President Barack Obama (photo: AP)
Blueprint for Middle-Class Economics
29 January 15
merica's
resurgence is real. With a growing economy, shrinking deficits,
bustling industry, and booming energy production, we have risen from
recession freer to write our own future than any other nation on Earth.
Now we have to choose what we want that future to look
like. Will we accept an economy where only a few of us do spectacularly
well? Or will we commit ourselves to an economy that generates rising
incomes and rising chances for everyone who makes the effort?
In my State of the Union Address last week, I focused
on making sure middle-class economics helps more Americans get ahead in
the new economy. As a country, we need to do more to make working
families' paychecks go farther, give Americans of every age the chance
to upgrade their skills so they earn higher wages, and build the world's
most competitive economy for our businesses.
On Monday, I will present Congress with my budget, a
plan for bringing middle-class economics into the 21st Century. First,
I'm proposing we make the kinds of investments we need to continue to
grow our economy and enhance our national security. We would establish
new advanced manufacturing hubs, rebuild crumbling infrastructure,
combat antibiotic-resistant bacteria, and lead a new age of precision
medicine that uses cutting-edge science to find new treatments for
diseases like diabetes and cancer. We would give working parents a
chance to get ahead with guaranteed paid sick leave, and we'd give
Americans of all ages a chance to earn new skills by making community
college free for responsible students. And we should invest in a 21st
century military to confront global challenges with strong and sustained
American leadership. These proposals are pragmatic; they're the types
of things both parties should be able to support.
But where Democrats and Republicans often disagree is
in how to pay for these kinds of ideas. I'm proud that since I took
office, we've experienced the fastest period of sustained deficit
reduction since the end of World War II. My budget will build on that
progress with reforms to health programs, our tax code, and our broken
immigration system. It would eliminate the trust fund loophole that
allows the wealthiest Americans to avoid paying taxes on their unearned
income, and use the savings to cut taxes for middle class families. If
Congress passes my budget, our country would meet the key test of fiscal
sustainability, with our debt declining as a share of our GDP.
Of course, to make these common-sense investments in
our future without adding to our deficits, we need to turn the page on
the manufactured crises that have defined the debates over our budget in
recent years. Our recovery was held back when Congress shut down the
government and risked the full faith and credit of the United States. We
can't afford to do that again. And we have to build on the bipartisan
budget agreement I signed in 2013 that helped us end some of the
arbitrary, across-the-board budget cuts known as "sequestration." Last
year's agreement helped boost our economic growth without undermining
fiscal responsibility. We were able to invest in key national priorities
while cutting our deficits to their lowest level since 2007.
In order to get wages and incomes rising faster, we
need to take the next step. That's why my Budget will fully reverse the
sequestration cuts for domestic priorities in 2016. It will match those
investments with equal dollar increases for defense funding. If Congress
rejects my plan and refuses to undo these arbitrary cuts, it will
threaten our economy and our military. Investments in key areas will
fall to their lowest level in ten years, adjusted for inflation, putting
American research, education, infrastructure, and national security at
risk. But if Congress joins me, we can make sure that ending
sequestration is fully paid for by cutting inefficient spending and
closing tax loopholes.
The Budget I'm sending to Congress is a blueprint for
success in the new economy. I know that there are Republicans in
Congress who disagree with my approach, and I look forward to hearing
their ideas for how we can pay for what the middle class needs to grow.
But what we can't do is simply pretend that things like child care or
college aren't important, or that there's nothing we can do to help
middle class families get ahead.
Because we still have work to do. As a country, we
have made it through some hard times. But we've laid a new foundation.
We've got a new future to write. And I am eager to get to work.
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