[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 32, Number 34 (Monday, August 26, 1996)]
[Pages 1459-1461]
[Online from the Government Printing Office, www.gpo.gov]
<R04>
The President's Radio Address
August 17, 1996
Good morning. This year the American people are being offered a
clear choice of economic plans, two very different visions of how to
help our economy grow. This morning I want to talk with you about my
plan for our Nation's economy, about the differences between my plan and
the plan offered by our opponents, and how we can keep the American
dream alive as we move toward the 21st century.
This is a very hopeful time for our country. Our Nation's enduring
mission is to give every American opportunity, to demand responsibility
from all of our citizens, and to come together as a community. We must
go forward into this new century together.
One of the things that helps us is a growing economy. A growing
economy helps make all those values--opportunity, responsibility, and
community--real for our families, our children, for all Americans.
As America prepares itself for the possibilities of the new century,
they seem unlimited. But 4 years ago that wasn't so clear. Our economy
was drifting then. New jobs were scarce; unemployment was 7.7 percent.
Our budget deficit was at a record high and growing.
I took office determined to set our country on a new course, and
that is what we did, cutting the deficit by 60 percent, investing in our
people, expanding exports to record levels. And today we see the
results. America is making more cars than Japan for the first time in a
decade. We have 900,000 new construction jobs. There are hundreds of
thousands of businesses owned by women. In fact, now, one in three
businesses are owned by a woman.
Four point four million Americans have become homeowners. Another 10
million have refinanced their mortgages at lower rates. The combined
rates of inflation, unemployment, and mortgages is at a 28-year low. The
budget deficit is now the smallest it's been since 1981, and our economy
has created over 10 million new jobs.
Finally, real hourly wages--the paycheck of the American worker--
these wages are starting to rise again for the first time in a decade.
As even our opponents have acknowledged, our economy is the soundest
it's been in a generation.
This opportunity strategy is working. But now we have to build on
it, to produce faster growth, more high-paying jobs, more successful
businesses, to bring the benefits of economic growth to those who have
not yet experienced them. First, we have to finish the job of balancing
the budget so that we can keep interest rates down and remove the debt
burden from future generations. Then we have to give our people
education and training, access to health care, and retirement security,
so all working people can reap the rewards of this new economy.
This week I will sign into law an increase in the minimum wage. For
those who work hard to stay off welfare but can't live on $4.25 an hour,
this is a very important act. It will truly honor work and family. The
same bill also provides help to small businesses to help them increase
investment in job creation and to increase their ability to save for
retirement.
Next, we should give Americans a tax cut. We've already cut taxes
for 15 million American working families through our dramatic expansion
of the earned-income tax credit. This year that tax deduction will be
worth about $1,000 to a family of four with an income of $28,000 a year
or less. Now, we can, and we should, do more.
In going forward I have proposed a program of tax cuts for working
families that focus on education and childrearing and are clearly within
our ability to balance the budget so we can continue to keep those
interest rates down and the economy growing. That's
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very important if we want our families to be strong and successful.
On the tax cut front I think, first, we should give tax cuts to pay
for a college education. I have proposed giving individuals a $1,500 tax
credit each year to pay for 2 years of college tuition, a Hope
Scholarship that will entirely pay for tuition at a typical community
college. We have to make 2 years of education after high school as
universal as a high school education is now.
And going beyond that, I proposed giving families a tax deduction
for up to $10,000 a year for the tuition of all college costs, going
beyond just the first 2 years. Over and above that, I have proposed
collapsing all the Federal training programs into a ``GI bill'' for
America's workers, so that those who are unemployed or underemployed can
get a skills grant worth up to $2,600 a year to pursue their education.
This is a good, good foundation on building a network of lifetime
learning that all American families will need to succeed in the global
economy.
The second thing we need to do is to give parents of children under
the age of 13 a $500 per child tax credit to help them to pay for child
care. This also is very important.
Thirdly, we ought to give people a tax cut through expanded IRA's
that people can use to withdraw from without penalty in a way that helps
them save not only for their retirement but also for a first-time home,
for medical care, or for a college education.
That's our program: targeted tax cuts; continuing to invest in
education and research and new technologies; continuing to cut the
deficit and balance the budget; expanding exports to record levels. This
is the plan that will work. We know this growth strategy works. It's
already produced over 10 million new jobs, a very different situation
than existed under the previous policy.
Now, as you know, our opponents are offering a very different
strategy, but it's the same one they've offered before. And our plans
are very different. My tax cut is limited in size; it's worth $110
billion. Theirs is 5 times as much, $550 billion. We can afford ours. We
can't afford theirs.
My tax cut is targeted. Theirs is indiscriminate. Mine will be there
when the middle class families need it to help them give their children
an education, buy a home, pay for child care. Our opponents' plan gives
indiscriminate tax cuts, regardless of the cost. In fact, millions of
middle class families with children in college or with adults in
educational programs would actually get a bigger tax cut under my plan
than under our opponents' plan.
And my tax cut is paid for with specific, tough budget cuts
consistent with the balanced budget plan. Our opponents haven't said how
they'll pay for their tax cut yet.
Now, if they don't pay for it, their plan would balloon the deficit.
That would increase interest rates, and that would slow down the economy
and cost us jobs. Our plan, by contrast, would clearly help the economy.
Higher interest rates under their plan would cancel out the tax benefits
for most families. Under our plan, interest rates would come down
because the budget will be balanced just as people are getting their tax
cuts.
On the other hand, if our opponents do pay for this massive tax cut,
that would mean even bigger cuts in Medicare, Medicaid, education, and
the environment than they have already proposed. My plan pays for tax
cuts without undermining our values. Their plan would deeply cut
Medicare. My plan would not require new out-of-pocket costs for
beneficiaries to pay for tax cuts. Their plan would undermine Medicaid's
guarantee of quality health care to pregnant women, poor children, to
families with people with disabilities, and to the elderly. My plan
would preserve Medicaid's guarantee for these groups of Americans.
Their plan would cut education. My plan would cut taxes while
increasing investments in education. Their plan would endanger the
environment. My plan would cut taxes while continuing to clean up
pollution and make our environment cleaner.
So the American people have a clear choice in this election. We
agree on one thing: Americans do deserve a tax cut. But we must choose
between a tax cut that responsibly balances the budget and one that puts
our economy at risk; between one that is targeted to help working
families pay for education, health care, and other pressing needs, and
one that is indiscriminate; be-
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tween one that is paid for by prudently cutting Government, and one that
is paid for by undercutting Medicare, Medicaid, education, and the
environment, or not paid for at all, bringing back those bad old days of
out of control deficits, high interest rates, slow growth, or recession.
I look forward to discussing these plans before the American people
in the coming months. This election will give our Nation the chance to
decide whether we want to continue forward on a path of opportunity,
responsibility, work, and growth. That kind of debate can only be good
for our country.
Thanks for listening.
Note: The address was recorded at 5:40 p.m. on August 16 at the Chapman
Ranch in Jackson Hole, WY, for broadcast at 10:06 a.m. on August 17.