[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 32, Number 34 (Monday, August 26, 1996)]
[Pages 1475-1477]
[Online from the Government Printing Office, www.gpo.gov]
<R04>
Statement on Signing the Small Business Job Protection Act of 1996
August 20, 1996
Today I have signed into law H.R. 3448, the ``Small Business Job
Protection Act of 1996.''
This is important and long overdue legislation that provides a badly
needed pay raise for millions of Americans and their families who
struggle to make ends meet while working at the minimum wage. The Act
boosts the minimum wage in two steps--a 50 cent increase from $4.25 to
$4.75 an hour that takes effect October 1, followed by an additional 40
cent rise to $5.15 an hour on September 1, 1997. This increase will help
some 10 million of our hardest pressed working families build a better
future. It is true to the basic American bargain that if you work hard
you ought to have food on your table and a living wage in your pocket.
It is the right thing to do.
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I should note that I disagree with certain provisions added to the
minimum wage title of the Act, such as the provision creating a new
subminimum wage for young people and the one denying increased cash
wages to most employees who rely on tips for part of their income.
Still, those defects do not obscure the central accomplishment of this
Act--securing the first minimum wage increase since 1991.
Beyond raising the minimum wage, this Act represents real progress
on a number of other fronts.
First, I am particularly gratified by the important provisions in
this Act concerning adoption. The Act provides a nonrefundable tax
credit of up to $5,000 per child for adoption expenses; $6,000 for
children with special needs. It will help thousands of children waiting
for a family who wants them. It will help thousands of middle class
parents realize their dream of adopting a child. It will build stronger
families and stronger communities.
Moreover, the Act bars placement agencies that receive Federal funds
from denying or delaying adoptions based on race, color, or national
origin. As I have consistently said, it is time to end the historical
bias against interracial adoptions. That bias has too often meant
interminable delay for children waiting to be matched with parents of
the same race. It is time to put the creation of strong and loving
families first.
Second, the Act creates a simplified, 401(k) retirement plan for
small businesses, making it far easier for such companies to offer
pensions to their employees. This new plan includes many of the pension
reforms my Administration proposed more than a year ago. For example, it
increases the portability of pensions, allowing more new workers to
start saving for retirement from their first day on the job. It cuts the
vesting period for workers in multiemployer plans from 10 years to 5,
immediately vesting over 1 million workers in their benefits. It repeals
the so-called ``family aggregation rule,'' which limited the retirement
benefits of family members working together in the same business. It
allows nonprofit organizations and Indian tribes to maintain 401(k)
plans for their workers; assures veterans they will have continued
pension coverage if they return to a civilian job after military
service; and makes pension benefits safer and more secure for millions
of employees of State and local governments. The pension provisions in
the Act are not perfect--they provide a smaller share of benefits to
lower and middle wage workers than I proposed. But they are a
significant step in the right direction.
Third, the Act gives a boost to small business by increasing the
amount of capital that small businesses can write off as an expense. I
proposed a $15,000 increase in 1993 in order to encourage the kind of
investment that creates new growth and jobs. The Congress passed half of
what we advocated then and this legislation gives us the other half.
Although the measure in this Act is phased in more slowly than I
proposed, it will still give small businesses a good incentive for
capital investment.
Fourth, the Act extends the research tax credit, an important
measure for a high-tech economy that will retain its competitive edge in
the 21st century only if we remain committed to innovation and the
research that underlies it. I wanted the Congress to go further by
reinstating the research credit retroactively to July 1, 1995, when it
last expired, and making it permanent. But this extension, through May
of next year, is an important step forward.
Fifth, the Act extends a tax incentive for businesses that train and
educate their employees. That incentive excludes from an employee's
taxable income as much as $5,250 of educational assistance provided by
an employer. Such assistance is another key element in maintaining U.S.
competitiveness because a better trained, better educated work force is
vital to achieving higher productivity. I regret that the Congress
failed to make this incentive permanent and that it has eliminated the
incentive for post-graduate education. But in extending the incentive
for undergraduate education through May 1997, the Act takes a useful
step.
Sixth, by replacing the expiring Targeted Jobs Tax Credit (TJTC)
with a new Work Opportunity Tax Credit, the Act provides a significant
incentive for employers to hire people from certain targeted groups most
in need of jobs, such as high-risk youth. I am
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pleased to see improvements that address many of the concerns raised
about implementation of the TJTC. For example, the minimum employment
period required before an employer becomes eligible for the credit will
promote longer, more meaningful work experiences for those hired.
As strong a piece of legislation as this is overall, however, I am
concerned about three provisions, two of which I objected to when they
were included in legislation I vetoed last year.
The first provision repeals the tax credit related to corporate
investments in Puerto Rico and other insular areas. I urged the Congress
to reform the credit and use the resulting revenue for Puerto Rico's
social and job training needs. My proposal would have, over time,
prevented companies from obtaining tax benefits by merely attributing
income to the islands, but it would have continued to give companies a
tax credit for wages and local taxes paid and capital investments made
there, as well as for earnings reinvested in Puerto Rico and qualified
Caribbean Basin Initiative countries. This legislation ignores the real
needs of our citizens in Puerto Rico, ending the incentive for new
investment now and phasing out the incentive for existing investments. I
remain committed to my proposal for an effective incentive based on real
economy activity that preserves and creates jobs in underdeveloped
islands, and I hope that the Congress will act to ensure that the
incentive for economic activity remains in effect.
A second provision repeals a 1993 initiative of this Administration
that reduces tax incentives for U.S. companies to move jobs and
operations abroad. Repeal of this provision will allow businesses to
avoid taxes by accumulating foreign earnings without limit.
Finally, I have reservations about a provision in the Act which
makes civil damages based on nonphysical injury or illness taxable. Such
damages are paid to compensate for injury, whether physical or not, and
are designed to make victims whole, not to enrich them. These damages
should not be considered a source of taxable income.
Notwithstanding these objections, this is important, forward-looking
legislation. It gives millions of hard-pressed workers a well-deserved
raise, will make adoption a reality for thousands of grateful families
and children, takes a good first step toward providing adequate
retirement benefits and security for employees of small businesses, and
creates useful tax incentives for the benefit of small businesses and
their employees. Where there are improvements yet to be made, we will
continue to work with the Congress to make them.
William J. Clinton
The White House,
August 20, 1996.
Note: H.R. 3448, approved August 20, was assigned Public Law No. 104-
188.