[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 193 (Thursday, December 15, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S8621-S8622]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
PAYROLL TAX CUT EXTENSION
Mr. CASEY. Mr. President, I rise this morning to talk about an issue
that the American people expect us to take action on, and that is to
provide another extension of the payroll tax cut we put into place in
2010.
I want to provide a little bit of background by way of recent
history. We started this debate a number of weeks ago when I proposed
legislation which would do the following--this is a brief summary. But
here is what I proposed: that we would not only continue the payroll
tax cut for workers, but that we would enlarge it, make it a bigger
cut. So instead of having the payroll tax cut for employees across the
country that would amount to $1,000, as we did last year--that was the
right thing to do last year as part of the larger bill--I thought we
should go further and cut the payroll tax in half for workers across
America.
What we are talking about here is 160 million American workers. This
is not some small matter. This is a major issue for the American people
and for those 160 million families in America. That is what I proposed
on the employee side; instead of cutting it to the level we did last
year, we cut it even more--cut it in half.
Then I added to that a provision for business so that you would have
businesses across the United States, 98 percent of them, also get their
payroll taxes cut in half as well. So you have employees and employers
getting a cut of their payroll tax obligations in half. I added a third
element, which would be a credit, so that if you are a business and you
add to your payroll, meaning you hire someone, you increase wages, you
somehow increase your payroll, you could get not just a cut in your
payroll tax as applies to those new employees or wages, you would have
a full cut. In other words, you would pay zero, zero payroll tax if you
added to your bottom line.
What you have here is three elements in legislation that would not
only help 160 million workers but would help most of the businesses in
America. I put into the legislation a provision that says if we are
going to do all of this, we need to pay for it. We had a full series of
ways to pay for it. One of those was, of course, the provision of the
surtax on individuals with incomes above--the key word is ``above''--$1
million. So if you are making $1 million, that entire million dollars
was tax free; not a dime of surtax until you went above it. We had it
at 2.2 percent. We had a vote on it. It was rejected by the other side.
I said: Well, okay, let's come together. We will work with the other
side, our leadership, and take into consideration some of the concerns
the other side raised, trying to be reasonable, trying to compromise
and come together.
What we did is we reduced the surtax substantially to 1.9 percent, a
big cut, a big reduction in the level of the surtax. As I said, I
wanted to have a payroll tax cut for businesses across America. The
other side did not want that, for whatever reason. The other side did
not want to cut payroll taxes for business. I do not understand that,
but that is what they wanted. They wanted that out of the bill. So that
was out of the bill. The surtax was reduced. We are at the point where
we are talking mostly about expanding and extending--I should say
extending first, extending and hopefully expanding the payroll tax cut
that we put in place last year for workers, 160 million workers, and as
we cut it in half, $1,500 in the take-home pay of workers, $1,500 in
your pocket, so you would not have, absent this action, as last year,
$1,000 dollars in your pocket in take-home pay, because of the action
we took last year.
Here we are now, all of these days later, several weeks now of
debating this issue. For whatever reason, the other side does not want
to have a vote on a measure the House passed. I do not understand that.
I realize the votes are not there, but I think it is very important
that we move forward and come to an agreement on a very fundamental
issue for the American people.
They know, as well as everyone here knows, this is not in dispute, it
is a fact, that if we pass a payroll tax cut for 160 million Americans,
the impact on the economy will be seismic, substantial--you can pick
your word--it will have a huge positive impact on our economy.
The corollary to that is if we do not do this, it will have a very
adverse, negative impact on gross domestic product and on jobs. So if
you want to reduce the number of jobs created in America in 2012--I do
not know anyone who wants to do that, but if that is what you want to
do, not taking action is a way to do that.
We hear phrases in Washington all of the time: Job killer. Not
passing a payroll tax cut extension for 160 million Americans is a job
killer, without a doubt.
Anyone who is credible in this town knows that. This is something the
American people want us to do. They are tired of the finger-pointing
and whining and the politics of Washington. They want us to get this
done. We should get it done--if we are doing the right thing--today or
tomorrow, but we have some people who are playing games.
