[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 147 (Tuesday, October 4, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6069-S6085]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CURRENCY EXCHANGE RATE OVERSIGHT REFORM ACT OF 2011
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Under the previous order, the clerk will
report the bill by title.
The legislative clerk read as follows:
A bill (S. 1619) to provide for identification of
misaligned currency, require action to correct the
misalignment, and for other purposes.
Amendment No. 694
Mr. REID. The bill having been reported, Mr. President, I have an
amendment at the desk.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
The legislative clerk read as follows:
The Senator from Nevada [Mr. Reid] proposes an amendment
numbered 694.
The amendment is as follows:
At the end, add the following new section:
SEC. __. EFFECTIVE DATE.
The provisions of this Act shall become effective 3 days
after enactment.
Mr. REID. I ask for the yeas and nays on that amendment.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second?
There is a sufficient second.
The yeas and nays were ordered.
Amendment No. 695 to Amendment No. 694
Mr. REID. I have a second-degree amendment at the desk.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
The legislative clerk read as follows:
The Senator from Nevada [Mr. Reid] proposes an amendment
numbered 695 to amendment No. 694.
The amendment is as follows:
In the amendment, strike ``3 days'', insert ``2 days''.
Motion to Commit With Amendment No. 696
Mr. REID. I have a motion to commit the bill with instructions that
is also at the desk.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
The legislative clerk read as follows:
The Senator from Nevada [Mr. Reid] moves to commit the bill
(S. 1619) to the Committee on Finance with instructions to
report back with amendment No. 696.
The amendment is as follows:
At the end, add the following new section:
SEC. ___. EFFECTIVE DATE.
The provisions of this Act shall become effective 6 days
after enactment.
Mr. REID. I ask for the yeas and nays on that amendment.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second? There is a
sufficient second.
The yeas and nays were ordered.
Amendment No. 697 to Amendment No. 696
Mr. REID. I have an amendment to the instructions.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the amendment to the
instructions.
The legislative clerk read as follows:
The Senator from Nevada [Mr. Reid] proposes amendment
numbered 697 to the instructions of amendment No. 696 to the
motion to recommit.
The amendment is as follows:
In the amendment, strike ``6 days'' and insert ``5 days''.
Mr. REID. I ask for the yeas and nays.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second?
There is a sufficient second.
The yeas and nays were ordered.
Amendment No. 698 to Amendment No. 697
Mr. REID. I have a second-degree amendment at the desk.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the second-degree
amendment.
The legislative clerk read as follows:
The Senator from Nevada [Mr. Reid] proposes an amendment
numbered 698 to amendment No. 697.
The amendment is as follows:
In the amendment, strike ``5 days'' and insert ``4 days''.
Mr. REID. I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The assistant bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. REID. I ask unanimous consent that the order for the quorum call
be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Republican leader.
Jobs Bill
Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, for 3 weeks President Obama has been
traveling across the country calling on Congress to pass what he calls
his jobs bill right away. Here is what he will say in Texas today, if
he has not said it already: At least put this jobs bill up for a vote
so the entire country knows where every Member of Congress stands.
Well, I agree with the President. I think he is entitled to a vote on
his jobs bill.
The suggestion that the Senate Republicans are not interested in
voting on his jobs bill is not true. I think he is entitled to a vote.
It won't surprise anyone to know I do not think it is a good approach,
a way that is likely to create jobs, but he has asked for a vote. I
think we ought to accommodate the President of the United States on a
matter he has been speaking frequently about over the last few weeks
and give him his vote.
In fact, they have been calling for this vote with great repetition.
His Press Secretary said it on October 3, and David Plouffe, the White
House Senior Adviser, said the same thing on September 27. David
Axelrod, his top strategist, called for us to have this vote on
September 13. The President himself--let me count the number of times:
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11--12 times the President of the United
States himself, over the last few weeks, has called on us to have this
vote. As he put it: I want Congress to pass this jobs bill right away.
Well, I hope it will not pass because I do not think it is the right
direction for the country to take to begin to deal with the joblessness
issue, but I do think the President makes an important point--that he
is entitled to a vote.
If I were to be given an opportunity by my good friend the majority
leader, I would offer the President's jobs bill, which we think would
be more accurately described as stimulus 2, sort of a redo of the
approach and the bill we approved back in 2009, after which we have
lost 1.7 million jobs. Therefore, I would ask consent to set aside the
pending motion and amendments in order to offer the amendment which I
have just described and hold in my hand at this moment.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The majority leader.
Mr. REID. Mr. President, reserving the right to object, I am not
going to do a long dissertation on stimulus 1, the jobs bill that, in
effect, did so much good for our country. I can't talk about the other
49 States, but I can talk about what the Recovery Act did for the State
of Nevada. It basically saved the State of Nevada from going into
bankruptcy, hundreds of millions of dollars to help State government
stop massive layoffs of teachers and create tens of thousands of jobs
in areas such as renewable energy. So that is enough on the American
Recovery Act. I thought it was extremely important for Nevada. Other
Senators can come and talk about how their own States benefited.
``Right away'' is a relative term. The President has been calling for
a vote on his jobs bill and rightfully so. Why did he start calling for
a vote on his jobs bill? Because there was again one of the long
obstructions that took place in the Senate and in the House on an issue
that was fairly simple. What was that? Funding the Federal Emergency
Management Agency. These devastating floods, tornadoes, hurricanes, and
fires had created a situation where FEMA was about to go broke. You
would think we could move quickly past that, but, no, we couldn't
because something we agreed on in late July--that we would fund the
government for the rest of the year--was again brought to the forefront
and because the Republicans were threatening to close down the
government again. So of course the President was calling for his jobs
bill. He recognized that what was going on here in the Senate and in
the House was a waste of time; that is, why were we spending time
unnecessarily on funding one of the essentials of government; that is,
taking care of people who have been devastated by these terrible storms
and other calamities.
We have moved very quickly, after we got through that slog caused by
the
[[Page S6070]]
Republicans, to get FEMA funded and to get the CR extended for 6 weeks.
We are now on something that is long overdue: China currency. China has
been manipulating its currency for a long time. In the last 10 years,
we have lost 2 million jobs because of this. If there were ever a jobs
bill, it is this we are doing on the floor right now.
I sponsored the President's bill. I am the one who brought it to the
floor. I have announced in a number of speeches I have given out here
that I believe we should move to this jobs bill. We need to move to
this right away, there is no question about that, but to tack this onto
the China currency manipulation legislation is nothing more than a
political stunt. We all know that. If we don't, we should know. I am
telling everyone. I said I will bring the American Jobs Act to the
floor this work period. We have 2 more weeks left in this work period.
Obviously, the Republican leader, my friend, the Senator from
Kentucky, wants to do something about the jobs bill. I am glad he does.
He wants us to move this forward. So my suggestion would be to modify
my friend's unanimous consent request and suggest that we have the
permission, for lack of a better word, of the Republicans here in the
Senate to immediately move--the motion to proceed would be unnecessary.
We could move to that as soon as we finish--you have two choices:
either as soon as we finish the China currency legislation or we finish
the trade legislation, which Senator McConnell and I have talked about
finishing next week. So I would move to modify my friend the Republican
leader's consent agreement that we move immediately to the legislation
I have introduced on behalf of the President either after we finish the
China currency legislation or after the trade bill, whatever my friend
would rather do.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The pending request is a request from the
Republican leader.
Mr. REID. I have asked that it be modified.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Does the Republican leader so modify his----
Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, reserving the right to object, I
listened carefully to what my good friend the majority leader had to
say, and he was talking about other matters debated at other times--the
first stimulus bill, on which I think we probably have a basic
disagreement. I think it was almost a total failure. He also talked
about the debate we had with regard to the continuing resolution, which
was finally worked out on a bipartisan basis. But those are things that
occurred in the past.
What I am trying to do here today by suggesting that we vote on the
President's jobs bill which my good friend the majority leader has
previously introduced and I gather by way of introduction supports,
that we honor the request of the President of the United States to vote
on it now. He has been asking us repeatedly over the last few weeks to
vote on it now. If my friend the majority leader is saying he doesn't
want to honor the President's request and vote on it now but would like
to consider voting on it later, that is something he and I can discuss
as we decide how to move forward with Senate business.
But I think the President of the United States, whose policies I,
generally speaking, do not support--although I am happy to support his
initiatives on trade, be they ever so late--is entitled to know where
the Senate stands on his proposal that he has been out talking about
over and over in the last few weeks, suggesting that we are unwilling
to vote on it.
What I am saying is, we don't agree that it is the right policy, but
we are more than willing to vote on it. What I hear my friend the
majority leader saying is that even though he supports it, he wants to
vote on it some other time. Well, the President has been saying he
doesn't want to vote on it some other time, he wants to vote on it now.
If my friend is saying we are not going to vote on it now, I would be
happy to talk to him and reach an understanding to vote on it later.
But my feeling here is that the least we can do for the President is
give him a chance to have a vote on his proposal now, as he has
requested on numerous occasions. So I will object to the modification,
understanding full well the majority leader and I, off the floor, will
have further discussions about when we might move to the President's
bill and give him the vote he has been requesting.
Mr. REID. Mr. President, further reserving my right to object, there
are 14 million people in this country who are out of work.
What a charade we have going on here. We are in the midst of some of
the most important legislation we have done this entire year--China
currency manipulation--and we now have a proposal that is ridiculous on
its face; that is, we vote with no debate on the President's jobs bill.
This is senseless. It is unfair to bring this up in this form. We are
going to get to this, and we are going to do it either as soon as we
finish this China currency or after we finish the trade bills, whatever
I can work out with my Republican colleague so that I can move to it.
It takes 60 votes to get to this legislation.
The American people, I am sure, can see through this very clearly,
that this is nothing more than a political stunt. It is clear we need a
full debate on this--we don't need a filibuster--and that time will
come very soon, so I object.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The objection is heard.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Republican leader.
Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, if I may elaborate further, we have had
a request from the President on multiple occasions to vote on what he
calls his jobs bill and to vote on it now. Just to count again, 1, 2,
3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11--12 times the President has asked us, over
the last few weeks, to vote on what he calls his jobs bill now. I don't
think the President is saying he wants an extensive debate about it; I
think he is saying he wants a vote on it. I wanted to disabuse him of
the notion that somehow we are unwilling to vote on his proposal. We
are more than happy to vote on it.
I understand why my friend the majority leader may have some
reservations about going forward. I have read a number of critiques of
this legislation by Democratic Senators, one part of it or another. But
even though there is bipartisan opposition to the President's jobs
proposal, I think he is entitled to a vote. So I am sorry it appears we
will not be able to achieve this vote the President has repetitiously
asked for over the last few weeks. I would like to give him that vote,
and we will be talking to the majority leader about when we might have
an opportunity to vote on his proposal, the President's proposal which
the majority leader introduced, which he has been requesting us to vote
on.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Franken). The majority leader.
Mr. REID. Mr. President, the President introduced his jobs bill.
Immediately, the Republicans continue their obstruction on issues very
simple but maintain the floor. There are things going on here. You just
can't automatically move to legislation. We know the Senate procedure
takes 60 votes to get on a piece of legislation.
The President was calling upon Congress, and especially the
Republicans in Congress, to allow his jobs bill to move forward. As I
indicated, we were hung up here on issues that had very little to do
with the jobs bill. In fact, we should not have been doing it. All the
time, I repeat, we have been hung up on FEMA funding, on the continuing
resolution, which should have been approved quickly because we agreed
to that last July, but they reneged on that even, and threatened to
shut down the government unless FEMA was paid for the way they wanted.
We were able ultimately to win that debate, but it took a long time.
So when the President said he wants to move to his legislation right
away, he was absolutely candid and forthright. He wanted to clear the
unimportant things off the floor--the stalling tactics on the floor--
and move to his bill, and that is what we are going to do.
What I would be willing to do, if my friend would be agreeable--would
the Republican leader agree to a vote on the motion to proceed to the
jobs bill? We could do that. We could interrupt this legislation right
here. We could interrupt the trade bills. We could vote on a motion to
proceed to the jobs bill.
Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, is my friend propounding a consent
agreement or simply asking a question?
[[Page S6071]]
Mr. REID. I think if the Republican leader is interested in the
subject, I could put it in proper form, but we get the point. To get it
on the floor, it needs 60 votes. I would be happy to, if the Republican
leader would agree to a vote on a motion to proceed to the jobs bill.
Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, let me say to my good friend, I am
prepared to vote on the President's proposal today. If the majority
leader wants to vote on it some other day, we can talk about that,
about how to move forward with it. But the President has been
repeatedly asking us to take it up and vote on it now, and I am
prepared to do that. With regard to taking it up some other time and
voting on it some other day, we will be happy to talk about that off
the floor, as we do frequently on every issue we deal with.
Mr. REID. Mr. President, I am sure that in the immediate future--
right away--the American people will see, once again, the Republicans
are filibustering measures they shouldn't be filibustering--this time,
the jobs bill.
Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, I would just add in closing, I think my
good friend's problem--and I sympathize with him--is that there is
bipartisan opposition to the President's proposal.
Mr. REID. Mr. President, I heard my friend say that, and I didn't
want to get into a long dissertation about bipartisan opposition. There
are 53 of us. A majority of Democrats will support the President's jobs
bill.
Mr. McCONNELL. The majority leader just confirmed what I was saying,
which is that there is bipartisan opposition to this, and we will
discuss at what point the majority leader is comfortable with going
forward with this proposal. My only reason for offering it today was to
respond to the President's request that we vote on it, and we are
prepared to do that. If we can't do it today, we will be happy to
discuss, as we always do, the agenda of the Senate and when it would be
appropriate to vote on it some other time.
