Home > 1998 Presidential Documents > pd09mr98 Proclamation 7071--Women's History Month, 1998...pd09mr98 Proclamation 7071--Women's History Month, 1998...
February 28, 1998
To the Congress of the United States:
As required by section 163 of the Trade Act of 1974, as amended (19
U.S.C 2213), I transmit herewith the 1998 Trade Policy Agenda and 1997
Annual Report on the Trade Agreements Program.
William J. Clinton
The White House,
February 28, 1998.
Note: This message was released by the Office of the Press Secretary on
March 2.
<DOC>
[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents]
[frwais.access.gpo.gov]
[Page 356-361]
Monday, March 9, 1998
Volume 34--Number 10
Pages 351-388
Week Ending Friday, March 6, 1998
Remarks to the Mortgage Bankers Association of America
March 2, 1998
Thank you all so much. Thank you, Marc, and Paul Reid and Mike
Ferell and all the officers and staff of the Mortgage Bankers
Association; to our national treasurer and members of the National
Association of State Treasurers. I'm delighted to be here, along with
Frank Raines, my OMB Director, who used to spend some time with some of
you, and Gene Sperling and others on our staff.
I have looked forward to this day for a long time, just to be able
to thank you for the work that all of you have done in giving America
the highest homeownership rate in the history of the Republic. It means
a lot to a lot of people out there in the country, and I appreciate your
role in this historic achievement. And I thank you very much.
In my State of the Union Address, I called upon all our people to
strengthen our country for the new century ahead. Historically, that has
always meant deepening the meaning of America's freedom, strengthening
our Union, and drawing our people closer together across all the lines
that divide us, and clearly, always widening the circle of opportunity.
Now, we are seeing a remarkable increase in the circle of
opportunity. In addition to reaching the highest level of homeownership
in history, millions of Americans have been able to refinance their
mortgages, which has amounted to billions and billions of dollars in tax
cuts for families, putting more money in their pockets, freeing up more
for investment and savings. Access to capital has spread to minorities
who for years have been locked out of the economy. And I appreciate what
Marc said about going to New York. We do see increasing homeownership
rates for minorities now and I hope it will continue. Our capital
markets are the strongest in the world, and clearly, they have played a
major role in helping us to do well in this new economy.
Today what I'd like to do is talk to you just for a few minutes
about why we have to follow a consistent strategy of fiscal discipline
and investment in our future and our people. The strategy that has
worked for the last 5 years we must continue into the next century. I
also want to talk about how all the discussions surrounding the tax
system and the IRS fit into this: what is the right way to cut taxes;
what is the right way to reform the IRS; what is the wrong way to do it?
I especially want to comment on what I believe strongly is a misguided
scheme recently introduced in the Congress that I believe could take us
back to policies which have failed us in the past.
[[Page 357]]
These are good times for our country, with a new economy powered by
technology, nurtured by the ingenuity of the human mind, enlarged by our
newfound fiscal discipline at home, and increasing trade among all
nations. Over the past 5 years our new economy has produced now almost
15 million new jobs, with the highest percentage of those jobs in the
private sector of any recovery in memory. Unemployment is the lowest in
24 years; business investment is growing at 11 percent, the fastest pace
in 30 years; since 1993, family incomes are up about $2,200.
Today we have fresh new evidence that the economy continues to grow.
Personal income rose six-tenths of one percent last month alone. Our
social problems, from crime to welfare, are bending to our efforts. The
welfare rolls are the lowest in 27 years; the crime rate the lowest in
24 years. We now have, literally, a system in which we have opened the
doors of college education to all people in this country who are willing
to work for it, with tax credits, with IRA's, with better student loans
and tax deductibility for the interest on those loans, more Pell grants,
more work-study positions. We are adding 5 million children from working
families to the ranks of those with health insurance. Combined with our
record levels of homeownership, the American dream is clearly within
reach for more and more American families.
This did not happen by accident, but no one alone can claim credit
for it. It was the product of a remarkable concerted endeavor by tens of
millions of Americans. But it also was supported by the economic
policies that we have followed with discipline and consistency over the
last 5 years. We moved beyond the sterile debate between those who said
Government was the problem and those who said it was the solution to a
new way, a new Government for the information age that gives our people
the tools they need to make the most of their own lives, that is
unashamedly a catalyst for new ideas where the old ones don't work, that
is a good partner with the private sector.
