Home > 1998 Presidential Documents > pd07se98 Statement on the Northwest Airlines Pilots Strike...pd07se98 Statement on the Northwest Airlines Pilots Strike...
Now, in terms of what has happened in America, obviously it's always
more enjoyable when our stock market goes up than when it goes down. But
I have talked to our Secretary of the Treasury about this several times
since yesterday. I want to reiterate the point that I think is important
for Russia, for America, for every country: We believe our fundamental
economic policy is sound; we believe our people are working at record
rates; and we are determined to stay on a path of fiscal discipline that
brought us to where we are. I think that wherever there are markets
there will always be changes in those markets. But we must attempt to
move in the right direction.
And that's what I want to talk to you about today: How can we move
in the right direction? When I look at all the young people here today--
and I have read about you and your background--young people from all
over Russia, seizing the possibilities of freedom to chart new courses
for yourselves and your nation, making a difference by building
businesses from modest loans and innovative ideas, by taking
technologies created for weapons and applying them to human needs, by
finding creative government solutions to complex problems, by improving
medical care and fighting disease, by publishing courageous journalism,
exposing abuses of power, producing literature and art and scholarship,
changing the way people see their own lives, organizing citizens to
fight for justice and human rights and a cleaner environment, reaching
out to the world. In this room today, there are young people doing all
those things. That should give you great reason to hope.
You are at the forefront of building a modern Russia. You are a new
generation. You do represent the future of your dreams. Your efforts
today will not only ensure better lives for yourselves but for your
children and generations that follow.
I think it is important to point out, too, that when Russia chose
freedom, it was not supposed to benefit only the young and well
educated, the rich and well connected; it was
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also supposed to benefit the men and women who worked in factories and
farms and fought the wars of the Soviet era, those who survive today on
pensions and Government assistance. It was also supposed to benefit the
laborers and teachers and soldiers who work every day but wait now for a
paycheck.
The challenge is to create a new Russia that benefits all
responsible citizens of this country. How do you get there? I do not
believe it is by reverting to the failed policies of the past. I do not
believe it is by stopping the reform process in midstream, with a few
Russians doing very well but far more struggling to provide for their
families. I believe you will create the conditions of growth if, but
only if, you continue to move decisively along the path of democratic,
market-oriented, constructive revolution.
The Russian people have made extraordinary progress in the last 7
years. You have gone to the polls to elect your leaders. Some 65 to 70
percent of you freely turn out in every election. People across Russia
are rebuilding diverse religious traditions, launching a wide range of
private organizations. Seventy percent of the economy now is in private
hands. Not bureaucrats but consumers determine what goods get to stores
and where people live. You have reached out to the world with trade and
investment, exchanges of every kind, and leadership in meeting security
challenges around the globe.
Now you face a critical moment. Today's financial crisis does not
require you to abandon your march toward freedom and free markets.
Russians will define Russia's future, but there are clear lessons, I
would argue, from international experience. Here's what I think they
are.
First, in tough times governments need stable revenues to pay their
bills, support salaries, pensions, and health care. That requires
decisive action to ensure that everyone pays their fair share of taxes.
Otherwise, a few pay too much, many pay too little, the government is in
the hole and can never get out, and you will never be able to have a
stable economic policy. It is tempting for everyone to avoid wanting to
pay any taxes. But if everyone will pay their fair share, the share will
be modest and their incomes will be larger over the long run because of
the stability and growth it will bring to this Russian economic system.
Second, printing money to pay the bills and bail out the banks does
not help. It causes inflation and ultimately will make the pain worse.
Third, special bailouts for a privileged few come at the expense of
the whole nation.
Fourth, fair, equitable treatment of creditors today will determine
their involvement in a nation tomorrow. The people who loan money into
this nation must be treated fairly if you want them to be loaning money
into this nation 4 years, 5 years, 10 years hence.
These are not radical theories, they are simply facts proven by
experience. How Russia reacts to them will fundamentally affect your
future. Surviving today's crisis, however difficult that may be, is just
the beginning. To create jobs, growth, and higher income, a nation must
convince its own citizens and foreigners that they can safely invest.
Again, experience teaches what works: fair tax laws and fair
enforcement; easier transferability of land; strong intellectual
property rights to encourage innovation; independent courts enforcing
the law consistently and upholding contract rights; strong banks that
safeguard savings; securities markets that protect investors; social
spending that promotes hope and opportunity and a safety net for those
who in any given time in an open market economy will be dislocated; and
vigilance against hidden ties between government and business interests
that are inappropriate.