Mr. REID. Mr. President, I know I only have in my head the math I
learned from Mrs. Picker at Searchlight Elementary School. But I do
know, when we have 53--and I have told everyone here we will get a
majority of the Senate--a majority of the Senate, not a majority of the
Democrats, a majority of the Senate--that is not very bipartisan
opposition to this bill.
Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, I can only quote my good friend the
majority leader who repeatedly has said, most recently in early 2007,
that in the Senate it has always been the case we need 60 votes. This
is my good friend the majority leader when he was the leader of this
majority in March of 2007, and he said it repeatedly both when he was
in the minority as leader of the minority or leader of the majority,
that it requires 60 votes certainly on measures that are controversial.
So it is not at all unusual that the President's proposal of this
consequence, that would raise taxes, that would spend $\1/2\ trillion
in a second stimulus bill, would have to achieve 60 votes. That is the
way virtually all business is done in the Senate, certainly not
extraordinarily unusual.
Mr. REID. The American people will see very soon that a majority of
the Senate supports the President's jobs bill.
I note the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Virginia.
Mr. WEBB. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. WEBB. I ask unanimous consent to speak for 10 minutes and that
following my remarks, Senator Barrasso be recognized.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. WEBB. Mr. President, I wish to speak for a few minutes about an
amendment I introduced that, in my view, gets to the heart of some of
the more troubling Chinese trade policies that are threatening the
economic security and the long-term competitiveness of our country.
It is well known that many American companies operating in China are
required to transfer their intellectual property and proprietary
technology to China as a prerequisite for doing business in that
country. I will repeat that they are required to transfer this
technology. Despite assurances from the Chinese leadership earlier this
year that this was no longer ``official'' Chinese policy, China does
continue to be aggressive and overt in its pursuit of foreign
intellectual property as it seeks to develop its own, what it calls
indigenous innovation. Companies such as General Electric and
Westinghouse, among many others, have been required to transfer
proprietary technology to Chinese counterparts in order to do business
there.
If a private company has developed technology on its own and it makes
a business decision to transfer that technology to a joint venture
partner in a place such as China, unless there are national security
issues, we are obligated to respect the free marketplace. They may be
seeking short-term profits at the expense of long-term competitiveness,
but that is a business decision. But it is a different case when the
American taxpayer has financed the development of these technologies
through Federal funding assistance, and I do not believe it is
appropriate to allow those technologies simply to be given away to
other countries.
Every American owns a piece of intellectual property that has been
financed through taxpayer assistance. Federal dollars that go to R&D
funding, loan guarantees, and public-private partnerships in order to
help develop the next generation of technologies here are supposed to
be making American businesses competitive and generating American jobs,
not helping develop other industries such as those in China. My
amendment would prohibit that practice.
Last year, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce issued a report entitled
``China's Drive for Indigenous Innovation.'' The Chamber noted that
China's master plan for the development of science and technology ``is
considered by many international technology companies to be a blueprint
for technology theft on a scale the world has never seen before.''
The report went on to state that China's ``persistent'' intellectual
property theft is ``compounded by the indigenous innovation industrial
policies which compel technology transfers in order to have access to
the China market.''
The New York Times recently reported that Ford Motor Company is
looking to share proprietary technologies for electric vehicles in
exchange for selling cars in China. The electric vehicle sector has
been developed through Federal R&D funding, loan guarantees, and
public-private partnerships--costs borne by American taxpayers. In
2009, for instance, Ford Motor Company received a $5.9 billion loan
guarantee from the Department of Energy to advance its vehicle
technology manufacturing program.
We see these types of transfers in other industries as well. The
Washington Post reported last month that General Electric has
transferred valuable aviation avionics technology to state-owned
Aviation Industry Corporation of China. Our government has long
supported the aviation industry through procurement initiatives and
Federal research projects. The fruits of American taxpayer support will
now be incorporated into Chinese commercial airliners, in line with
China's desire to develop an internationally competitive aircraft
industry that could rival American-based Boeing.
We see similar examples of technology transfer in the nuclear energy
sector. According to the Financial Times, Westinghouse Electric has
transferred more than 75,000 documents to Chinese counterparts as the
initial phase of a technology transfer program in exchange for a share
of China's growing nuclear market. These documents relate to the
construction of four third-generation AP1000 reactors that Westinghouse
is building in China.
American taxpayers supported the development of the AP1000 as well as
its predecessor, the AP600, through decades of nuclear energy research
and development at the Department of Energy. In other words, our
taxpayers provided years of government support for the design and
licensing of this reactor.
In a January 2010 letter to Obama administration officials, the heads
of 19
[[Page S6072]]
American business and industry associations wrote of ``[s]ystemic
efforts by China to develop policies that build their domestic
enterprises at the expense of U.S. firms and U.S. intellectual
property.'' Signatories to that letter included the Business
Roundtable, the National Association of Manufacturers, and the U.S.
Chamber of Commerce.
I ask unanimous consent that this letter be printed in the Record.
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
January 26, 2010.
Hon. Hillary Rodham Clinton,
Secretary of State.
Hon. Timothy Geithner,
Secretary of the Treasury.
Hon. Eric H. Holder, Jr.,
Attorney General.
Hon. Gary F. Locke,
Secretary of Commerce.
Hon. Ron Kirk,
U.S. Trade Representative.
Dear Secretary Clinton, Secretary Geithner, Attorney
General Holder, Secretary Locke and Ambassador Kirk: We seek
your urgent attention to policy developments in China that
pose an immediate danger to U.S. companies. The Chinese
government has promulgated a series of ``indigenous
innovation'' programs as part of a long-term plan that
threaten to exclude a wide array of U.S. firms from a market
that is vital to their future growth and ability to create
jobs here at home. Given the far-reaching impact of these
policies on the American economy, we urge you to make this a
strategic priority in our bilateral economic engagement with
China.
For several years, the Chinese government has been
implementing indigenous innovation policies aimed at carving
out markets for national champions and increasing the locally
owned and developed intellectual property of innovative
products. We are increasingly alarmed by the means China is
using to achieve these goals.
Of most immediate concern are new rules issued by the
Chinese government in November to establish a national
catalogue of products to receive significant preferences for
government procurement. Among the criteria for eligibility
for the catalogue is that the products contain intellectual
property that is developed and owned in China and that any
associated trademarks are originally registered in China.
This represents an unprecedented use of domestic intellectual
property as a market-access condition and makes it nearly
impossible for the products of American companies to qualify
unless they are prepared to establish Chinese brands and
transfer their research and development of new products to
China.
This directive targets some of our most innovative and
competitive manufacturing and service industries, including
computers, software, telecommunications and green technology.
Once this system is in place, it is expected to be expanded
to other industries. The November directive was followed in
late December by the announcement that the government would
develop a broader catalogue of indigenous innovation products
and sectors to be afforded preferences beyond government
procurement (i.e., including subsidies and other preferential
treatment). The December announcement, which was issued by
four Chinese agencies including the State Owned Assets
Supervision and Administration Commission (SASAC), also
raises the specter of China subtly encouraging its many
state-owned enterprises to discriminate against foreign
companies in the context of procurement, including for
commercial purposes.
These particular programs are part of a broader set of
government policy initiatives covering, for example, patents
and standards, competition policy, encryption and tax, the
effect of which is creating barriers to competition in the
Chinese market for our most innovative companies.
They also run counter to repeated pledges by the Chinese
government to avoid protectionism, including the joint
commitment of President Hu and President Obama at their
recent summit in November to pursue open trade and
investment. Moreover, they do not provide a constructive
framework for a positive, cooperative and mutually beneficial
relationship.
U.S. economic growth relies in significant measure on
access to key international markets. China is the world's
third largest economy and represents a major potential growth
market for the United States. A healthy U.S.-China bilateral
relationship requires an expanding economic relationship
based on mutual openness. Systematic efforts by China to
develop policies that build their domestic enterprises at the
expense of U.S. firms and U.S. intellectual property is not a
framework for a positive and cooperative relationship.
Additionally, we are further concerned that such policies, if
left unchallenged, will be pursued by other important trading
partners, compounding the impact on the U.S. economy.
We respectfully request that your agencies make this issue
in particular a strategic priority in your bilateral economic
engagement with China; develop, in consultation with the
business community and like-minded foreign governments, a
strong, fully coordinated response to the Chinese government;
and raise this issue with your Chinese counterparts in all
appropriate multilateral and bilateral meetings and forums.
With best regards,
Stephen J. Ubl, President and CEO, AdvaMed; Richard R.
Vuylsteke, President, The American Chamber of Commerce
in Hong Kong; Brenda Lei Foster, President, The
American Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai; Harley
Seyedin, President, The American Chamber of Commerce in
South China; John Castellani, President, Business
Roundtable (BRT); Robert W. Hlolleyman, II, President
and CEO, Business Software Alliance (BSA); Bob Vastine,
President, Coaliton of Service Industries (CSI); Gary
Shapiro, President and CEO, Consumer Electronics
Association (CEA); Calman J. Cohen, President,
Emergency Committee for American Trade (ECAT); Dean C.
Garfield, President, Information Technology Industry
Council (ITI); Robert Barchiesi; President, The
International AntiCounterfeiting Coalition (IACC); John
Engler, President and CEO, National Association of
Manufacturers (NAM); Evan R. Gaddis, President and CEO,
National Electrical Manufacturers Association (NEMA);
Bill Reinsch, President, National Foreign Trade Council
(NFTC); Ken Wasch, President, Software & Information
Industry Association (SIIA); Phillip J. Bond, President
and CEO, TechAmerica; Grant Seiffert, President,
Telecommunications Industry Association (TIA); Peter
Robinson, President and CEO, United States Council for
International Business (USCIB); Thomas J. Donohue,
President and CEO, U.S. Chamber of Commerce.
Mr. WEBB. I am introducing a very simple amendment. It is intended to
protect American innovation and American jobs, and it is intended to
make America more competitive and to create jobs here at home. In cases
where technologies are developed with the support of the American
taxpayer, my legislation prohibits companies from transferring the
technology to countries that by law, practice or policy, require
proprietary technology transfers as a matter of doing business.
Specifically, it says: A country which, by law, practice or policy,
is required to transfer proprietary technology or intellectual property
as a condition of doing business in that country will not be the
recipient of any of these technologies that were developed with the
assistance of the American taxpayer.
Quite simply, if taxpayers supported the development of the
technology, they own a piece of it, and it can't just be given away.
The transfer of publicly supported proprietary technologies by American
firms to China, and potentially other countries, clearly and
unequivocally places the competitive advantage of the American economy
at risk.
Our trade laws are designed in order to protect national security,
but our economic security is also an element of our national
security. Intellectual property in the civilian sector should also be
protected. My amendment seeks to do that.
I believe this is an issue every Senator can support.
I thank the Presiding Officer and yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Wyoming.
A Second Opinion
Mr. BARRASSO. Mr. President, I come to the floor, as I have
repeatedly since the health care bill was signed into law, to offer a
doctor's second opinion about issues related to that health care law.
A group of House and Senate Republican lawmakers, including Senator
Thune of South Dakota, released a startling new report about the
President's health care law. The report is entitled ``CLASS' Untold
Story: Taxpayers, Employers, and States on the Hook for Flawed
Entitlement Program.'' I commend this report to my colleagues.
Many may remember that President Obama's health care law established
a brandnew, Federal long-term care entitlement program. It is called
the CLASS Program, the Community Living Assistance Services and
Supports Program.
This CLASS Program pays a stipend to individuals enrolled when they
are unable to perform daily living activities--dressing, bathing,
eating. To qualify for the benefits, an individual would have to pay a
monthly premium for 5 years--pay a monthly premium for 5 years--before
the Federal Government starts to pay out any of the benefits.
The health care law mandates that the CLASS Program collect
individual
[[Page S6073]]
premiums for those 5 years before the program actually even starts to
pay out benefits.
It sounds pretty good but not so fast. When it comes to the health
care law, the American people have come to realize that if it sounds
too good to be true, it probably is.
The CLASS Program was supposed to start January 1, 2011--10 months
ago. But the Obama administration's officials decided to delay the
program because they know it does not work. It is now known that the
CLASS Program was an intentionally designed budget gimmick--that is
correct: an intentionally designed budget gimmick.
During Senate floor debate of the President's health care bill, I,
along with many other Members of this side of the aisle, warned
repeatedly--repeatedly--that the CLASS Program is a financial disaster
waiting to happen.
The Congressional Budget Office estimated the CLASS Program would
reduce the deficit by $70 billion over a 10-year period. These savings
are mythical, and they come from the premium dollars CLASS collects
those first 5 years, before it pays out a single penny.
During those first 5 years, the program is not required to pay out
any benefits to any individuals. Over its first 10 years, the
Congressional Budget Office says this CLASS Program will collect $83
billion in premiums and only pay out $13 billion in benefits.
But instead of holding on to the $70 billion in excess premiums
collected to pay for future expenses we know are coming, Members of the
Senate--Members on the other side of the aisle--used those same funds
to pay for President Obama's health care law.
To add insult to injury, Washington Democrats then tried to claim
that the $70 billion could also be used to pay down the deficit.
The American people immediately saw this claim was irresponsible.
Even the Senate Budget Committee chairman, Senator Kent Conrad from
North Dakota, admitted the CLASS Program was ``a Ponzi scheme of the
first order--something Bernie Madoff would be proud of.'' Yet the
President and Washington Democrats pushed to include this CLASS Program
in the health care law.