We have the smallest Government here in Washington since President
Kennedy was in office. But it is still more progressive, more active. It
is smaller, but the Nation is stronger. We put in place a three-part
economic strategy, rejecting these false choices from the past: first,
restoring fiscal discipline and conquering the deficits that hobbled
growth, spiked interest rates, and robbed our economy of capital for
investment throughout the 1980's; second, investments in our people, in
science and technology, in education and job training, and health care,
so that everyone has a chance to reap the rewards of growing prosperity;
and third, we responded to the global nature of the new economy by
opening new markets to our goods and services.
The strategy is clearly working. There is renewed confidence in the
American economy. Its stability, its strength, its steady growth are the
envy of the world. More than ever we are also investing in the future. A
record two-thirds of Americans almost--as Marc said, almost two-thirds--
now live in their own homes, and we must finish the job. I agree with
you that the most important thing we can do in this session of Congress
is to support Secretary Cuomo's plan to raise the FHA loan limit. We can
pass it, and we must.
Now, last month I submitted to Congress the first balanced budget in
a generation. If we are fortunate and if we can work together with our
allies around the world to minimize the impact of the recent
difficulties in Asia on our own economy, Mr. Raines says that we'll
probably have a balanced budget this year. Instead of deficits, America
can now look forward to about a trillion dollars in surpluses over the
next 10 years.
Now, that is a tempting target in an election year in Washington.
But, first of all, let me remind you they have not materialized yet. And
we shouldn't count those chickens before they hatch. Secondly, we should
remember what we did to the long-term strength of America when we
quadrupled the debt of this country in the 12 years from 1981 through
1992. And we should not repeat that error again. Finally, we shouldn't
use the surplus for any new tax cuts or new spending programs until we
have confronted the challenge of saving Social Security first. I think
that is very important.
All of you are generally familiar with the problem. It's projected
that the Social Security Trust Fund will not cover payments starting in
the year 2029. That's the year when
[[Page 358]]
all the baby boomers will finally be in the Social Security system, and
at presently projected birth and immigration rates and labor force
participation rates, it means that there will be only about two people
working for every person drawing Social Security.
Now, those things could all change to some extent, but no matter
what, it is clear that the generation of the baby boomers entering the
Social Security system will be quite larger than the generation just
following it. Indeed, the generation now in public schools, starting
last year, is the first generation in American history larger than the
baby boom generation. I do not know a single person my age or younger--
because I'm the oldest of the baby boomers--I hate that, but it's true--
[laughter]--I don't know a single person who doesn't think about the
problems we could create for our children if we don't make the changes
now in the Social Security system we need to. No one wants to burden our
children and our ability--their ability to raise our grandchildren.
On the other hand, it is important to remember that it's just since
1985 that senior citizens have been less poor than the rest of us. That
is an astonishing achievement for a country that 60 years ago had 70
percent of its seniors living below the poverty line, many of them in
abject poverty. Now, if we make small changes today with discipline, we
can deal with this issue. And I also want to point out something all of
you know, which is that hardly anybody--even though Social Security
helps people keep body and soul together--hardly anybody in America can
retire and maintain his or her standard of living on Social Security
alone. So we must also do more to help Americans save for their own
retirement. We've done a lot of work with the 401(k) plans and other
things; we need to do more.
So we're going to work in this next year very hard, in what I hope
will be a completely nonpartisan way, to acquaint the American people
with the details of the challenge before us, to explore all the
alternatives, and then to come up with a solution, which I hope the
Congress will pass early next year to deal with this. You say, well if
you pass it in 1999, 2029, that's 30 years away. First of all, those of
you in the audience who are my age or older know that 30 years can pass
in the flash of an eye. But secondly, I would remind everyone that the
longer we wait to deal with this, the more severe actions will be
required to deal with it. If we move now, with modest but disciplined
changes, we can do a great thing to ensure the financial strength of
America in the 21st century and to preserve the compact that binds us
together across the generations. I cannot emphasize how strongly I feel
about this.
Now, there are other economic challenges we face as well, and I'll
just mention two very briefly. One is, how do we extend the benefits of
enterprise that have brought so much to America in the last few years to
those who still have not felt the impact of the economic recovery,
principally in the inner cities and isolated rural areas? We have a
whole range of proposals in that regard, a lot of them coming out of
Secretary Cuomo, a lot of them coming out of the Vice President's
community empowerment initiative, but I think it is very important that
we recognize that these people who are still unemployed or underemployed
are the great target we have for the rest of us to keep the economy
growing with low inflation, so we can do what is morally right to try to
expand opportunity to people who still don't have it and help the
overall American economy as well.
