[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 113 (Tuesday, July 26, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H5497-H5498]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
{time} 1040
LET'S ADDRESS CAUSES, NOT SYMPTOMS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Ohio (Ms. Kaptur) for 5 minutes.
Ms. KAPTUR. Mr. Speaker, too often, Congress and Washington deal with
symptoms, not underlying causes. And that's what's going on with this
current debate about the debt limit. It's kind of like you have an ill
patient that has a fever, and you say, well, they're sick so throw some
water on the patient and their fever will go down. But you never deal
with the underlying infection, the underlying cause that is tripping
the fever in the first place.
Let me put a little map on the table here this morning, to look at
the nature of current economic challenge. When you have 14 million
Americans out of work, and up to 24 million who are working part-time
that want to work full-time or others who have completely dropped out
of the workforce, none of them are earning a full check. Money is not
being taken out of that check to pay their social insurance for Social
Security, and they're not going to pay their regular income taxes
either. And so the government falls short on revenues. It's quite
clear.
We have a jobs problem. That's the causal problem that underlies the
deficit problem that America faces.
Now, if you look just at this year alone, 2011, so far this year the
government's taken in over a trillion dollars--$1.2 trillion in
revenue. That's not bad for an economy that's just limping along. But
we've spent $1.8 trillion. So we've spent already this year over $600
billion that we didn't have. We've had to borrow that money. That
borrowing gets added to the long-term deficit. But why do we have that
deficit this year?
We have that deficit because the revenues aren't coming in at the
same rate as in prior years because there is a jobs problem. When you
have 14 million to 24 million people who want a better job and can't
get one, that's the underlying cause which Washington fails to see or
address.
Now, the cost of that unemployment with the attendant shortage of
revenues, is added to this huge accumulated debt, which now is over $14
trillion. So where did that come from? Let me outline the reasons. The
largest share, not only of this year's deficit but of prior debt that
we've accumulated, is due to a lagging economy. Families know this.
They can't pay as much in taxes or any taxes when they're out of work.
Companies, banks, and real estate firms that go bankrupt can't pay
taxes either. Revenues fall short.
If you take a look at the cost of our sluggish economy triggered and
caused by Wall Street abuse, that's what threw us into this mess in the
first place, right, back in 2008. The increased costs of resulting
unemployment are staggering indeed: Add them up. First, we have to pay
the unemployment checks, and some people even got 99 weeks of
unemployment because jobs are scarce. Add to it the costs of food for
those unemployed people. They are enormous.
When an economy isn't fully functioning, the Federal costs of medical
care skyrocket because people fall off their own insurance. So many in
this country simply can't get good care, and that's all tied in to a
very sluggish economy. Yes, the costs of unemployment are huge.
Then let's add the cost of the housing meltdown. All of the bad
mortgages, four out of five bad mortgages were dumped on the Federal
Government. Did Wall Street take care of its dirty laundry? No. They
gave it to you, the American people. At the FHA, the Federal Housing
Administration, at Freddie Mac, Fannie Mae, the Veterans
Administration, guess who's holding all of the mortgages that are under
water? Eighty percent of them. Us, the people of the United States,
because Wall Street's insurance company or vacant units become the
property of Uncle Sam; not Wall Street. Did Wall Street write off any
losses? Oh, no, no, no. They gave them to us. That is a huge and
growing part of the Federal deficit related to the housing crisis and
what it is going to cost to revitalize or demolish that housing
inventory.
Then, add to all this a trillion dollars more that's been spent on
two wars that have not been paid for. That is a major part of the
growing deficit. We can't ignore that. Do we say we should have a war
tax? Do we say we should end the wars? Do we say our allies
[[Page H5498]]
should pay more? The point is we haven't said anything other than just
add that trillion dollars on the deficit.
Now let's take a look at the Bush trillion-dollar tax giveaway to the
very wealthy, who said that if we gave them the money, they would
create jobs in our country. Guess what? They took the money and they
created jobs offshore. Corporate profits are at all-time highs, but are
jobs increasing in this country? No. Those corporate profits are due to
the booking here in our country of profits earned offshore.
So some say give them more tax breaks. Why, unless they invest in our
country in job creation here at home. We would be foolish to waste
precious dollars on more outsourcing.
And finally, former President Bush had this idea for pharmaceuticals.
He said don't let the Federal Government bargain the cost of
pharmaceuticals in Medicare and Medicaid expenditures. Yet when we
can't do that, when we fail to negotiate the best, competitive prices,
that omission adds hundreds of billions of dollars to our debt.
Mr. Speaker, to solve the deficit problem, Congress and the executive
branch must focus on employing the citizens who are out of work. That
is the real cause of our economic sluggishness. America ought to
address causes, not symptoms.
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