This new report provides undeniable evidence that administration
officials knew the CLASS Program's design and payment structure were
fiscally unsustainable. The Obama administration knew it. Yet they
repeatedly ignored the explicit and persistent warnings.
One might ask: Why is that? The only logical explanation is,
administration officials chose to hide the CLASS Program's true cost
from congressional lawmakers and the American people--all to advance
President Obama's ideological health care agenda.
This push to advance an agenda, rather than reasonable patient-
centered health care reforms, served only to create yet another
unsustainable entitlement program, an entitlement program this country
simply cannot afford. The Obama administration's own Chief Actuary, a
man named Richard Foster, repeatedly tried to tell administration
officials that the CLASS Program was not fiscally sound. Internal e-
mails from Mr. Foster first warned administration officials in May of
2009--well before the health care law was enacted.
According to that report, Mr. Foster's e-mail says:
The program is intended to be ``actuarially sound'', but at
first glance this goal may be impossible. Due to the limited
scope of the insurance coverage, the voluntary CLASS plan
would probably not attract many participants other than
individuals who already meet the criteria to qualify as
beneficiaries.
He went on to say:
While the 5-year ``vesting period'' would allow the fund to
accumulate a modest level of assets, all such assets could be
used just to meet benefit payments due in the first few
months of the 6th year.
Then, a key sentence:
The resulting substantial premium increases required to
prevent fund exhaustion would likely reduce the number of
participants, and a classic ``assessment spiral'' or
``insurance death spiral'' would ensue.
What does this mean in plain English? It means the CLASS premiums
will be too expensive to persuade young, healthy people to participate.
It means the CLASS plan's long-term care payout is very enticing to
people who know they are going to need the care; healthy people do not
participate, sicker people do participate. Individuals in the health
care system call this phenomenon adverse selection. When adverse
selection occurs, the American taxpayer is at very serious risk of
being forced to bail out the program when it fails.
The report goes on to show that Mr. Foster repeated his concerns
during the summer of 2009. He writes to another administration
official:
I'm sorry to report that I remain very doubtful that this
proposal is sustainable at the specified premium and benefit
amounts.
He says:
Thirty-six years of actuarial experience lead me to believe
that this program would collapse in short order and require
significant federal subsidies to continue.
Let me remind everyone that the Chief Actuary is a nonpartisan, high-
ranking official at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
The Chief Actuary's estimates are critical to understand the health
care law's true fiscal impact and long-term viability.
Mr. Foster certainly does not have an ax to grind. He simply offered
his analysis based on the data, and the Obama administration ignored
it. Not only did Obama administration officials ignore Mr. Foster, they
stopped requesting his input. But Mr. Foster was not alone.
In the fall of 2009, the Department of Health and Human Services'
Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation also
raised the red flag. According to the report, one employee wrote in an
e-mail on October 22:
Seems like a recipe for disaster to me. . . . I can't
imagine that CLASS would not have high levels of adverse
selection given the significantly higher premiums compared to
similar policies in the private market.
Just a week after Senator Thune released this stunning new report on
the floor of the Senate, media outlets indicated that the Department of
Health and Human Services has closed its CLASS Program. Mr. Bob Yee,
the CLASS Chief Actuary, announced the closure in an e-mail. He went on
to say he would leave his position as the CLASS office Actuary
effective immediately. News reports indicated the CLASS office's
employees have either been reassigned or asked to leave.
Mysteriously, however, the Department of Health and Human Services
issued a statement denying the office was officially closing. In fact,
the statement failed to say if and when the CLASS Program would even
start. The Obama administration has had 18 months to figure out how to
implement this CLASS Program. Recent developments show they are not
even close to resolving questions about the program's solvency.
The American people deserve more. The American people deserve the
truth. The evidence is indisputable. Administration officials at the
Department of Health and Human Services knew the CLASS Program was
unsustainable, and they knew it before President Obama signed the
health care bill into law. They knew it. Yet this Senate and the House
of Representatives and the administration failed in their duty to be
honest with the American people and to tell them the truth.
Were administration officials deliberately hiding CLASS's true cost
for political gain? This is certainly not the first time during the
last several weeks that we have seen troubling reports exposing the
administration's tendency to ignore financial warnings. They ignore the
warnings so they can advance politically important projects to them--
projects that turn into expensive failures, with the American taxpayers
being stuck with the bill.
I see this report, this incredible study, as yet one more piece of
evidence that the President's health care law must be repealed. It must
be repealed and replaced with reasonable, commonsense, and financially
sound alternatives: patient-centered reforms that allow individuals to
get the care they need, from the doctor they want, at a price they can
afford.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Utah.
Mr. HATCH. Mr. President, I rise in support of amendment No. 680 that
we have filed. I am concerned that the bill before us will have only
marginal effects on China's manipulation of its currency. My amendment
offers a different approach, one which I believe
[[Page S6074]]
will be more effective over the long term.
Let me first say, I strongly agree with the sponsors of this bill
about the need to send a strong signal to China, and other currency
manipulators as well, that massive intervention in the currency markets
to gain trade advantage will no longer be tolerated. For the
international economic system to work, every country, including China,
needs to play by the rules.
Similarly to many of my colleagues, my frustrations with China's
trade and economic practices go far beyond currency manipulation. For
example, China's failure to protect intellectual property rights,
China's industrial policies, their limitations on American investment,
and their unfair support and subsidization of State-owned and State-
assisted enterprises are all very serious problems we need to address.
So while today we are focusing on currency manipulation, I look
forward to working with Senator Baucus to examine potential solutions
to these problems through Finance Committee hearings on China, which I
hope we will hold soon.
The sponsors of this bill assure us that their approach is WTO
consistent and will not result in a trade war with one of our largest
trading partners. Given the importance of these questions, I wrote
Secretary Geithner and Ambassador Kirk to request the administration's
views. While they assured us they are reviewing the bill, to date, they
have not publicly weighed in one way or the other. It seems to me they
need to weigh in. Given that they know the Senate is debating the
legislation this week, I think this is very unfortunate. If the
administration is going to have any impact on this debate, I would urge
them to comment soon.
Even though I have supported similar legislation in the past, I have
continuing reservations about this approach. Fundamentally, we must
remain focused on one question: Will this legislation actually solve
the currency problem with China? After careful consideration, I have
come to the conclusion it will not. While well-intentioned, the bill is
too focused on unilateral remedial actions. As a result, I fear the
bill will only have a marginal effect on China's practices, while at
the same time potentially targeting many U.S. exporters for trade
retaliation by China.
For example, the Congressional Budget Office scored this bill as
generating $61 million in revenue over 10 years. To put this in
context, in 2010 alone, the United States imported almost $365 billion
of goods from China. Given the scope of the problem, I find it
difficult to believe that unilaterally imposing an additional $6
million in antidumping and countervailing duties a year on Chinese
imports will compel China to change its currency policies or have any
meaningful impact on our trade deficit with China.
Many of the other remedial provisions in this bill require the U.S.
Government to take other unilateral actions against China, many of
which may actually harm U.S. exporters directly or expose them to
potential retaliation by the Chinese. To succeed over the long term, I
think we must go in a different direction.
My amendment does just that. My amendment strikes the unilateral
provisions while retaining the core of the bill that actually advances
our shared goal of combating Chinese currency practices. I agree with
my colleagues that the exchange rates and International Economic Policy
Coordination Act of 1988 is simply not working. Administration after
administration refuses to exercise its authority and deem China a
currency manipulator. This is enormously frustrating to all of us,
especially since candidate Obama campaigned against China's current
currency practices, and after being elected had his own Treasury
Secretary testify before Congress that China is, in fact, manipulating
its currency. Yet they refuse to act.
So I agree the Congress must tighten the criteria and establish a
more objective approach to identifying fundamentally misaligned
currencies and designating fundamentally misaligned currencies for
priority action.
I supported this goal in the past and continue to today. I also agree
we need to hold the Secretary of the Treasury and the U.S. Trade
Representative accountable. So I have retained the requirements under
this bill that they report to and testify before Congress on their
progress. But to succeed over the long term we need to adopt a
fundamentally different approach.
We have had some success in the past. For example, during the Bush
administration, from 2005 to 2008, negotiations pushed China to
appreciate its currency by 20 percent. Unfortunately, the Obama
administration has had no such success.
My amendment builds on this successful model but also takes it a step
further. First, my amendment directs the Secretary of the Treasury and
the U.S. Trade Representative to initiate negotiations in the World
Trade Organization and the International Monetary Fund to develop
effective remedial rules and actions that will mitigate the adverse
trade and economic effects of fundamentally misaligned currencies
designated for priority action under this bill, and that will encourage
priority action countries to adopt appropriate policies to eliminate
the fundamental misalignment of their currencies.
The WTO and the IMF were designed to handle complex issues like
currency, so we should start there and work with our allies to devise
long-term and effective solutions. Working with like-minded countries,
we should be able to agree that when individual members advance their
nationalistic interests so aggressively through currency manipulation
that they threaten the whole global economy and their own long-term
interests, and their actions need to be addressed.
Many of my colleagues may argue that negotiations in the WTO and IMF
will not work. My amendment addresses that potential problem in its
second section. It provides that if the Secretary of the Treasury and
the U.S. Trade Representative cannot make progress to effectively
mitigate the adverse effects of fundamentally misaligned currencies
within the WTO and the IMF within 90 days, then the administration
shall enter into plurilateral negotiations outside of the WTO and IMF
to develop agreements with our friends and allies who are also
committed to open and fair currency policies.
These negotiations will need to develop mechanisms to mitigate the
adverse effects of priority action country currency policies, and to
encourage those priority action countries to abandon their
interventions into their currencies.
We have seen multilateral approaches work in the past in combating
some of China's unfair trade and economic practices. For example, China
changed course on both its aggressive indigenous innovation policies
and on efforts to hoard its rare earth materials primarily due to
multilateral pressure against the Chinese. These important issues have
not been solved and require additional efforts.
But by working with our friends and our allies, we effectively
convinced the Chinese Government to take a more constructive approach.
Let's build on the successes we have witnessed in recent years. Let's
work together to counter, in a systematic and comprehensive way, the
efforts of those priority action countries that derive trade advances
through current policy.
To be clear, I am not suggesting that the United States violate any
of its international obligations. That point is made clear in the
amendment. But I am suggesting that the solution to the currency
problem cannot be achieved unilaterally, and our negotiators must reach
out to our allies to aggressively counter the behavior of China and
others. So far the administration has failed to lead on the currency
issue. My amendment requires that they do so.
The third section of my amendment helps maintain pressure on the
administration to take concrete action. It requires the Treasury
Department and the USTR to report to Congress every 180 days following
enactment of this bill. In these reports the administration must
identify: one, the countries with which the United States is conducting
negotiations to mitigate the adverse effects of priority action
currencies, and in what international fora or negotiating
configurations those negotiations are taking place; two, the remedial
rules and actions under discussion in those negotiations; three, any
remedial rules that have been adopted and any remedial actions that
[[Page S6075]]
have been taken pursuant to those negotiations; and, four, what, if
any, additional authority the Secretary or the U.S. Trade
Representative needs from Congress to conduct these negotiations and to
effectively mitigate the adverse trade and economic effects of
fundamentally misaligned currencies or to implement coordinated actions
with other countries.
Finally, my amendment sets up a process to immediately take advantage
of ongoing international trade negotiations by establishing a new
priority negotiating objective of the United States for ongoing and
future trade agreements. This new objective requires that each party
agree to not fundamentally misalign its currency in a manner that would
result in a priority action designation and agree to work together to
mitigate the adverse trade and economic effects of fundamentally
misaligned currency by non-parties such as China.
For example, if the Trans-Pacific Partnership negotiations are to
tackle 21st-century trade and investment issues, as the USTR continues
to promise, I think this plurilateral negotiation would be a great
place to start to address the challenges of fundamentally misaligned
currencies. Working with this group of like-minded countries, we should
be able to agree amongst all nine parties that no party will
fundamentally misalign its currency.
We should also be able to agree to work together to counter the
actions of other countries whose interventions in currency markets
destabilize the global economy. We have seen multilateral engagement
work in other areas. If we are truly going to solve this currency
problem, we need to look at what other efforts have actually produced
some results in moving the Chinese off a mercantilist policy course and
improve the conditions for American businesses and workers competing
against the Chinese.
We can all agree that China's massive interventions in its financial
sector and currency have disrupted global trade and that its efforts to
benefit China at the expense of others has harmed many countries and
workers, including many in our own United States. But I believe rather
than merely sending a message to China, we must try and find real,
long-term solutions and empower and direct our negotiators to reach out
to our friends and allies around the world and finally solve the
problem.
If existing institutions are not working, we must modify them. If
that is not possible, we must look to create new effective
international agreements. The challenge that China's currency
interventions present are not just to the United States but to the
international economic community. We, the Congress, must demand that
the administration launch these critical negotiations so we can avert
further damage by currency policies of countries like China.
So I call on my colleagues to join me and to not just send a message
but to take actions that could, in fact, produce results. In the end,
China itself, as well as its neighbors and trading partners, will
benefit from a more open, transparent, and fairly exchanged currency
regime. What is at stake is far more than making a statement. We need
to actually alter the international agreements and the rules of the
game to address the problems of today and tomorrow.
So I urge my colleagues to support this amendment when it comes up. I
hope we can get it up once we come to the final agreement on how to
proceed on this bill.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from New York.
Mr. SCHUMER. Mr. President, my main purpose is to address the China
currency bill, particularly in regards to the remarks of Speaker
Boehner and Chairman Bernanke. But there are two other points I wish to
make on previous speakers' comments. First, Senator Webb's amendment.
