[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 110 (Thursday, July 21, 2011)]
[House]
[Page H5298]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
AMERICAN ECONOMIC DISPARITIES
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Illinois (Mr. Davis) for 2 minutes.
Mr. DAVIS of Illinois. Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
Whenever I hear a Member of Congress proposing austerity as a fix for
any or all of our Nation's economic problems, whether the problems are
real or perceived, my first reaction is ``austerity for who?''
The fact is that in recent years we've been condemning more and more
Americans to austerity then ever before while at the same time we
continue to hand out tax breaks and fat government contracts for the
wealthiest Americans, and the largest and wealthiest corporations.
After getting bailed out, the profits at the largest financial
institutions have recovered and then some--bonuses for their CEOs have
recovered, and then some, but this Congress refuses to ask those
institutions and those CEOs, and others like them, to give back just a
little.
The latest census data dramatically shows how after African Americans
had made significant gains in the 1950s and '60s, progress began to
stall in the 1970s. Four decades after the civil rights movement,
blacks still earn only 57 cents and Latinos earn 59 cents for each $1
of white median family income in our country. The contrast is even
starker for net worth. That is, the total value of investments,
savings, homes, and other property, minus debt. Blacks hold only 10
cents of net wealth and Latinos 12 cents for every $1 that whites hold.
Out of the 43.6 million Americans living below the poverty threshold,
9.9 million of those are African Americans. Meanwhile, the latest
unemployment rates are, to say the least, grim. Overall, African
American unemployment, 16.2 percent; African American men, 17 percent;
black teenagers, about 40 percent--and this Congress can't find the
votes to extend unemployment insurance. I say that our policies must
reflect the needs of those who are most vulnerable. We must provide
opportunity for the needy and not just the greedy.
When I see that the median annual Social Security benefit for a 65-
year-old single African American woman is $10,680 which puts the median
benefit for African American woman seniors just above the 2010 poverty
line for individual seniors, an obscenely low $10,458. And when I
couple that with the knowledge that nearly half--45.6 percent--of non-
married African American women aged 65 older rely on Social Security
for all of their income and 54.1 percent rely on it for 90 percent of
their income or more. And, worst of all when I recall that non-married
African American women seniors already suffer from high rates of
poverty and near-poverty, nearly half--47.8 percent--of African
American women living alone have an income under 125 percent of
poverty, and one-third--33 percent--have income below 100 percent of
the poverty line . . .
Well, I just have to say to those who are talking of reducing Social
Security benefits, or the annual Social Security COLAs, or raising the
age for collecting Social Security ``austerity for who?''
When I pick up the paper every morning and have to read over and over
that home foreclosures were two-and-a-half times above the 2001 rate by
the end of 2010 and that some 3.7 million homes are in danger of
foreclosure and this Congress, instead of addressing the epidemics of
unemployment and foreclosure, plays politics with raising the debt
ceiling;
I can't help but remember that, for all the hubbub about the size of
government and Federal spending, the Bush tax cuts increased the
deficit by $1.7 trillion between 2001 and 2008 and the two wars begun
by President Bush added another $1 trillion to the deficit and Bush
Administration's policy of deregulation of the financial markets led
ultimately to the bursting of the housing bubble which triggered the
Great Recession which not only sapped our federal budget, but have
decimated state and local budgets in every corner of the nation. I have
to demand of those risking default and tipping the nation into
depression ``austerity for who?''
I have to wonder why we aren't talking about the fact that since the
recession officially ended in June 2009, private payrolls have
increased by more than 1 million workers, still nowhere close to
putting 14 million Americans back to work, but State and local
government payrolls for teachers, fire-fighters, police officers,
public health workers and other critical services have declined by
493,000--cutting the number of jobs created almost in half while the
loss of those good jobs reverberate throughout the local economies. My
obvious question is ``austerity for who?''
I wonder if some Members of Congress just don't know that Medicaid
covered half of all Black children in the United States and nearly two-
thirds (64%) of low-income Black children. Medicaid covers over a third
(35%) of African Americans in fair or poor health and 59% of African
Americans living with HIV/AIDS. Shouldn't we expect and require of
those who are proposing to slash Medicaid an answer to: ``austerity for
who?''
I am just as concerned about balancing the Federal budget as any
Member of this Congress, but there are a lot of ways to do that. The
Peoples' Budget proposed by the Progressive Caucus would get us to a
balanced budget and would put us on the road to paying down the debt
and lay the foundation for a healthy, sustainable and just economy.
I've reached the conclusion that we do need a Constitutional
Amendment, not a Balanced Budget Amendment, but one that would require
Members of Congress who glibly propose austerity as a quick and dirty
solution to every challenge which comes over the horizon to explain to
the American People, truthfully and fully, in each and every case,
``austerity for who?''
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