Now, this is not an American agenda. I will say it again: This is
not an American agenda. These are the imperatives of the global
marketplace, and you can see them repeated over and over and over again.
You can also see the cost of ignoring them in nation after nation after
nation.
Increasingly, no nation, rich or poor, democratic or authoritarian,
can escape the fundamental economic imperatives of the global market.
Investors and entrepreneurs have a very wide and growing range of
choices about where they put their money. They move in the direction of
openness, fairness, and freedom. Here, Russia has an opportunity. At the
dawn of a new century there is a remarkable convergence; increasingly,
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the very policies that are needed to thrive in the new economy are also
those which deepen democratic liberty for individual citizens.
This is a wealthy country. It is rich in resources. It is richer
still in people. It has done a remarkable job of providing quality
education to large numbers of people. You have proven over and over and
over again in ways large and small that the people of this country have
a sense of courage and spirit, an unwillingness to be beat down and to
give up. The future can be very, very bright.
But we can't ignore the rules of the game, because if there is a
system of freedom, you cannot take away and no country, not even the
United States with the size of our economy, no country is strong enough
to control what millions and millions and millions of people decide
freely to do with their money. But every country will keep a large share
of its own citizens' money and get a lot of money from worldwide
investors if it can put in place systems that abide by the rules of
international commerce. And all Russia needs is its fair share of this
investment. You have the natural wealth. You have the people power. You
have the education. All you need is just to get your fair share of the
investment.
Now, 21st century economic power will rest on creativity and
innovation. I believe the young people in this room think they can be as
creative or innovative as anyone in the world. It will rest on the free
flow of information. It will rest on ideas. Consider this, those of you
who are beginning your careers: America's three largest computer and
software companies are now worth more than all the American companies in
our steel, automotive, aerospace, chemical, and plastics industries
combined--combined--our three biggest computer companies.
The future is a future of ideas. No nation will ever have a monopoly
on ideas. No people will ever control all the creative juices that flow
in the human spirit more or less evenly across the world. You will do
very well if you just get your fair share of investment. To get your
fair share of investment, you have to play by the rules that everyone
else has to play by. That's what this whole crisis is about. No one
could ever have expected your country to be able to make this transition
without pain. You've only been at this 7 years.
Look at any European country that has had an open market society for
decades and decades and decades. They have hundreds, indeed thousands,
of little organizations, they have major national institutions that all
tend to reinforce these rules that I talked about earlier. Don't be
discouraged, but don't be deterred. Just keep working until you get it
in place. Once you get it in place, Russia will take off like a rocket,
because you have both natural resources and people resources.
Now, I think it's important to point out, however, that economic
strength--let's go back to the rules--it depends on the rule of law. If
somebody from outside a country intends to put money into a foreign
country, they want to know what the rules are. What are the terms on
which my money is being invested? How will my investment be protected?
If I lose money, I want to know it's because I made a bad decision, not
because the law didn't protect my money. It is very important.
Investors, therefore, seek honest government, fair systems--fair for
corporations and consumers, where there are strong checks on corruption
and abuse of authority and openness in what the rules are on how
investment capital is handled.
Economic strength depends on equality of opportunity. There must be
strong schools and good health care, and everyone must have a chance to
share in the nation's bounty. And economic power must lie with people
who vote their consciences, use new technologies to spread ideas, start
organizations to work for change, and build enterprises of all kinds.
Now, some seek to exploit this power shift that's going on in the
world to take advantage of their fellow citizens. When this nation went
from the old Communist command and control system to an open free
system, without all the intermediate institutions and private
organizations that it takes years to build up, vacuums were created. And
into those vacuums, some moved with an intent to exploit their fellow
citizens to enrich themselves without regard to fairness or safety or
the future. The challenges for any citizen--this is not Russia
specific--this would have happened and has happened in every single
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country that has had to make this transition. There's nothing inherently
negative about this development. It is as predictable as the Sun coming
up in the morning. Every country has had to face this. But you must
overcome it.
You must have a state that is strong enough to control abuses:
violence, theft, fraud, bribery, monopolism. But it must not be so
strong that it can limit the legitimate rights and dreams and creativity
of the people. That is the tension of creating the right kind of
democratic market society.
The bottom line is that the American people very much want Russia to
succeed. We value your friendship. We honor your struggle. We want to
offer support as long as you take the steps needed for stability and
progress. We will benefit greatly if you strengthen your democracy and
increase your prosperity.
Look what our partnership has already produced. We reversed the
dangerous buildup of nuclear weapons. We're 2 years ahead of schedule in
cutting nuclear arsenals under START I. START II, which still awaits
ratification in the Duma, will reduce our nuclear forces by two-thirds
from cold-war levels. President Yeltsin and I already have agreed on a
framework for START III to cut our nuclear arsenals even further.