It is a very important amendment. What it says, of course, is that in
cases where commercial technologies are developed with the support of
U.S. taxpayers, it prohibits companies from transferring the technology
to countries that force proprietary transfers as a condition of doing
business. We have seen this over and over.
China, which does not play fair up and down the line, basically gets
away with economic murder. One of their techniques is to say to a big
American company: We will allow you to sell a ton of stuff to us. You
will make lots of money. But in return you must give us your
proprietary technology--basically your family jewels.
It is outrageous, and in the long run it weakens America's ability to
grow and create jobs. The companies do this because in the 5- or 10-
year period in which they have signed the contract, they get a lot of
revenue. But it certainly hurts American workers, and it certainly
hurts these companies in the long run. But the CEOs probably figure
they will be long gone before that money is made. So I want to support
Senator Webb's amendment.
In regards to my good friend from Utah who proposed an alternative, I
would say this: We have tried for a decade to get multilateral action.
That involves getting China's acquiescence. It is not going to happen.
Multilateral action--like saying to the Chinese: Please--has not
worked. It will not work. Our legislation is much stronger. It can
pass. It got a large vote here this week. It has bipartisan support.
I know Speaker Boehner--I will talk about this in a minute--has said
he will not take up our bill. But there is going to be huge pressure
for him to do so, as I will elaborate later.
So to my good friend from Utah--and I have tremendous respect for
him, and I do not doubt for a minute his good intentions, his
integrity, his hard work and desire to see things happen. To say to the
Chinese: Please negotiate, is a strategy for weakness, is a strategy
for failure, and multilateral action will not succeed. The Chinese
understand only one thing--I will yield in a brief moment to my
colleague for a question or a comment, whichever he prefers.
But the Chinese only understand one thing: being tough; telling them,
if they do not discontinue these actions we are going to take action
unilaterally on our own. I have been doing this for years. I can tell
you, China's policies get worse and worse and worse. As one of my
constituents said to me: Uncle Sam, when it comes to China, is Uncle
Sam.
To have a policy that involves large multilateral actions and says to
the Chinese: Come and negotiate with us, makes no sense at all.
I yield for a brief moment on my time to my colleague from Utah--for
a minute or so.
Mr. HATCH. Well, I appreciate that. My colleague has always been very
fair and gracious to me. I feel the same way toward him. I understand
his deep feelings about this matter. I respect and appreciate them as
well. But I am not talking about necessarily negotiating with China
directly, other than what we can do. I am talking about dealing with
nations that literally are feeling the same way we do, and gradually
multiplying our effectiveness by working together--not just sending a
message but getting the whole world to start saying: Yes, the United
States is right; yes, this group of nations is right. And we can do
that even outside of the international organizations that currently
exist.
But I would like my colleague to look at that amendment and see--I
think he will see some real good in it. I think it will get us farther
down the pathway of doing what he knows needs to be done, and I know
needs to be done, without necessarily causing a major trade war.
So I just bring that up to my colleague for that purpose, respecting
him and what he is trying to do. I think this plural lateral approach I
am talking about goes far beyond the IMF and some of the other
worldwide organizations; it means really doing effective diplomatic
work to bring worldwide pressure to get people to live within certain
monetary constraints.
I thank my colleague for yielding.
Mr. SCHUMER. I thank my colleague, and I understand his good
intentions and desire to get to the same place, which is to get China
to behave fairly. I certainly will look at his bill.
I simply say this: Growing up in Brooklyn, we had to deal with a lot
of bullies. The only time bullies give in is when you stand up to them.
The proposal my colleague has made does not stand up to China.
The nations of the world have made their opinions clear. Recently,
Brazil did. China doesn't care. They will only
[[Page S6076]]
care if there are sanctions, tough sanctions that give consequences to
their unfair--and usually illegal by WTO standards--action.
Now I want to talk about Speaker Boehner's remarks and Ben Bernanke's
remarks.
Last night was a milestone in the Senate. For years, the Government
of China has been willfully breaking the rules of free trade without
provoking a formal response from the U.S. Government--until yesterday.
The full Senate for the first time went on record that it wanted to
consider formal action to confront China's currency manipulation. It
was a lopsided vote, a bipartisan majority of both parties, with 79
Senators in favor. We will spend the next few days debating the
particulars, but make no mistake about it, when it comes to China's
unfair trade practices, there is a consensus to act in the Senate.
It can be hard at times here to get 79 votes to turn the lights on.
When the majority leader and the minority leader vote together to move
forward on a major jobs-boosting measure, we should not delay in moving
forward. But then today, less than 24 hours after the Senate saw the
overwhelming vote in favor of moving forward to finally confront China
with real action, the Speaker of the House of Representatives suggested
he would not take up the bill if it passes the Senate. He called it
dangerous. The Speaker's argument is behind the times. The only thing
that would be dangerous would be to continue turning the other cheek
while China mounts its assault on U.S. jobs, U.S. wealth, and U.S.
manufacturing. Up and down the line, they oppose fair practices. They
are mercantilists, maximizing their wealth at the expense of American
workers, American companies, and American jobs.
Critics like the Speaker say the bill could start a trade war with
China. Well, I have news, Mr. President: We are already in a trade war
with China, and it is not going that well. American companies are
fighting for survival in the United States and around the globe,
battling subsidized Chinese exports with a built-in price advantage of
20 to 40 percent.
We cannot raise the white flag on American jobs, American wealth, and
American manufacturing. We can compete successfully against Chinese
competition at home and in China and around the world but only--only--
if we level the playing field. Our bill helps level that playing field.
There is already a trade war going on, I say to the Speaker. China is
cheating to gain unfair advantage. It is about time we do something
about it. As Mr. Samuelson said in his article in the Washington Post,
the only thing worse than a trade war--and I believe that won't happen
because China has more to lose in a trade war than we do, and if they
are one thing, they are smart, and they won't cut off their nose to
spite their face. They may take a few sanctions, but they won't create
a trade war. The only thing worse than even a trade war is continuing
our present policies where, 5 and 10 years from now, America cannot get
up off the ground because of unfair Chinese policies.
The House Speaker seems to want to sit out this fight. He seems to
want us to take a hands-off approach to China. He says, ``This is well
beyond what Congress should be doing.'' I am aghast at that notion,
that the Speaker says that fighting for American jobs against unfair
practices China foists upon us is well beyond what Congress should be
doing. What should we be doing? There is nothing else Congress should
be doing except rising to defend American jobs.
If he doesn't believe these practices are unfair, he should just
listen--the Speaker should--to Chairman Bernanke. This is what he said
this morning:
The Chinese currency policy is blocking what might be a
more normal recovery process in the global economy. It is . .
. hurting the recovery.
He is the top economist in the land. It is hurting the recovery, I
say to the Speaker. That is what Ben Bernanke said. Does the Speaker
really think it is beyond what Congress should be doing--to confront
something that is hurting the recovery, that everyone who studies it
says is unfair, that nobody has come up with a solution to?
Multilateral negotiations? Give me a break. China won't budge. We know
that.
I find it ironic that the Speaker wants a hands-off approach on
China's unfair currency practices considering he, along with the rest
of the Republican leadership in both the House and the Senate, just
sent a letter a couple weeks ago seeking to meddle in U.S. currency
policies. Just 2 weeks ago, the Republican leadership in the House and
Senate sent a letter to Chairman Bernanke trying to influence his
handling of monetary policies in a highly inappropriate way. It was
nothing short of a breach of a protocol that has long been observed,
which is that you don't put political pressure on the Federal Reserve
because they need to handle monetary policy in an economic way, not a
political way. A former Fed official called that attempt to politically
meddle in the Fed's independent policymaking outrageous. Politico wrote
that the letter was ``an audacious move against a central bank that
prizes its political independence.'' A leading economist said that ``it
crosses a line that shouldn't be crossed.''
Let me get this straight. The Speaker and the House leadership feel
it is OK to cross the line and try to strong-arm the Fed but it is not
OK to have the will to stand up to China. This is totally inconsistent,
and it is hard to figure out how you could do one thing one week and
say another the next week--unless, of course, the House leadership's
goal is to hold back our economic recovery. I fear to think that. I
fear to think their goal is to make sure the economy is so bad that
they might do what our Republican leader said was his No. 1 goal:
unseat President Obama. I shudder to think that the millions of
American households without jobs, with people looking and searching to
find a way to provide some dignity for their families, have to be
political fodder for a goal to hold the economy back. I don't want to
embrace that conclusion, but it is hard to see another explanation for,
on the one hand, trying to twist the arm of the Fed when it comes to
U.S. monetary policy but when it comes to fighting back against China,
to say: Hands off. That is totally inconsistent.
I also find the Speaker's position on this China currency measure
strange because if he blocks this measure, he is effectively thwarting
the will of his own Members in the House, where there are 225
cosponsors--61 Republicans at last count--for a measure similar to the
one being debated in the Senate right now. It is clear there is a
consensus in the House very similar to the one here in the Senate. So I
urge the Speaker to heed his own Chamber and put this bill on the
floor. Don't thwart your own Members who want to support this measure.
Give it an up-or-down vote. Even if the leadership doesn't want to vote
for it, they should at least allow the will of the House to go forward.
They should not suppress the collective will of their Chamber because
at the end of the day you have to ask yourself which side you are on.
Two major candidates for President on the Republican side support
this legislation. John Huntsman, who just got back from China--hardly
known as a radical--said he would sign this bill. I haven't talked to
him, but I can tell you, having worked on this issue for 6 years, I am
sure that former Ambassador Huntsman is totally frustrated with the
Chinese, and he knows that, unfortunately, the legislation introduced
by his fellow Utahan doesn't address it and that the Chinese don't
react when you ask nicely. They don't react when you ask, period. They
only react when there are consequences that are harmful to them if they
continue the unfair, anti-free-trade policy.
For some inexplicable reason, the Republican leadership in the House
is siding with the Chinese Government. This is not the time to go soft
on China. The top economist in the country tells us China is holding
back the recovery. Many other economists say that China, in its
currency policies, is thwarting and distorting world trade. I have seen
some list it as one of the causes for the international recession we
have. We know--we know--it costs America in jobs.
I want to relate what I did yesterday. Just one company in upstate
New York--and I remind some of the editorial writers and pundits who
say this will just move jobs from China to Bangladesh, that they are 5
years behind
[[Page S6077]]
the times. We are not talking about jobs that are in labor-intensive
industries such as toys, clothing, or furniture. Those are gone, and
they are not coming back. They are talking about top-end, middle-size,
and smaller size American manufacturers and producers who have to fight
with one hand tied behind their back because of Chinese currency.
This company, which makes a ceramic that is put in generators,
electric generators, prevents pollution. They have a great ceramic
tool. They are doing fine. But a few years ago, China stole it; they
just took it. The head of the company told me he didn't mind because
his growth was so large just from selling these in the United States
and Europe that if China wanted to sell them in China, where they are
building lots of powerplants, so be it. But now China is not only
producing them for consumption in China--his product--it is producing
them to export to America, and this gentleman said he cannot compete
with them head to head. But when China gets a built-in 30 percent
advantage on intellectual property that they stole, how is he going to
survive?
That story can be repeated over and over. Of course China is holding
back our recovery. Of course China's policies lose us millions of
American jobs and hundreds of billions of dollars of American wealth.
And finally this body, in a strictly bipartisan way, with five lead
Republicans and five lead Democrats as cosponsors--and we have
criticized both Presidents Bush and Obama for their failure to act--
this body gets some resolve, and the Speaker says no.
Do you know what, I don't believe his ``no'' is going to stand. This
is an issue the American people know has to happen. This is something
they care about--Democrats and Republicans. Look at the polling. There
is no partisan divide; it includes both liberals and conservatives. You
don't have to have a Ph.D. in economics to know that China is cheating
us and playing unfairly with us.
I believe the pressure from Members on both sides of the aisle in the
other body and, more importantly, from the American people and
manufacturers all over the country could work, could get the Speaker to
reconsider his view. And I plead, pray, and hope that it does because
there is no greater step we can take to restore jobs in America than to
pass this important bill, get it enacted into law, and see, for once,
our top-notch American companies be able to compete evenly--a fair
fight--with Chinese manufacturers.
I thank the Chair, I yield the floor, and I suggest the absence of a
quorum.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The clerk will call the roll.
The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. INHOFE. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so
ordered.
Mr. INHOFE. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent to speak as in
morning business for up to 15 minutes.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so
ordered.
EPA Inspector General Report
Mr. INHOFE. Madam President, I wanted to come to the floor today
because 2 days ago I got the results of an inspector general's report
that I requested 18 months ago having to do with the endangerment
finding of the EPA. While it is a little bit complicated, I will go
back and put this in perspective.
Back in the 1990s, we were asked by the then-Clinton administration
to ratify a treaty called the Kyoto treaty. This was a treaty that was
aimed at the reduction of greenhouse gases--anthropogenic gases and
this type of thing. Well, it didn't pass. It went down 95 to 0 because
of two reasons: We all declared in this body we weren't going to ratify
any treaty that, No. 1, was damaging economically to the country; and,
No. 2, we would treat developing countries differently than developed
nations. Of course this missed on both those criteria.
After that happened, it became popular by some of the more radical
environmentalist groups who enjoy the overregulation we have so much of
in this country to seek the introduction of different bills. We had the
McCain-Lieberman bill of 2003 and again in 2005. We had the Warner-
Lieberman bill and several others--the Sanders-Boxer bill--and then, I
guess, the last one was a House bill called the Waxman-Markey bill.
