps families raise their children and send them to
college, and keeps the economy growing. That's my goal.
I look forward to continuing to work together with the Republican and
Democratic members of the tax writing committees in Congress to meet
this goal as we write the details of the tax cut into law. As that
process begins, I want to tell you three of the things this final tax
cut plan should include: First, with education our most important goal,
our tax cut must help open the doors of college to every American. Our
bipartisan budget plan includes $35 billion in tax relief, targeted to
help families pay for higher education. Our HOPE Scholarship is a
$1,500 per year tax cut to help pay for the first two years of college
and open them to all Americans. I will also recommend that students who
already receive Pell Grant Scholarships can still receive the HOPE
Scholarship for education costs beyond those covered by their Pell
Grant. With this step, we'll make sure that our tax cut reaches all
those who want to take responsibility for their own lives and go on to
college. Beyond that, I favor a tax deduction for the cost of any
education after high school for people of any age.
Second, as many families as possible should have a chance to receive
the dividend created by economic growth. Our plan will give families a
$500 child tax credit. This is the kind of tax relief we need --
targeted to helping families raise their children and meeting the
competing demands of work and family. As we craft this tax cut, I
believe it's especially important that we make sure that the child tax
credit is fair to working families -- especially those with lower
incomes.
Third, the tax cuts must be consistent with a balanced budget and must
not be written in such a way that they reopen the deficit and bust the
budget in years to come. This was absolutely key when we reached a
budget agreement, and I will continue to insist on it as we write the
agreement into law. Fiscal responsibility helped to produced a strong
economy. Fiscal irresponsibility will surely undo it. We cannot put
our prosperity at risk through time bomb tax cuts that explode the
deficit in five or 10 or 20 years. We must continue with discipline.
We tried it the other way before and it failed.
We are now nearly five years into our economic strategy of invest and
grow, and it is working -- well beyond our most optimistic expectations.
We have now an historic chance to continue this growth and give the
American people the dividends of expansion through a tax cut. We can
protect our values as we expand our economy. The American people
deserve a tax cut and they need a balanced budget. We can give them
both. If we make sure that this tax cut helps all working families,
that it opens wide the doors of college, and that it never, never throws
the budget out of balance, we can propel our country into the 21st
century even stronger than it is today.
Thanks for listening.
END
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