For you young people, at a time when India and Pakistan have started
testing nuclear weapons, America and Russia must resume the direction
the world should take away from nuclear weapons, not toward them. This
is a very important thing.
We are working to halt the spread of weapons of mass destruction. We
signed the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty with 147 other
countries. We're working to contain the arms race between India and
Pakistan, to strengthen controls on transfers of weapons technologies,
to combat terrorism everywhere.
Our bonds are growing stronger, and as they do we will move closer
to our goal of a Europe undivided, democratic, and at peace. We reached
agreement for greater cooperation between NATO and Russia. And our
soldiers serve side by side, making peace possible in Bosnia.
We don't always agree, and our interests aren't always identical.
But we work together more often than not, and the world is a better
place as a result. Building peace is our paramount responsibility, but
there is more we must do together. One thing we need to do more together
is prove that you can grow the economy without destroying the
environment.
A great man looking at the condition of the environment charged that
humanity was a destroyer. He wrote, ``Forests keep disappearing. Rivers
dry up. Wildlife has become extinct. The climate is ruined. The land
grows poorer and uglier every day.'' Chekhov wrote those words 100 years
ago. Just imagine his reaction to the present environmental conditions,
with toxic pollution ruining our air and water, and global warming
threatening to aggravate flooding and drought and disease.
Together, we can create cleaner technologies to grow our economies
without destroying the world's environment and imperiling future
generations. Together, we can harness the genius of our citizens not for
making weapons but for building better communications, curing disease,
combating hunger, exploring the heavens. Together, we can reconcile
societies of different people with different religions and races and
viewpoints, and stand against the wars of ethnic, religious, and racial
hatred that have dominated recent history.
If we stand together and if we do the right things, we can build
that kind of world. If the people of Russia stand for economic reform
that benefits all the people of this country, America will stand with
you. As the people of Russia work for education and scientific
discovery, as they stand against corruption and for honest government,
against the criminals and terrorists and for the safety of ordinary
citizens, against aggression and for peace, America will proudly stand
with you. It is the right thing to do, but it is also very much in the
interest of the American people to do so.
I was amazed there were some doubters back in America who said
perhaps I shouldn't come here because these are uncertain times
politically and economically. And there are questions being raised in
the American press
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about the commitment of Russia to the course of reform and democracy. It
seems to me that anybody can get on an airplane and take a trip in good
times and that friends come to visit each other in challenging and
difficult times.
I come here as a friend, because I believe in the future of Russia.
I come here also because I believe someone has to tell the truth to the
people, so that you're not skeptical when your political leaders tell
you things that are hard to hear. There is no way out of playing by the
rules of the international economy if you wish to be a part of it. We
cannot abandon the rules of the international economy. No one can.
There is a way to preserve the social safety net and the social
contract and to help the people who are too weak to succeed. There is a
way to do that. And there are people who will help to do that. But it
has to be done. So I come here as a friend. I come here because I know
that the future of our children and the future of Russia's young people
are going to be entwined, and I want it to be a good future. And I
believe it can be.
Recently, a woman from Petrozavodsk--I hope I pronounced that right,
Petrozavodsk--wrote these words about your people, who won World War II
and rebuilt from the rubble. Listen to this. She said, ``We survived the
ruins, the devastation, the hunger, and the cold. It is not possible
that our people can do this again? If people raise themselves, they can
move mountains. Toward what end? Pushkin once said that so long as we
burn with freedom, we can fulfill the noble urges of our souls.''
In all this dry and sometimes dour talk about economics and finance,
never forget that, whatever your human endeavor, the ultimate purpose of
it is to fulfill the noble urges of your soul. That is the ultimate
victory the Russian people will reap if you will see this process
through to the end. I hope you will do that, and I hope we will be able
to be your partners every step of the way.
Thank you very much.
Note: The President spoke at 4:50 p.m. in the auditorium at Moscow State
University. In his remarks, he referred to Maxim Safonov, student,
Moscow State University; and Minister of Foreign Affairs Yevgeniy
Primakov and President Boris Yeltsin of Russia. A portion of these
remarks could not be verified because the tape was incomplete.
<DOC>
[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents]
[frwais.access.gpo.gov]
[Page 1683]
Monday, September 7, 1998
Volume 34--Number 36
Pages 1667-1730
Week Ending Friday, September 4, 1998
Statement on the Northern Ireland Peace Process
Other Popular 1998 Presidential Documents Documents:
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