Anyway, these bills were all aimed at what we can do in this country
in order to restrict our use of CO2. Obviously--and there is
no disagreement on this--if we in the United States unilaterally reduce
our CO2, it will not affect the CO2 emissions
worldwide because this isn't where the problem lies.
Even when I asked Lisa Jackson, the Obama-appointed Administrator at
the EPA, for whom I have a great deal of respect, if we were to pass
any of these bills I just mentioned--that would have the effect of the
Kyoto treaty but only on the United States in reducing anthropogenic
gases--would this have the effect of reducing CO2 emissions,
she said, no, because, as I pointed out, this would only affect the
United States.
I would take the argument one step further and say it would have the
effect of increasing, not decreasing, emissions because, as our
manufacturing base has to find power to generate itself, they have to
go where that is. Anyway, I only wanted to bring that up because that
effort is still going on today.
With all these bills that have been before us--and at the time of
most of them the Republicans were in the majority and I was the
chairman of the Environment and Public Works Committee which had
jurisdiction over this subject--I was the one who stood on the floor of
the Senate to defeat these bills, and it became easier as each bill
came along because people recognized that while the science is in
question, the economics are not.
It had been determined by a number of sources--including a branch of
the Wharton School of Economics, MIT, and CRA, or Charles River
Associates--that the range of the cost of a cap-and-trade bill is
always in the range of between $300 billion and $400 billion a year.
It is confusing when we talk about these large numbers. Peoples' eyes
glaze over. They do not understand, and even I have a hard time
understanding how this affects me and my 20 kids and grandkids out in
Oklahoma. So I have a system--and I recommend it to my friends in the
Senate--that I take the number of family income tax returns that are
filed each year--get a current figure--and then I do my math. So this
range between $300 billion and $400 billion, when we reduce it down to
what it would cost each family, is in excess of $3,000 a year. Even if
we were to pass something like this, it still wouldn't reduce the
emissions, and that is what we need to get over.
Anyway, when President Obama saw this, he saw there was no way in the
world the Senate or the House would pass a cap-and-trade bill. So he
decided to do it just by regulation, and we have been talking about
overregulation in the Senate. Sometimes we are inclined to think the
antibusiness attitude of this administration is just in overtaxation
and this type of thing. That is not true. Overregulation is also a
killer. In this case, we are talking about the overregulation of
something we cannot sustain.
So in order for the President to be able to do through regulation
what he could not do through legislation, he had to have what they call
an endangerment finding; that is, the Environmental Protection Agency
had to come up with a conclusion that CO2 is dangerous to
our health. It is called an endangerment finding.
I was getting ready to go over to a meeting in Copenhagen they have
every year. These people who are promoting these programs have these
meetings, and I was getting ready to go over there, and we had
Administrator Jackson before our committee. I remember looking at her
and saying: I am leaving for Copenhagen tomorrow. Shall I assume you
are going to have an endangerment finding as soon as I leave town? She
didn't answer, but she smiled. She smiles a lot. Anyway, that is what
happened when I left.
An endangerment finding has to be based on science, and that is where
this inspector general's report came in. Again, this is new stuff, just
2 days ago. I had requested 18 months ago that they look into the
endangerment finding to see if this, in fact, is based on science. Of
course, they came out with
[[Page S6078]]
this report, which was just released. It confirms the endangerment
finding, which was the very foundation of President Obama's job-
destroying regulatory agenda, was rushed--and I am using their words,
``rushed, biased and flawed.'' It calls the scientific integrity of the
EPA's decisionmaking process into question and undermines the
credibility of the endangerment finding.
Keep in mind, we have to have an endangerment finding before we can
start regulating all this stuff. Well, the inspector general's
investigation uncovered the EPA's failure to engage in the required
recordkeeping process leading up to the endangerment finding. That is a
requirement by law. So they did not comply with the law at that time.
It also did not follow its own peer review procedures. Peer review is
something that is required, and they didn't do it.
Administrator Jackson readily admitted way back in 2009 that the EPA
had outsourced its scientific review to the United Nations'
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
Now, this is interesting because they are going back to say: All
right, you guys. You do the peer review on the very thing you have
developed. Well, it doesn't work that way, and I think at that time we
were complaining about that. So the EPA still refused to conduct its
own independent review of the science, as the EPA inspector general
found. Whatever one thinks of the U.N. science, the EPA is still
required by its own procedures, by law, to conduct an independent
review.
Of course, I have long warned about the IPCC process and what they
have been doing in the past. In fact, it was 6 years ago that I sent a
letter to Dr. Pachauri, the head of the IPCC, specifically raising the
many weaknesses of the IPCC's peer review process. But Dr. Pachauri
dismissed my concerns, and here is what Reuters said in their article
on how Dr. Pachauri responded to my request. I am quoting now from
Reuters:
In the one-page letter, [Pachauri] denies the IPCC has an
alarmist bias and says ``I have a deep commitment to the
integrity and objectivity of the IPCC process.'' Pachauri's
main argument is that the IPCC comprises both scientists and
more than 130 governments who approve IPCC reports line by
line.
Now, that is what he said, as reported. As I predicted, it all came
apart for the IPCC. On the Senate floor last year I highlighted several
media reports uncovering serious errors and possible fraud by the IPCC.
This is the United Nations we are talking about. They are the ones that
started all this.
ABC News, the Economist, Time magazine, and the Times of London--
among many others--reported that the IPCC's research contains
embarrassing flaws--using their language--and the IPCC chairman and
scientists knew of the flaws but published them anyway. Media reports
uncovered a number of non-peer-reviewed studies that the IPCC used to
make baseless claims, including that global warming would--and listen
to this; this is the IPCC stuff that has totally been rebuked--melt the
Himalayan glaciers by 2035. Didn't happen.
It had 40 percent of the Amazon rainforest endangered by global
warming. It didn't happen.
Melt mountain ice in the Alps, Andes, and Africa. It didn't happen.
Slash crop production by 50 percent in North Africa by 2020. It is
something that is not even going on.
These embarrassments led to a number of these same publications to
demand that the IPCC come clean on the review process of the IPCC.
I am going to read this to let everyone know how serious this is.
The Financial Times, talking about the IPCC:
Now it is time to implement fundamental reforms that would
reduce the risk of bias and errors appearing in future IPCC
assessments, increase transparency and open up the whole
field of climate research to the widest possible range of
scientific views.
Time Magazine has always kind of been on the other side of this
issue. We might remember, Time Magazine had on their cover this last
polar bear standing on the last cube of ice and we are all going to
die. Time Magazine, when they talked about the glaciers all melting,
said:
Glaciergate is a black eye for the IPCC and for the climate
science community as a whole.
The Economist:
This mixture of sloppiness, lack of communication, and
high-handedness gives the IPCC's critics a lot to work with.
Newsweek came out:
Some of the IPCC's most-quoted data and recommendations
were taken straight out of unchecked activist brochures,
newspaper articles, and corporate reports--including claims
of plummeting crop yields in Africa and the rising cost of
warming-related natural disasters, both of which have been
refuted by academic studies. Just as damaging, many climate
scientists have responded to critiques by questioning the
integrity of their critics, rather than by supplying data and
reasoned arguments.
That was in Newsweek. So their analysis was that they are doing all
this stuff, and they resort to name-calling and this type of thing
because they don't have a logical response for it.
Last year--and keeping in mind this is after I requested the
inspector general's report and before; and still 1 year ago in a speech
I made right here I said:
There is a crisis of confidence in the IPCC. The challenges
to the integrity and credibility of the IPCC merit a closer
examination by the U.S. Congress. The ramifications of the
IPCC spread far and wide, most notably to the Environmental
Protection Agency's finding that greenhouse gases from mobile
sources endanger public health and welfare. EPA's finding
rests in large measure on the IPCC's conclusions--and EPA has
accepted them wholesale, without an independent assessment.
At this pivotal time, as the Obama EPA is preparing to enact
policies potentially costing trillions of dollars and
thousands of jobs, the IPCC's errors make plain that we need
openness, transparency, and accountability in the scientific
research financed by the U.S. taxpayers.
That was a year before the IG report came out, and it is almost
exactly what the IG report said just this last week.
Two months before that speech, I asked EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson
to delay the EPA endangerment finding based on Climategate. She told
me--and I have a lot of respect for her, by the way. I have professed
that many times. She is one whom normally I will ask her a question,
and she will come out and give an answer, even though it may be an
unpopular answer with her boss, President Obama. She said:
I do not agree that the IPCC has been totally discredited
in any way. In fact, I think it is important to understand
that the IPCC is a body that follows impartial and open and
objective assessments.
She is saying essentially the same thing:
Yes, they had concerns about e-mail. I do not defend the
conduct of those who sent those e-mails.
Here, they are talking about Climategate. We all remember those
secret e-mails going back and forth between the principals to somehow
fraudulently manipulate the science. She goes on to say:
There is peer-review, which is part of the IPCC process.
There are numerous, numerous groups of teams and independent
researchers all a part of coming up with IPCC findings, such
that even the IPCC has said that while we need to investigate
and ensure that our scientists are to a standard of
scientific conduct that we can be proud of, we stand behind
our findings.
So they are all whitewashing the work of the IPCC--again, that was
before the IG report came out--but it didn't work because there are
magazines throughout the world, publications which generally were on
the other side of this argument or their side of the argument. The
Guardian, for example, talking about Climategate and how they are a
disgrace, said:
Pretending that this isn't a real crisis isn't going to
make it go away.
The Daily Telegraph said:
This scandal could well be the greatest in modern science.
This is what they are talking about with Climategate.
The Atlantic Monthly:
The stink of intellectual corruption is overpowering.
Let's remember, the economic ramifications of global warming
regulations imposed upon the EPA under the Clean Air Act will cost
American consumers somewhere in the range of $300 billion to $400
billion a year. This is not to mention the absurd result that EPA
readily admits they need to hire 230,000 additional employees and spend
an additional $21 billion to implement its greenhouse gas regime if
they are not given wide discretion to circumvent the law, and all this
economic pain is
[[Page S6079]]
for nothing--no gain at all. As the EPA Administrator admitted before
our committee, it would have no effect on the overall release of
anthropogenic gases.
Also, of note, what happened to the EPA's vow in 2009 that the Agency
would commit to high standards of transparency because ``the success of
our environmental efforts depends on earning and maintaining the trust
of the public we serve'' or Obama adviser John Holdren's promise that
the administration would make decisions based on the best science
possible because, as the President said, ``the public must be able to
trust the science and scientific process informing public decisions.''
Given what has come to light in this report, it appears the Obama EPA
cannot be trusted on the most consequential decision the Agency has
ever made.
I have already called upon the committees in the Senate--this would
be my committee of which I am the ranking member, the Environment and
Public Works Committee--to have an investigation. My gosh, I don't ever
recall in the years I have been here an IG report coming out where
there weren't numerous hearings to find out and to probe into why they
came up with the decisions they made.
I have tried for 10 years now to pursue this thing with the various
bills that were introduced to do legislatively--to implement the
requirements. Then, when we see they are unable to do it--and if we
look around this Senate, there are only about 30 votes now. They don't
have half the number of votes to impose cap and trade. They don't have
it. It is not here. That is why the President is trying to do it
through regulations.
It is kind of interesting, if we put this in perspective. This
supercommittee they keep talking about, the 12 people--6 Democrats, 6
Republicans, 3 from the House, 3 from the Senate--their goal is to find
$1.5 trillion in 10 years. We have a President in his own budget--and
this isn't Democrats or Republicans or House or Senate. This is the
President. His three budgets he came out with have just under a $5
trillion deficit. That is inconceivable.
I can remember coming down here in the mid-1990s, when President
Clinton was in power. The first $1.5 trillion budget we had, I
complained this is not sustainable. Now it is $1.5 trillion over and
above what it costs to run America. Obviously, that can't be done.
So when we stop to think about the fact that it should be fairly easy
to find $1.5 trillion, that would just be his deficit for 1 year to
find $1.5 trillion.
This is kind of hard to follow. But if they were successful in
implementing what they could not do by legislation and have a cap and
trade, that would cost a minimum of $300 billion a year; or, multiply
that by 10, that would be $3 trillion.
So we have this supercommittee out there trying to find $1.5
trillion; at the same time, they are advocating increasing the cost to
America by $3 trillion. It is not believable.
I think it is very important, and I am on the floor now trying to
gather support for having a hearing. We can't have an IG report talking
about the flawed product of the EPA, of the IPCC, of the United Nations
and not have some kind of investigation. I hope we will be able to do
that.
I yield the floor and suggest the absence of a quorum.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The clerk will call the roll.
The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. CASEY. Madam President, I ask the order for the quorum call be
rescinded.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so
ordered.
Mr. CASEY. Madam President, I rise to speak this afternoon about the
legislation that is before us, the Currency Exchange Rate Oversight
Reform Act, which got an overwhelming vote yesterday. There are not
many times when a piece of legislation on a specific topic gets the
kind of overwhelming support to move forward as we saw yesterday in the
vote that took place, and now we are considering the bill.
When you go across Pennsylvania, if you drew a line down the middle
of our State and moved to the east, a lot of communities were
devastated by flooding. Other than that issue, the No. 1 issue for the
people of our State--and I think the people of the United States in
total--is the issue of jobs. In their frustration, they look to
Washington for action and for solutions. Too often what they see when
they turn on the television set or read about what is happening here,
they see a lot of fighting, a lot of bickering, a lot of back and forth
and, frankly, a lot of politics but not enough action on the question
of jobs.
What we have before us is not some esoteric bill about currency,
although it is somewhat about that. Obviously, it truly is not that.