The second point I'd like to make is that if we want to continue to
see this economy grow, we have to have people who are skilled enough and
well trained enough and well educated enough to take positions in
tomorrow's economy, not yesterday's economy. There was a study which
came out a couple of weeks ago, I can't remember the exact number, but
there was something like nearly 400,000 openings in America today for
people in information technology related jobs. And when you go to some
of our larger inner-city neighborhoods where the unemployment rate is
still 10 percent, you say, well, what is wrong with this picture? Well,
we got one indication of what is wrong with this picture last week when
we saw that our 12th graders in the International Math and Science
Survey scored 19th among 21 countries in their performance in math and
science.
[[Page 359]]
So the other big economic issue before America is how to make our
system of elementary and secondary education as good as our system of
higher education. No one doubts that we have the best system of colleges
and universities in the world; we should not rest, and we cannot rest,
until we have the best elementary and secondary education in the world.
It is a major economic issue for our country.
Anyway, it's against this background that I think you have to see
the emerging debate, or, if you will, the continuing debate, on the tax
system--what taxes should be cut and how? And the IRS, how should we go
about collecting taxes? This is a hazardous discussion that it's easier
for me to enter into maybe because I'm not on the ballot anymore--
[laughter]--since there's no such thing as a positive thing anyone ever
wants to say about this.
But we need to think about it. This debate can be a very healthy
thing. We should always be examining, you know, whether there are
changes in the tax system we could have which would either be fairer or
which would achieve our common objectives more or which would grow the
economy faster. And we should always be looking for ways that, through
either common sense or new technology, we can ease the burden on our
people of paying taxes--always. The door should never be shut to reform,
and there will always be more to do no matter what system we adopt. I
think all of us know that.
But the point I want to make today is that this debate must occur
within the context of our commitment to a long-term economic strategy
that will work for our people. It should occur within a context of our
commitment to maintain economic confidence in the future. There is a
right and a wrong way to do reform. And the right way must involve our
continued commitment to fiscal discipline, to investing in our people,
and to making the future a predictable and confident one in terms of our
economic policy.
Now, within that context, over the last 5 years we've worked hard to
reform our tax laws. We've honored our responsibilities as parents with
the $500-per-child tax credit. We've rewarded work by more than doubling
the earned-income tax credit, which basically is designed to say if
you're a parent and you work 40 hours a week, your child ought not to be
in poverty. Over 2 million children have been lifted out of poverty
because of the changes in the earned income tax credit.
We've recognized the importance and the cost of college education
with the HOPE scholarship tax credit, which is worth $1,500 a year for
the first 2 years of college, lifetime learning credits for junior and
senior years and graduate school, the tax deductibility of student loan
interest payments, and other initiatives.
We've encouraged homeownership by eliminating capital gains on
almost all home sales. And we've helped Americans save for their
retirement, for their education, and health care costs, by expanding
IRA's. At the same time, billions of dollars in tax loopholes that were
more wasteful have been closed.
This year, the balanced budget proposal I presented to Congress
continues to help working families with new tax cuts to make child care
more affordable, our economy stronger, and our environment cleaner by
meeting the challenge of climate change.
We also had to continue our work to improve the operations of the
IRS. Like every American and the majority of IRS employees, who are
trying hard to do their jobs well, I get outraged when I hear about
abuses in the IRS. But we are making changes, and we must continue to do
so. I've already signed into law 40 tax simplification measures and a
new Taxpayer Bill of Rights.
As of February the 20th, less than 2 weeks ago, 10.7 million
Americans had filed their tax returns electronically for this year;
that's a 19 percent increase over last year. Three-point-eight million
Americans have filed by telephone; that's a 25 percent increase over
last year. The average telephone conversation is 10 minutes. I think
that's pretty good, and I hope more will continue to do that.
We are having problem resolution days, which have been widely
publicized by the media, and I thank them for that. In every IRS
district, at least once a month, where the IRS employees are open--they
open the offices at night or on the weekends--people come in with their
tax problems, and we try to resolve them in a quick and informal way.
[[Page 360]]
I think all these things are very important. We just approved new
regulations to protect so-called innocent spouses who are left with tax
liabilities by their spouses, that they had no role in undertaking. Now,
there's more to do, but a lot has been done. Among the new reforms
proposed are new citizen advocacy panels, new systems to file taxes by
phone or computer to make it even more easy and more widely used,
stronger taxpayer advocates, phone lines open 24 hours a day, further
relief for innocent taxpayers.
Late last year the House passed these reforms almost unanimously. I
think there were over 400 votes for them, and only 3 or 4 against. So
again let me say, I hope that the Senate will quickly pass this
legislation and send it to me for my signature. It's a good bill, and it
will do a lot of good for Americans.
Now, we need to continue to do these kinds of things, and we need to
be open to broader reforms of the tax system. But there are some people
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