I hope our friends on the other side of the aisle, who talk a lot
about tax cuts and a lot about helping folks through this recession,
will vote with us to cut the payroll tax and end this long debate that
doesn't make much sense. We have a lot of other issues to debate, but
this should not be one of them because we have been working on this for
weeks.
The American people understand what this is about. This is about
take-home pay. This isn't a complicated issue. We are either going to
put more money in their pockets or we are not. It is very simple. We
believe, on this side of the aisle--and I think the overwhelming
majority of Americans believe this--that if workers have more take-home
pay in their pockets, the impact on the economy will be very positive.
[[Page S8622]]
We had Mark Zandi do some analysis. He is a great economist who has
provided data and information for people on both sides of the aisle for
a long time. He is a very credible, capable economist. Our staff asked
him to look at the impact just on Pennsylvania--just one State but a
big State, and I think it is reflective of the country in a lot of
ways. The basic analysis was, if we don't pass the payroll tax cut for
workers, what happens in Pennsylvania? The impact in 2012 would be a
loss of just shy of 20,000 jobs, roughly 19,500 jobs. This is in a
State where we need to create a lot more jobs. But we know that in
2011--the year is not over--the most recent number of jobs added in
Pennsylvania in the last year was over 50,000. I believe we can come to
a number like that in 2012.
If we don't pass the payroll tax cut for those 160 million workers,
in a State such as Pennsylvania the effect is that we lose 20,000 jobs.
You can do the math and extrapolate from that to indicate what would
happen to the country. So in a State where we had a net gain of more
than 50,000 jobs last year, we are talking about not putting in place a
tax cut policy, and that would cut that job gain a little less than
half. So instead of creating 50,000 jobs, you would create 40 percent
less. That doesn't make any sense under anyone's analysis about what we
should be doing.
It is critically important that we take steps in the next few days--I
hope in the next few hours--to finally pass a payroll tax cut and to
also make sure we don't harm the economy as well by failing to take
action on unemployment insurance. Again, unemployment insurance is not
just for that worker and his or her family to get back on their feet
after they lost their job through no fault of their own, it also has a
positive impact on the economy. You spend a buck on unemployment
insurance, and you get back almost two bucks--$1.90. Whether it is
$1.50 or $1.90, we know that if you spend a dollar, all of us get in
return something much more substantial than that dollar we put in.
We need to do both of these things, take both of these actions for
the larger economy. This isn't about one group benefiting and another
group not. Both of these actions--reducing the payroll tax for workers
and unemployment insurance--will have a substantial impact on
everybody. It will help the economy for the American people.
In the payroll tax cut, there is a particular significant group of
Americans who would be most positively impacted; that is, those 160
million American workers. I believe most folks out there who are in the
holiday shopping season--maybe they are finished shopping or maybe they
are still making purchases--would like the peace of mind to know they
can spend a little extra for that gift for a loved one, and maybe they
can have a little more peace of mind knowing that the economy is still
in difficult shape but that their own lives--and so many people are
leading lives of struggle and sacrifice and anxiety about the future.
But this is one step we can take--passing the payroll tax cut--that
would give them some peace of mind that moving into 2012 they will have
more dollars in their pockets. I hope it will be $1,500, but at least
we should do what we did last year and make sure those 160 million
workers in America have as much as $1,000, on average, in their
pockets. That would be good for that worker and his or her family, the
community, and all of us because it would help kick-start, jump-start
economic growth and job creation when we badly need that in the midst
of a still very difficult recession.
Mr. President, we are going to keep on this, keep pushing, and keep
making sure the American people know what is at stake. For those 160
million Americans who are waiting for us to take action, as well as
what is at stake for the larger economy, if we do this--pass the
payroll tax cut--and if we do the right thing on extending unemployment
insurance, we can move into 2012 with some confidence, while being
aware it is still difficult, that the economy will grow a little more,
jobs will be created at a higher rate, and we can have some confidence
that we can end 2012 with a stronger economy than we had at the end of
this year.
I hope our friends will come across the aisle, so to speak, and work
with us to get this done because the American people are tired of the
politics and the fighting. They want us to come together on a new
payroll tax cut for 2012. We can do it, they support it, and we should
get this done.
I yield the floor and suggest 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. DURBIN. Mr. 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.
____________________