This is a bill that speaks directly to the frustration Americans feel
and I know the people of Pennsylvania feel. There are not many places
in Pennsylvania I can go where I talk about this issue of China for
many years cheating on currency and us losing lots and lots of jobs
because of it. Hundreds and thousands of jobs are lost because of that.
There are not many places in our State where I can go to talk about
that where the point of view that I express doesn't receive unanimous
support.
This is a very real issue for people. This isn't far off. They know
that, just as in other aspects of life, especially on something as
consequential and significant as international trade--most people
understand that when we are involved in that kind of endeavor, we have
to play by the rules. Every country should play by the rules. When we
have a country as big and as significant in the international economy
or the international marketplace as China not playing by the rules,
cheating time after time after time, giving their workers and their
industries an unfair advantage, I think most people know what that
means. It is not just a question of fairness and playing by the rules;
it is the impact of that cheating, as Americans lose jobs and have lost
jobs. So we have to take action. The time is up. We have been talking
about this for years. We have been pleading with China in one way or
another, urging them, pushing them, but the time for that is over. The
time to act is now.
This is a prudent piece of legislation. It does a couple of things.
Basically what it does is to at long last help American manufacturers
and our workers by clarifying that our trade enforcement laws can and
should be used to address currency undervaluation. It also provides an
opportunity for us to improve oversight by establishing objective
criteria to identify misaligned currencies and imposing tough
consequences for offenders. So it doesn't put into place a new rule for
international trade; it just says that if you violate the rules, there
are going to be consequences and that our Treasury Department and our
Commerce Department are going to take action no matter what
administration is in office, a Democratic administration or a
Republican administration.
I can point to a number of Senators in both parties--and I think I am
one of them--who have been urging this administration and the prior
administration to take stronger, more decisive action. For a variety of
reasons, they haven't done that. That is not to say they haven't been
working on it and not to say they haven't been pushing their
counterparts in China, but I think we have been far too timid in the
approach we take because, again, this isn't some far-off issue. This is
about American jobs and whether we are going to stand by and allow more
and more--tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands more--American
jobs to be lost in the next decade as we have seen hemorrhage from our
society in the last 10 years. One of the causes, one of the substantial
factors in that job loss--not the only but one--is the cheating China
does on its currency.
It is as if we are telling our workers and our companies: Look, we
are going to have a foot race with Chinese companies and Chinese
workers, and we are going to have this competition, as we have every
day in the international marketplace, but China is going to start at
the--if this is a 100-yard dash, they are going to start at the 20- or
25- or 30-yard line and then we are going to start the race and see how
we do.
It is completely unfair to our workers. It undermines their ability
to compete even if they are working as hard as they can, even if they
have a high skill level, even if the company has invested time and
training in those workers, has invested capital in the
[[Page S6080]]
equipment and the technology. Sometimes it doesn't matter what the
company does to improve its production, to improve its efficiency. It
doesn't matter what the workers do. They can go to school and learn and
prepare and get trained. But if they are at a 15- or 20- or 25-percent
disadvantage--by the way, those are the lowest estimates. This has been
a problem of above 30 percent or higher at times. But no matter what
the percentage is, we know there has been a lot of cheating and we know
it is costing us jobs. So it is time for action.
This morning at the Joint Economic Committee hearing, we had Federal
Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke. I asked him about currency, and I
actually read to him some statements he has made in the past about
currency and about the adverse role China has played, the role about
which I am as frustrated as any American. I asked him about that. The
summation of his comments has been reported already, but in addition to
commenting about the impact on our workers and our companies, he talked
about the impact of China's currency policies on the global economic
recovery. So this isn't just an adverse consequence for America, for
the United States, this is an impediment to a full and robust recovery
around the world. So this isn't just limited to the impact on our
workers and our companies, it has worldwide reach, worldwide impact,
and worldwide consequences.
So the United States is unwilling, so far, to crack down on China's
currency and to crack down on what I would assert is manipulation. Some
will say: Well, it might be something different than that, but I think
it is basic manipulation--cheating. I think it is a step we have to
take now, to have rules in place for how we react to their cheating and
then to have very tough consequences. That is what is in the bill.
Unfortunately, this inability to respond appropriately or assertively
or aggressively is one of many, I would argue, pieces of a flawed trade
strategy that have been a prevailing point of view over the course of
two administrations. We are going to have some debate about trade
coming up, and we are going to see some interesting alliances, some
interesting coalitions here. But our flawed trade strategy--if we can
even call it a strategy--has failed over many years, failed our workers
and failed our companies.
We will get to the debate on the trade agreements later, but at least
today and this week we can finally make progress on an issue that has
cost the American people lots and lots of jobs.
Let me give my colleagues a sense of what could happen if we are able
to pass this legislation. In a report dated June 17 of this year from
the Economic Policy Institute--one of the many think tanks across
Washington of various points of view that have studied this issue--and
I am broadly summarizing, but one of the many conclusions they reached
about this issue is that if China revalued its currency by 28.5
percent--now, many would say it is a bigger problem than a 28.5-percent
or 28.5-percent advantage their workers and their companies have--if
they revalued to that level, at 28.5 percent, the growth in our gross
domestic product in the United States would support 1,631,000 U.S.
jobs. If other Asian countries also revalued their currency, then
2,250,000 American jobs would be created. So even if someone could
prove those numbers are off by 10,000 or 20,000 or even if we could
debate the number being off because some might reach different
numbers--but I have seen numbers that high, and I have also seen
numbers in the hundreds and hundreds of thousands of jobs.
So any policy we can enact here--in this case, being appropriately
tough with China on the cheating they do on currency--if passage of
legislation such as this, the one we are considering, leads to the
creation of 1.6 million jobs just as it relates to having China play by
the rules, why wouldn't we pass legislation to do that?
People are saying over and over to us, please do something about
jobs. And sometimes the response is, well, we are trying, but we can't
get agreement or we are trying, but we don't have all the solutions. We
finally have a piece of legislation that will create jobs for sure and
has broad and substantial bipartisan support.
We should pass this bill because it will send two messages that are
badly needed right now from us to the American people--No. 1, that we
are focused on job creation in the near term, not 10 years from now but
in the next year or two. So it is a very specific answer to their
request of us as their elected representatives that we focus on
enacting legislation that will create jobs. Secondly, the message we
will send to the American people is that we finally get it. Finally,
Democrats and Republicans can come together on a very serious issue of
great consequence to families who have been devastated by job loss;
that we are finally coming together, Democrats and Republicans, working
together to have a unanimous vote on a job-creation bill.
It is that simple. Anyone who tries to make it more complicated than
that is probably trying to mislead because it is that simple. We need
to focus our attention in the days ahead to get this legislation passed
and to finally take action in a way that is directed at job creation in
a bipartisan way.
Madam President, I yield the floor and note the absence of a quorum.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The clerk will call the roll.
The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. BROWN of Ohio. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the
order for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Casey). Without objection, it is so
ordered.
Mr. BROWN of Ohio. Mr. President, I appreciate the Presiding
Officer's comments earlier in support of the Currency Exchange Rate
Oversight Reform Act of 2011. The Presiding Officer and I--both
Democrats--joined by five Republicans and three other Democrats--are
the prime sponsors of the Currency Exchange Rate Oversight Reform Act
of 2011.
The cloture motion on the motion to proceed was agreed to--the rules
in the Senate are sometimes a bit impenetrable, but the cloture motion
on the motion to proceed to the bill was agreed to last night with 79
votes out of 98. So there is clear interest in this body to debate one
of the most important jobs bills we have seen in front of us, I say to
the Presiding Officer, in our almost 5 years in the Senate. I have not
seen in my time here another jobs bill be voted on this overwhelmingly,
this bipartisanly, that was this important for putting people back to
work.
Let me sort of expand on that. First of all, this Currency Exchange
Rate Oversight Reform Act of 2011 has broad support from business and
labor. It creates jobs without spending taxpayer dollars. In fact, this
legislation raises revenue and reduces our deficit, clearly, because
when people go back to work, people who are now on unemployment
benefits--sometimes receiving food stamps, sometimes getting other
subsidies, maybe trade adjustment assistance, which the Presiding
Officer has been so involved in--instead, people going back to work
will be paying taxes and not be the beneficiaries of those programs. So
it is a plus both ways in terms of reducing our government's budget
deficit.
Most important, it is in response to an enormous problem, an enormous
economic threat, brought on by the Chinese Communist Party Government.
Senators Schumer, Casey, Snowe, Stabenow, Sessions, Burr, Hagan,
Collins and I have been working closely to bring this bill to the
floor. I thank the majority leader, who usually sits at this desk, for
bringing this bill to the floor to respond, purely and simply, to
China's protectionist trade policies. This is not the United States
turning inward and pointing fingers at other countries. This is a
response to Chinese protectionism, to Chinese economic policies and
trade policies that have been unfair, that cheat--the Chinese have
cheated--and that cost us American jobs.
We know when a factory closes--we have had 50,000; Senator Sanders
said earlier today, we have had 50,000 factories close in this country
in the last decade or so, not all because of China. I do not blame them
nearly for all that. But when a factory closes, we know what it does to
a community, whether it is in Harrisburg, whether it is in Sharon,
whether it is in Erie, whether it is in Cleveland or Akron or Canton.
[[Page S6081]]
I am encouraged by my colleagues on both sides of the aisle who
support this bill who see how China's protectionist trade policies have
undermined businesses, have disadvantaged manufacturers, and
ultimately, most importantly, have cost American jobs. We all know the
problem. For years, China subsidized its exports by adopting
artificial, manipulated exchange rates not based on market forces. As a
result, China's exports to the United States remain cheap, our exports
to China remain more expensive. In other words, because they cheat on
their currency, a product made in Wuhan and sold in Lima or Dayton, OH,
will be cheaper because they have subsidized their production by
weakening their currency.
At the same time, if a company in Lima or Dayton, OH, tries to sell
into China, the cost of that item is 25 percent more because China has
gamed the currency system. So by keeping the value of the renminbi, the
RMB or the yuan, the words for the Chinese currency, by keeping the RMB
artificially low, China incentivizes foreign corporations to shift
production there because it reduces the price of investing in China and
makes Chinese exports cheaper.
In this continued devaluation--I use the percentage 25 percent, some
economists say it may be as high as 40 percent, but clearly it is that
range--they are cheating, they are gaming the system 25 to 40 percent.
Think about in Pennsylvania and Ohio, two States that have a lot in
common. Think about a company, think of two gas stations on opposite
corners. One buys its oil 25, 30 or 35 or 40 percent less expensively,
pays a lower price than the competitor across the street. It is clear
what is going to happen. The competitor that cannot get the break, get
the subsidy, is going to go out of business pretty quickly.
It is that phenomenon that has caused serious harm to the U.S.
economy and has cost America jobs. In 1993, the Chinese currency, the
RMB, was valued at approximately 5.5 to 1 U.S. dollar. Then, from 1995
to 2005, it was valued at about 8.28 without change during that period.
That can mean one of two things: a huge coincidence or blatant currency
manipulation.
Our trade deficit with China in 1993 was about $30 billion, $40
billion--in that range. Today, we run a deficit 8, 9, 10 times that, of
$275 billion--a bilateral deficit just in our relationship with the
Chinese. According to a recent Economic Policies Institute report,
since China joined the WTO, the World Trade Organization, in 2001, 2.8
million jobs have been lost or displaced in the United States as a
result of the U.S. trade deficit--2.8 million jobs. That is hundreds of
thousands in my State. It is tens of thousands in States as small as
West Virginia. It is hundreds of thousands in States as large as
Pennsylvania.
Currency manipulation is not the only reason China enjoys an enormous
trade surplus, but it is certainly a big part of the reason. From 2005
to the middle of 2008, we started to fight back and were headed in the
right direction, however slowly. The Senate overwhelmingly supported a
measure offered by New York Democratic Senator Schumer and South
Carolina Republican Senator Graham that would put tariffs on Chinese
imports if the government did not let its currency appreciate.
All it did was it wiped clean the advantage China had created by
manipulating its currency. That bill passed the Senate, but it did not
pass the House. It was never signed by the President. But what it did
do was get China's attention. Beginning in 2005, China began to do a
slight currency appreciation, which allowed for a few years of modest
progress toward letting its currency appreciate.
But then in the summer of 2008, China abandoned its feigned interest
in fairness. It once again fixed the value of the renminbi against the
U.S. dollar. Then, in June 2010, China vowed to allow its currency to
float more freely against the dollar and other foreign currencies. The
Peterson Institute for International Economics found that, despite the
intervention appreciation, the RMB is even more undervalued today
against the dollar than it was 1 year ago. That is the recent history
of China's currency manipulation.
The Chinese, in other words, when they know people are watching, when
they see the U.S. Government, with our very strong economy--even when
we look weak internally and way too many people unemployed, we are the
major economic force on Earth--when they see us doing something, they
respond. They start to act a little better. It is a little bit similar
to a naughty kid. When the parents are watching, they are going to act
better. When the Chinese--we hope our kids do not break the law the way
the Chinese do, international trade law, but when we watch them, they
behave better. When we exert discipline on them, in other words, we are
going to change this law the way they have gamed the system on
currency, they begin to let the currency float and let it appreciate
and do some better, more fairminded things.
New research by economists at MIT shows how much damage China's trade
and export policies have done to our labor market and to our
communities. The report shows China imports actually have effects on
jobs but also increased use of Federal programs such as the Social
Security and disability insurance program. Of course it does. When
people get laid off, all kinds of things happen in their lives. They
apply for food stamps. They may lose their home, causing, if they are
foreclosed on, the values of homes in the neighborhood to decline, and
the public schools do not have quite the support. They may not be able
to hire one teacher as a result of a handful of people losing their
jobs. All those things happen. So when the Chinese game the currency
system and jobs are lost in Pittsburgh or in Dayton, then bad things
happen in Pittsburgh and Dayton to those families, to those
communities, to those States.
