[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 60 (Tuesday, April 27, 2010)]
[House]
[Pages H2881-H2882]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
RESTORING JOB GROWTH IN AMERICA
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Louisiana (Mr. Boustany) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BOUSTANY. Madam Speaker, the United States is on an unsustainable
path right now, an unsustainable course with massive debt, trillion
dollar deficits going into the out-years, unemployment approaching 10
percent, and this administration, since January of 2009, has enacted
$670 billion in gross tax increases with more tax increases planned by
this administration and the Democratic leadership of Congress. It's no
wonder we have high unemployment and uncertainty all throughout this
country with regard to the business climate.
So what can we do? How can we correct this course? How can we restore
American competitiveness for the 21st century? Well, I think there are
three things we can do. First, let's cut wasteful, massive government
spending. Let's give the American public confidence that we can get our
fiscal house in order. Let's send a signal to the bond markets and to
our foreign allies and competitors that we can act responsibly. Let's
lay out a path for entitlement reform, which is causing severe strain
on the Federal budget and leading to this deficit spending. Just laying
out a corrective path will send a positive signal.
Secondly, we can lower the corporate tax rate to make U.S. companies
more competitive globally with regard to our trading competitors. Let's
unleash American innovation. Let's get the American companies out there
creating jobs again by lowering the tax rate for our corporations.
Right now we have the second highest corporate tax rate in the world
among industrialized countries. This makes us less competitive. This
also means that companies that want to come to the United States and
invest to create jobs here also have a high tax burden. So, therefore,
if we want to create jobs, let's make this country competitive for
investment coming in and for our companies going out to do investment.
That's how we will restore job growth in this country.
Also, one of the things we need to do with regard to tax policy is to
make sure that we don't doubly tax our companies who are trying to
compete against foreign competitors abroad because our companies
competing all over the globe also create American jobs. If we doubly
tax ours on top of having the second highest corporate tax rate in the
world, well, it's no wonder we're not seeing the kind of job growth
that is necessary. We're not going to see U.S. companies and the U.S.
be competitive in this global market.
And finally, the third thing: let's promote exports. Exports create
jobs, good high-paying jobs. Now, the President has announced that his
goal, his stated goal during the State of the Union, was to double
exports by the U.S. over the next 5 years. Well, let's look at a little
bit of history here for a moment. It took us 10 years previously to
double exports. It required the completion of a round of negotiations
at the WTO. It took implementation of NAFTA and 10 free trade
agreements to be implemented to double exports. This administration has
offered none of that so far.
We have, currently, three free trade agreements pending that have
been negotiated in good faith, and yet this administration and this
Democratic Congress has failed to implement these free trade
agreements. These are a win for the United States because those
countries are already bringing goods into our country; we just have
barriers in exporting to theirs. Why not lift those barriers?
Implementing these free trade agreements will create good high-paying
U.S. jobs.
These three countries--Colombia, Panama, and South Korea--are markets
that are ready for U.S. goods and services. So all we have to do is
implement these agreements which have been negotiated in good faith. By
failure to do this, what we're doing is sending a signal to our
competitors and to other countries that the United States does not
negotiate in good faith. That's a poor signal to send if we want to be
competitive in this global market.
Meanwhile, those three countries I just mentioned, Colombia, Panama--
let's just take Colombia, for instance. The European Union and Canada
are both in the stages of implementing free trade agreements with
Colombia. And what's happened? We've seen U.S. exports of agriculture
products plummet just over the past year. At the same time, the
European Union and Canada have also increased their exports to fill
that gap. We are losing out. We are losing out on being able to export
to Colombia simply because we won't keep our good faith negotiation and
implement this agreement.
The President has announced a national export initiative, but yet
there have been no substantive steps to move this forward. Why not
implement a small business initiative to help our small businesses
export to Colombia? That's an immediate way to create jobs.
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