[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 35 (Wednesday, March 9, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Page S1495]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
JOB LOSSES
Mr. WHITEHOUSE. Mr. President, I do not intend to speak long. I know
we are getting ready to wrap up. I will not interfere with that. But I
did not want the day to end without a reminder of the concern that H.R.
1 and the significant, serious cuts it imposes will produce
significant, serious job losses. That is not something being
manufactured on our side of the aisle. It comes from careful analysis
from very neutral forums.
Many people will have seen this graphic already. Chairman Bernanke of
the Federal Reserve is one of the observers who has looked at the bill
and said it will cut significant jobs. I believe his testimony was that
it was not trivial, that it would be hundreds of thousands of jobs.
Economist Mark Zandi has advised Republicans and Democrats. He is a
neutral, independent economist. He has calculated that the GOP plan
would cost 700,000 jobs. When we consider the good news that we have
just heard of job growth in the past reporting period, which was, I
believe, around 170,000 jobs--less than 200 anyway--the idea of wiping
out 700,000 jobs acquires a real scale and a real significance.
Finally, at the bottom is Goldman Sachs. Goldman Sachs is no great
friend of the Democratic Party. It is a group of financial advisers and
investors who look at data as dispassionately as possible, because if
they are wrong, they don't make money. Goldman Sachs has estimated that
the spending cuts will hurt economic growth. My memory is, they
estimated it would be 2 percentage points off of our economic growth.
When we consider that our economic growth is under 3 percent right now,
if we take two of the percents out, we are basically getting pretty
close to flat-lining the American economy. So prudence dictates that we
go about the necessary adjustments to get rid of our debt and our
deficit in a way that does not snuff out the gradually emerging
recovery.
In my State of Rhode Island, we have just gone from 11.5 percent
unemployment down to 11.3 percent. It is still pretty darn serious out
there. While clearly things appear to have bottomed out and started to
go in the right direction, nothing prevents what everybody calls the
double dip. Things such as the gas crisis we are experiencing now have
been discussed as potentially creating a double dip. To knock out
hundreds of thousands of jobs, to knock 2 full percentage points out of
growth out of a ratio that is not much over 3 percent is a very big hit
to the economy. It may be wiser to allow the economic recovery to
continue a little bit further, as the Bowles-Simpson group recommended,
that you couldn't snuff out the recovery early. Let the blaze catch a
little more. Let it get going, and then we can move into these areas.
I will come to the floor later to talk about not just prudence but
also fairness. There are two issues we need to address as we face up to
our debt and deficit challenge. We have to do it prudently. We also
should do it fairly. The way the House does it does not meet the
standard either of prudence or fairness. On prudence, I think we have
pretty strong agreement when Ben Bernanke and Mark Zandi and Goldman
Sachs all talk about significant job losses as a result, and fairness
is a topic for another day.
I yield the floor.
____________________