What has been our response when our trading partners use any means
necessary--low labor costs, direct subsidies, currency manipulation--to
compete? What has been our response? It has been inaction. We have not
done very much. It has been adherence to the status quo, and we can no
longer afford to do that. Some like the Presiding Officer from
Pennsylvania and others of us around here have been beating the drum
for a long time that these trade agreements are not fair, that they are
not fair to the American worker and to Americans, particularly small
manufacturers. Bigger manufacturers kind of take care of themselves.
They kind of do it by moving production overseas. Small manufacturers
usually cannot do that.
We know what it does to our workers--bad tax law, bad trade law, bad
currency policy. This bill is a modest measure. It is not as sweeping
as I would like to do. But it is a modest measure that gives our
government the tools to fight back. With different parts authored by
several of my colleagues, this bill came from two other bills we put
together. The bill updates the processes and tools the government would
have at its disposal when it comes to countries that are currency
manipulators, that are in some ways repeat currency manipulators.
Senator Snowe from Maine, a Republican, and I, a Democrat, have
worked on a part that would immediately designate unfair subsidies as
an unfair trade practice. That means jobs for a number of industries:
coated paper in southwest Ohio, tires in Finley, OH, aluminum
extrusion, tubular steel in northeast Ohio. It means more American
manufacturers, from autos to clean energy, can petition the government
against unfair subsidies from importing countries.
That measure is combined with comprehensive measures to reform the
structural deficiencies in our government's approach to combating
currency manipulation. That part of the bill was spearheaded by
Senators Schumer and Graham. It would improve oversight of currency
exchange rates--and I would add Senator Stabenow was involved in that.
It would improve oversight of currency exchange rates. It would
ensure that the Treasury Department properly identifies countries that
undervalue their currency. Under the Omnibus Trade Act of 1988, the
Treasury Department is required to formally identify countries that
manipulate their currency for the purpose of gaining an unfair
competitive trade advantage. In recent years, Treasury has found that
certain country's currencies were undervalued. It was pretty clear and
pretty obvious.
[[Page S6082]]
Reputable economists from the Reagan administration, from the Carter
administration, for years respectable economists were saying these
currencies were undervalued 25 percent, 35 percent, some have said as
high as 50 percent. It was pretty hard for the Treasury Department to
say anything other than these countries' currencies were undervalued.
However, based on the interpretation of the law's legal standard for
a finding of manipulation, the finding of the word ``manipulation,''
Treasury has refused and continues to cite such countries as currency
manipulators.
Our legislation is bipartisan. As I said, five Republicans, five
Democrats are the primary sponsors. It got 79 votes. Three Democrats
voted against moving the bill forward yesterday; 16 Republicans voted
against it. So it has broad bipartisan support.
But what is amazing is the President of the United States, in either
party--President Bush was negligent in finding of manipulation.
President Obama has been negligent in finding manipulation. I will give
some credit to President Obama in his move, in some cases, of actually
doing real enforcement of trade rules and trade laws. It has turned
immediately into job growth in the Mahoning Valley, a new steel mill,
in Finley with tires, in southwest Ohio with paper. But the President
and the Treasury Department have just neglected to do their duty; that
is, interpreting and saying China has manipulated currency.
The biannual release of this statutorily required report to Congress
is almost a Washington charade. Last year, Secretary Geithner even
announced he would delay the report's release. I care less about the
exact timing of this report than I do the administration's willingness
to be open with Congress and the American people about what it is doing
and why it is doing it. But here is why it is important.
Some argue the Commerce Department already has the authority to treat
currency manipulation as an export subsidy and apply countervailing
duties. But the Commerce Department has tended to also kick these
decisions down the road, duck the issue of currency manipulation when
it investigates other subsidies. The bill puts an end to that
bureaucratic end-around.
I told a story earlier today on the Senate floor. I would like to
repeat it, briefly. A trade lawyer representing a southwest Ohio paper
company told me China did not even have a coated paper industry, the
glossy paper magazines are typically printed on--did not even have that
technology until a decade or so ago.
When they started those companies in China, they bought their wood
pulp in Brazil, they shipped it to China, they milled it in China, and
they sold it back here--at the high cost of transporting something as
heavy as paper, as bulky as paper, for the price of paper; it is a
pretty expensive move to ship it from Brazil to China to the United
States. The cost of labor is only about 10 percent of the production of
paper. Yet China has found a way to underprice Ohio paper and
underprice paper made in other parts of the country.
It is pretty clear that is, in part, because they get a 25-, 30-, 35-
, 40-percent basically add-on benefit for their price because of
currency manipulation. That is why, in part, they are being able to do
that. They are probably subsidizing their water, their energy and their
land and their capital also, so that they can underprice us. That is
why this is so serious.
Ohio workers have lost jobs because China has gamed the currency
system. That is all we should need to know. American companies have
folded, have gone out of business, because China has cheated on its
trade policies, not following the rule of law in the World Trade
Organization. That should be enough to get 100 votes in this body.
It got us 79 yesterday. Our bill makes it clear that countervailing
duties can be applied when imported goods benefit from currency
manipulation as an export subsidy.
The bill would establish new criteria to identify countries
misaligning currency--and trigger tougher consequences for those who
engage in such unfair trade practices.
We can no longer accept China and other countries doing whatever it
takes to make their exports cheaper. We can no longer accept that China
continues to mount a massive trade surplus in the United States.
It is time to enforce the trade laws, and it is time the WTO enforces
its rules.
Critics claim this bill would ignite a trade war with China. Frankly,
they declared a trade war at least one decade ago. If it is not a trade
war, critics assert this bill is not compliant with our World Trade
Organization obligations.
I have listened to many multinational companies argue our bill will
provoke retaliation by China. My question to these detractors is, How
can China impose retaliation against something that is, in fact, WTO
legal? But since receiving PNTR status and the benefits of WTO
membership, China has taken money from American consumers and investors
without fully opening its markets to American businesses and workers.
The results are record trade deficits and millions of lost jobs in
Ohio and across the United States.
These arguments come from the same proponents of giving China PNTR
status and WTO membership, so China would adhere to a rules-based
trading system--and they predicted and promised in 2000, when it
passed, that China would adhere to a rules-based trading system. They
have not been. People care about our exports to China, as do I.
Remember, currency undervaluation makes exports harder to sell also.
Yes, our exports have grown in China. But while U.S. exports to China
have increased to China, they have not come close to balancing imports
from China. Imports from China have grown faster--in fact, about three
times as many as we export to China.
Look at our trade deficit with China versus the rest of the world. In
2000, China represented 26 percent of our total trade deficit. Last
year, it was just over 70 percent. In the space of 10 years, look how
this changed. That is the whole story.
Currency is a big factor that cannot be denied. While many
multinational companies don't say it, I think it is clear that even the
most ardent proponents of China PNTR are feeling a bit of buyer's
remorse because of China's aggressive protectionism.
Others, in criticizing this bill, will say there is nothing we can do
to bring back the jobs we have lost--that Americans don't want to work
at those jobs anymore anyway. That is a pretty naive view of American
manufacturing. My State is No. 3 in manufacturing. California, which
has three times the population, and Texas make more than we do.
If we don't act, we are not just talking about jobs in textiles or
steel or tires, which are important; we are talking about jobs in clean
energy, semiconductors, and auto supplies.
A trade war? WTO compliance? Retaliation? We welcome this debate. I
want colleagues to come to the floor--some of the 19 who opposed moving
this bill forward, when they say China will start a trade war and talk
about WTO compliance and retaliation. The fact is China has been
playing that trade war for 10 years.
The American people have been patient as the administration continues
a strategy of talk without action. But our patience is up, as more U.S.
businesses are undercut and more U.S. jobs are eliminated.
This bill is about economic competitiveness, where everyone is
competing in the market by the same set of rules.
I have been to maybe 150 manufacturing plants in my State in the last
3, 4 years. I know American businesses can compete and American workers
can compete. Let's make the playing field level, and S. 1619 will help
us do that.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Michigan is recognized.
Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, first, I commend the Senator from Ohio for
his leadership on this bill. This has been a long time in coming. It is
a long battle that is being fought over Chinese unfair trade practices.
One of the most significant and damaging unfair trade practices is the
manipulation of currency by the Chinese. Senator Brown is taking the
lead in getting this finally rectified. I commend him for it. I know
the Presiding Officer, the Senator from Pennsylvania, is also a real
fighter in this area, trying to correct the unfairness that has been
allowed to exist
[[Page S6083]]
when the Chinese currency is manipulated. Senator Casey, I believe, has
been a leader and is an original cosponsor. I am proud to be a
cosponsor of the bill.
I have long supported the effort to take action against unfair
currency manipulation by our trading partners. I think for at least the
last 8 years we have had bills that have been introduced to address the
issue of unfair currency manipulation. This is an unfair trade practice
that contributes to large U.S. trade deficits and to job loss.
The reality is that when American companies do business in the global
marketplace, they are not competing against companies overseas; they
are competing against foreign governments that support those companies.
That is especially true with foreign governments such as China and, in
the past, Japan and other countries that manipulate the value of their
currency to keep its value artificially low. Currency manipulation
makes Chinese exports unfairly cheap and U.S. products more expensive
in China, displacing U.S. production and jobs. This is nothing short,
as Senator Brown has said, of a Chinese Government subsidy, and we
should be fighting against it--hard.
Trade creates new jobs when we export. Trade results in the loss of
jobs when imports replace goods that were once produced here. When
trade deficits rise, we are losing jobs to imports. The reality is, we
have been running massive, unsustainable trade deficits with China.
Just in the first 7 months of this year, we had a trade deficit of more
than $160 billion with China. That is four times larger than our
deficit with any other trading partner. Last year, we exported $92
billion of goods to China, and we imported an astounding $365 billion
from China. So there is a growing trade surplus, as illustrated by the
charts Senator Brown has presented to us.
China's growing trade surplus with the United States and the rest of
the world has been fueled by massive currency manipulation, subsidies,
and other unfair trade practices. Estimates are, the Chinese currency
is undervalued by up to 40 percent, which makes U.S. goods that much
more expensive for Chinese consumers and makes Chinese goods
artificially cheap in the United States and around the world. As a
result, U.S. imports from China have increased, and U.S. exports to
China have been suppressed.
Senator Brown has gone through some of the numbers, and I will repeat
them because I think it is important that every American focus on these
numbers and the growth of this trade deficit with China.
In 2001, our trade deficit with China was $84 billion. It grew to
$278 billion in 2010. According to an Economic Policy Institute study,
released in September, this deficit resulted in the loss or
displacement of nearly 2.8 million U.S. jobs over that period. The
report blamed part of our deficit with China on their manipulation of
its currency, and it is simply long overdue that we enact legislation
to end that unfair advantage because the tools we have to combat the
problem have been, so far, unequal to the task.
The International Monetary Fund has what it calls articles of
agreement. Those articles prohibit countries from manipulating their
currency for the purpose of gaining unfair trade advantage. But the
words are hollow because the IMF has no means to enforce that
prohibition.
Our current laws give the administration, on paper, the power to act
to combat currency manipulation. But those laws are easily bypassed and
too easily ignored. Both Republican and Democratic administrations have
failed to take action. The Treasury Department is required to issue a
semiannual report on international economic and exchange rate policies,
in which it could conclude--as almost every independent observer
concludes--that China is manipulating its currency. To date, the
Treasury Department has never made such a finding since the 1988 Trade
Act mandated the report. Instead, what it does--the Treasury
Department--is hint, suggests, and sometimes threatens, but it doesn't
act.
A couple examples. The Bush administration's 2006 exchange rate
report said the following:
China needs to move quickly to introduce exchange rate
flexibility at a far faster pace than it has done to date.
Given our strong disappointment [5 years ago] and the
importance of China to the world economy, the Treasury
Department will closely monitor China's progress in
implementing its economic rebalancing strategy, remain fully
engaged at every opportunity with China, and continue
actively and frankly to press China to quicken the pace of
renminbi flexibility.
That was the Bush administration 6 years ago. In May of 2011, under
the Obama administration, here is what the exchange rate report states:
Treasury's view, however, is that progress thus far is
insufficient and that more rapid progress is needed. Treasury
will continue to closely monitor--
Those were the same words used 5 years ago. Maybe they took this from
the computer and moved it from 2006 to 2011.
the pace of appreciation of the renminbi by China. It is a
high priority for Treasury--
Really? That is good news. The trouble is, the facts don't support
the statement.
working through the G-20, the IMF, and through direct
bilateral discussions to encourage policies that will produce
greater exchange rate flexibility.
The failure of administration after administration to do more than
closely monitor rather than take action is why Congress must act to
pass legislation to require action against foreign countries that are
unfairly manipulating their currency.
So the bill before us, S. 1619, the Currency Exchange Rate Oversight
Act, which is a bipartisan bill, combines several earlier currency
manipulation bills. It clarifies that U.S. countervailing duty laws can
address currency undervaluation, giving American companies and
manufacturers stronger tools to fight back against these unfair trade
practices. It would also replace the weak and flawed currency
provisions in current law with a new framework, based on objective
criteria that will require Treasury to identify misaligned currencies
and require action by the administration if countries fail to correct
the misalignment.
