[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 120 (Tuesday, August 10, 2010)]
[House]
[Pages H6579-H6580]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SUCCESSFUL GOVERNMENT INTERVENTION
The SPEAKER. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Virginia (Mr.
Connolly) for 5 minutes.
Mr. CONNOLLY of Virginia. Madam Speaker, according to independent
economists, the action of this Congress pulled the economy back from
the brink of falling into another Great Depression.
I hope my colleagues have had a chance to review the recently
released study by former Federal Reserve Vice Chairman Alan Blinder and
Mark Zandi, Moody's Analytics chief economist and former economic
adviser to John McCain's 2008 presidential campaign.
We have heard some from the other side of the aisle demagogue on the
value of the Recovery Act and other actions we took to stabilize this
economy. Republicans loudly claim these programs were failures. But
what do the actual economists say? From the study, I quote. ``There is
little doubt that, in total, the policy response was highly
effective.''
Madam Speaker, after careful analysis, the study's bipartisan authors
conclude that the Nation's gross domestic product would have been 11.5
percent lower than it is today without government intervention. They
conclude that an additional 8.5 million working Americans would have
lost their jobs.
When this Congress took office in January of 2009, we were facing an
economy in freefall with the second Great Depression in clear sight. We
were in the midst of a deepening recession, the worst in 80 years.
Increasing monthly job losses had peaked in January of that year at
741,000; housing prices were mired in 22 straight months of decline;
foreclosures dramatically increased. The economy's contraction was
worsening as gross domestic products shrank at an increasing rate each
quarter. Bank failures accelerated, threatening family savings. All
combined, Americans lost $17.5 trillion in net worth because of the
Bush recession. And in the midst of this economic maelstrom, in the
face of the united opposition from the minority, we took action,
immediate action, and passed the Recovery Act to stabilize the economy,
protect teachers, firefighters, police officers, boosted the private
sector payrolls, invested in America, and spurred growth.
According to the experts from both sides of the aisle, it worked.
Again quoting from the study, ``The effects of the fiscal stimulus
alone appear substantial.'' Madam Speaker, they found that the Recovery
Act raised GDP by 3.4 percent, reduced the unemployment rate by 1.5
percent below where it otherwise would have been, and, most
importantly, added or protected 2.7 million American jobs.
The proof is in more than just the study. Look at the GDP. Before we
passed the Recovery Act, GDP was declining for the third straight
quarter, including a 2.7 percent drop in the third quarter of 2008, a
5.4 percent drop in the fourth quarter, and an astonishing 6.4 percent
decline in the first quarter of 2009 when we came into office. The
Recovery Act slammed the brakes on that freefall. The very next
quarter, GDP posted only a 0.7 percent decline, quickly followed by
four straight quarters of GDP growth.
The Recovery Act also stemmed the ever increasing monthly job losses.
It is no coincidence that the job losses peaked just before we acted
and then immediately began to drop.
Currently, we are in our seventh straight month of private sector job
growth, with 600,000 net private sector jobs created this year alone.
The manufacturing sector continues to expand in fact to its highest
levels. American automobile sales, initially spurred by the successful
Cash for Clunkers program, continue to improve. The stock market, which
plummeted throughout
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2008 and hit rock bottom in the first quarter of 2009, has rebounded
since, increasing more than 60 percent. In fact, we have recovered $6
trillion of the $17.5 trillion lost by American families.
Madam Speaker, the Blinder and Zandi study illustrates our
intervention and investments through the Recovery and Reinvestment Act
saved the U.S. economy from the second Great Depression. But, as the
recent study demonstrated, we averted the worst outcome, but we still
have work to do.
Make no mistake. Despite the fragile economy, our economy is growing
again, and that growth is the direct result of the actions of this
Congress to save American taxpayers and to save this economy.
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