Under this bill, the administration would be required to take
specific action if a country with a priority currency designation does
not adopt policies to eliminate the misalignment within specified
periods of time. For instance, if no policies are adopted after 90
days, the legislation directs the administration to, among other
things, prohibit Federal procurement of goods and services from the
designated country, unless that country is a member of the WTO
Agreement on Government Procurement, of which China is not. After 360
days of failure to adopt appropriate policies, the USTR--the Trade
Representative--is required to request a dispute settlement in the WTO
with the government responsible for the misaligned currency.
Congress is on record in support of fighting currency manipulation.
In 2007, a majority of Senators went on record supporting a currency
manipulation bill that was brought up as an amendment to a State
Department reauthorization bill. That bill would have imposed tariffs
on Chinese imports to compensate for currency manipulation by China.
But it was withdrawn by its sponsors in exchange for a promise to
develop and vote on a WTO-compliant bill. The pending bill is a WTO-
compliant bill. Last Congress, the House of Representatives passed a
bill, H.R. 2378, the Currency Reform For Fair Trade Act. That narrower
currency manipulation bill made it clear that the Department of
Commerce is to fight the illegal subsidization of foreign currencies by
using U.S. countervailing duty laws. Unfortunately, the Senate ran out
of time at the end of the session and we did not take up the bill.
So the bill before us, S. 1619, will allow us to deal with any
country that is found to be manipulating its currency, not just China,
which is at the moment the worst offender. In the 1990s and early
2000s, Japan manipulated its currency, and this was a major problem for
our manufacturers and put them at an unfair competitive disadvantage
vis-a-vis Japanese manufacturers. For instance, when the Japanese
Government was intervening in currency markets to hold the yen at 116
yen to the dollar, that translated into an $8,000 subsidy for every
large vehicle imported into the United States from Japan. The market
share
[[Page S6084]]
gained by Japanese auto manufacturers was to a significant degree the
result of the currency manipulation undertaken by the Japanese
Government on behalf of its exporters. Because today the Japanese yen
is at historic highs, Japanese currency is not an immediate concern.
This could change at any time because Japan has recently indicated it
is willing to intervene again in currency markets.
So, Mr. President, with both Chambers now on record supporting
currency manipulation legislation, there is no reason we should not
pass this legislation quickly and send it to the President for his
signature. I hope our colleagues will support this bipartisan
legislation because it will finally--finally, long overdue, years too
late--address the very problematic and costly practice of our trade
competitors who manipulate their currencies to create jobs in their
countries at the expense of jobs here in the United States.
I again thank Senator Brown of Ohio for his great work on this bill.
I know he and the Presiding Officer, Senator Casey, and others,
including my colleague from Michigan, have been working hard on this
bill, and hopefully in the next couple of days it will come to a
fruitful conclusion.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Ohio.
Mr. BROWN of Ohio. Mr. President, I thank Senator Levin. There is no
better team in any State in the country than Senator Levin and Senator
Stabenow. With all the troubles they have had in that State with
manufacturing, as has my State, they are always on the right side of
these issues and advocating for local companies, especially small
companies that feed into the auto supply chain, and for the workers of
those companies. So I am appreciative of his leadership for so many
years.
Mr. President, I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. WHITEHOUSE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. WHITEHOUSE. Mr. President, I rise today to speak in support of
the Currency Exchange Rate Oversight Reform Act of 2011, and I would
note the presence on the floor of one of its principal sponsors,
Senator Sherrod Brown of Ohio, whom I have been very pleased to work
with on this legislation.
I am proud to be one of the original cosponsors of this bill, an
important piece of bipartisan legislation that will help protect
American workers from the trade-distorting effects of currency
manipulation. In particular, this legislation will allow us to fight
back against policies China has used to gain an unfair advantage over
American manufacturers.
Our American trade deficit with China rose from $83 billion in 2001--
the year China joined the World Trade Organization--to $273 billion in
2010. That trend is discouraging enough on its own, but it is more
troubling to consider that the growing trade deficit ultimately
represents goods no longer made in the United States by U.S. workers.
In fact, the Economic Policy Institute estimates that the trade deficit
with China has cost 2.8 million American jobs over the past decade,
including nearly 12,000 jobs in my home State of Rhode Island.
With so many families still struggling with unemployment in the wake
of the recession, it is important that we examine just how we came to
lose so many jobs to a single country and respond accordingly. It would
be one thing if the answer was that China's workers are just more
talented, their products are of higher quality, and they have simply
bested us in the open market. But that is not the case. The evidence
suggests another explanation: that China is gaming the international
system.
First, China provides subsidies to critical industries, which likely
violates World Trade Organization rules and gives Chinese companies an
unfair competitive advantage over American manufacturers.
Second, by restricting exports of their raw materials, China drives
up the cost of making products here in the United States.
Third, by turning a blind eye to or even facilitating the rampant
theft of American intellectual property, China benefits from what may
be the largest illicit transfer of wealth in history.
Finally, of course, China appears to be intentionally manipulating
the value of its currency. Indeed, through controlled purchases of
massive amounts of U.S. currency, the Chinese central bank has made the
value of its currency--the yuan--artificially cheap relative to the
U.S. dollar. Economists estimate the yuan is currently undervalued by
as much as 28 percent against our dollar. The depressed value makes it
28 percent cheaper to buy goods from China than from the United States
and it makes U.S. goods correspondingly more expensive. It is
essentially a subsidy for Chinese products and a tax on U.S. products.
This is much more than a problem of abstract economic theory. The
consequences of currency manipulation are deeply felt in households in
Rhode Island and across the country. In the Presiding Officer's home
State of Pennsylvania, in the floor manager's home State of Ohio, and
all across the United States, it is felt by families who for
generations have contributed to our growth as a nation by going to work
every day and building things, from cars and boats to toys and
electronics. These workers helped define our American character, from
the start of the industrial revolution at Slater Mill on the banks of
Rhode Island's Blackstone River through the first decade of the 21st
century. But they have watched in recent years as job after job has
been lost to China.
This unfair competition needs to stop. The advantage the undervalued
currency gives to Chinese companies has put American manufacturers out
of business and middle-class Americans out of work.
The Wall Street Journal reported last week on a study that measured
the impact of unbalanced trade with China on communities across the
country. The research shows that areas with industries exposed to
Chinese import competition have higher unemployment rates and lower
wages, and the people in these areas are forced to rely more heavily on
government safety net programs.
That study ranked the Greater Providence, RI, area second among
regions exposed to competition from China. This comes as no surprise to
Rhode Islanders.
Rhode Island was once a world leader in textiles and jewelry
manufacturing. But these industries have been hit hard by a flood of
cheap imports from China, greatly straining our State's economy. If we
regained the nearly 12,000 jobs estimated to have been lost to China
over the past decade, our unemployment rate in Rhode Island would drop
by two full percentage points.
As I travel around Rhode Island, I have heard time and time again
from workers and business owners about the costs of Chinese currency
manipulation.
George Shuster is the CEO of Cranston Print Works, a textile
manufacturer that traces its roots in Rhode Island back to 1807. He
told me:
We know first-hand the impact that China's disruptive
policies have had as we have seen factory after factory close
their doors around us. Addressing China's manipulation of its
currency would be a good first step to bringing our trade
policy to where it needs to be to help get American
manufacturers moving in the right direction again.
Leslie Taito is the CEO of the nonprofit Rhode Island Manufacturing
Extension Service. She has worked with a diverse set of manufacturers
across the State to help them increase their efficiency and become more
competitive. She told me this:
U.S. manufacturers are resourceful, agile, and fully
capable to meet national and international demand. Currency
manipulation creates an uneven playing field that has cost
the United States countless jobs and has dramatically
increased our trade deficit. I equate it to telling a boxer
to go into the ring with one hand tied behind his back and
asking him to come out the victor. Manufacturers in this
country aren't asking for special consideration, they just
want it to be fair.
Mr. President, this is why I made addressing currency manipulation a
central part of my ``Making It in Rhode Island'' manufacturing agenda,
and why I was one of the original cosponsors of
[[Page S6085]]
the legislation that is before the Senate today.
The Currency Exchange Rate Oversight Reform Act of 2011 will
strengthen the tools that we have at our disposal to counter the
actions of countries such as China that choose to manipulate their
currency rates. This legislation will first improve the oversight of
exchange rates and allow us to identify currencies that are misaligned.
For countries found to manipulate their currency values or that fail to
correct a misalignment, this law will trigger tough consequences. Our
trade enforcement agencies will gain clear authority to eliminate the
advantage created by currency manipulation by imposing tariffs on
products imported from offending countries. This should send a clear
message to China, or any currency manipulator, that if they abuse the
currency markets, they will not benefit.
Simply put, this legislation will help level the playing field for
American companies. Economists have predicted that a fair market for
our exports would reduce our annual trade deficit by between $100
billion and $200 billion. The resulting increase in production would
add over one-quarter of $1 trillion to our GDP and create up to 2.25
million American jobs.
Are the Chinese squawking about this? Are the big multinational
corporations who have no allegiance to any flag or nation squawking
about this? Yes. Of course, they are. America has for too long been
taken advantage of, allowing the wiles of others to erode our wealth.
The winners at a rigged game will always object when the other party
gets wise to the fact that the game is rigged and begin to do something
about it.
But if we are to solve the problem of China's currency manipulation
and stand up for American companies, American manufacturers, and
American workers, we should pass this legislation.
I applaud my colleagues from both sides of the aisle for their work
on this bill, and I commend in particular Senator Sherrod Brown of Ohio
who is here on the Senate floor managing the bill right now.
I yield the floor.
Ms. COLLINS. Mr. President, with unemployment stuck at 9.1 percent,
and consumer confidence plummeting, we must take action now to help put
Americans back to work.
Our Nation's job creators have been telling us for some time that the
lack of jobs is largely due to a climate of uncertainty, most notably
the uncertainty and cost created by new Federal regulations.
America needs a ``time-out'' from regulations that discourage job
creation and hurt our economy. If a proposed rule would have an adverse
impact on jobs, the economy, or America's international
competitiveness, it should not go into effect.
Today, I am filing an amendment to provide a 1-year moratorium on
final rules that could have an adverse effect on the economy. The
amendment is based on S. 1538, The Regulatory Time-Out Act, which I
introduced last month with 16 of my colleagues. The timeout would cover
major rules costing more than $100 million per year, and other rules
that have been considered ``significant'' under Executive orders going
back to President Clinton and followed by President George W. Bush and
President Obama.
The point of my amendment is to provide job creators with a sensible
breather from burdensome new regulations. This would give businesses
time to get back on their feet, create the jobs that Americans so
desperately need, and enhance the global competitiveness of American
workers.
This moratorium would also provide us with the time we need to review
and improve the regulatory process. Earlier this year, I proposed the
CURB Act, which stands for clearing unnecessary regulatory burdens,
which would reform the regulatory process in several important ways.
Many of our colleagues have also introduced regulatory reform
proposals, and the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee
has already held three hearings on the topic this year. I expect this
issue will be a priority for our committee this fall.
In sports, a ``time-out'' gives athletes a chance to catch their
breaths. American workers and businesses are the athletes in a global
competition that we must win. Our workers need policies that will get
them off the sidelines and back on the job. Our economy needs a time-
out from excessive and costly regulations. My amendment will provide
this needed time-out. I am pleased that Senators Blunt, Coats, Coburn,
Enzi, Hutchison, and Thune have joined me in offering this amendment,
and I urge my colleagues to support it.
Mr. President, I rise today to speak in favor of the Currency
Exchange Rate Oversight Reform Act, which I was pleased to join with
Senators Brown of Ohio, Schumer, Graham, Snowe, and others in
introducing. This legislation will ensure that the U.S. government
finally gets tough with countries, like China, that manipulate their
currency to gain an unfair trade advantage.
Maine's manufacturers and their employees can compete with the best
in the world, but not when the competition is gaming the system to get
a leg up. Time and time again, I hear from Maine manufacturers whose
efforts to compete successfully in the global economy simply cannot
overcome the practices of illegal pricing and subsidies of countries
such as China. The results of these unfair practices are lost jobs,
shuttered factories, and decimated economies.
A recent study by the Economic Policy Institute estimates that
between 2001 and 2008, the U.S. trade deficit with China eliminated or
displaced 2.8 million American jobs, including 9,500 jobs in the State
of Maine. China's policy of intervening in currency markets to limit
the appreciation of its currency against the dollar has played a major
role in driving this deficit by making Chinese exports cheaper and
imports more expensive.
The bill that we are now considering is an important step toward
holding accountable countries, such as China, that manipulate their
currency for the purpose of gaining an unfair trade advantage. I thank
the leader for bringing this bill to the floor, and I urge my
colleagues to support this legislation.
Cloture Motion
Mr. REID. Mr. President, I have a cloture motion at the desk.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Bennet). The cloture motion having been
presented under rule XXII, the Chair directs the clerk to read the
motion.
The legislative clerk read as follows:
Cloture Motion
We, the undersigned Senators, in accordance with the
provisions of rule XXII of the Standing Rules of the Senate,
hereby move to bring to a close debate on S. 1619, a bill to
provide for identification of misaligned currency, require
action to correct the misalignment, and for other purposes.
Harry Reid, Sherrod Brown, Charles E. Schumer, Al
Franken, Jeanne Shaheen, Kay R. Hagan, Robert P. Casey,
Jr., Richard J. Durbin, Michael F. Bennet, Richard
Blumenthal, Carl Levin, Kent Conrad, Jim Webb, Benjamin
L. Cardin, Sheldon Whitehouse, Tom Harkin, Daniel K.
Inouye.
Mr. REID. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the mandatory
quorum under rule XXII be waived.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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