[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 152 (Tuesday, October 29, 2013)]
[House]
[Pages H6834-H6835]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRADE AND KOREA
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Ohio (Ms. Kaptur) for 5 minutes.
Ms. KAPTUR. Mr. Speaker, Politico recently reported that U.S. Trade
Representative Michael Froman is pressing for another trade bill as
soon as possible. This one is called the Trans-Pacific Partnership
(TPP), to be signed with Asian Pacific countries, about a dozen of
them. But whether it is the Obama administration, the Bush I or Bush II
administration or the Clinton administration, the executive branch
continues to push the same old failed trade model that puts foreign
involvement and multinational interests ahead of America's workers and
America's businesses. In fact, these deals have cost America millions
and millions of jobs as our trade deficit continues to get worse.
This TPP proposal is particularly disturbing as a new trade deal.
Because, if you look at the results of the first Obama administration
trade deal, the Korean deal, you will see the proof is in the pudding
that things didn't get better with our economy, they actually got
worse. We were told with the Korean free trade deal that America would
create 70,000 jobs here at home.
Guess what?
The fact is, in reality, with the Korean free trade deal, America has
lost another 40,000 jobs as a result of that agreement alone. That is
about 4,000
[[Page H6835]]
jobs lost each month because of the Korean free trade deal.
We were promised with the Korean deal that our economy would grow
through increased exports by $10 billion to $11 billion.
Guess what?
In reality, U.S. exports to Korea have actually declined by roughly
$800 million since the agreement took effect. Yes, that is a 20 percent
decline. That translates into lost jobs and lost income.
America was told that if we signed the Korean trade agreement that,
actually, our trade deficit would shrink.
{time} 1030
Well, guess what, the month the Korean trade agreement took effect,
the U.S. trade deficit with Korea was $564 billion. It has nearly
tripled to $1.6 billion, adding to the sea of red trade-deficit ink and
more lost jobs.
We were told that America would actually level the playing field in
the field of automotive trade if we passed the Korean free trade deal.
I didn't vote for it. But guess what? Since the Korean agreement took
effect, U.S. exports of motor vehicles to Korea have gone up monthly
by, guess what, how much--44 cars--44 cars. That is it. At the same
time, guess how many more cars the Koreans are shipping in here per
month--20,000. All told, Korea has imported more than 1.5 million motor
vehicles to the United States since the agreement took effect.
Meanwhile, America has only exported 34,000 cars--only 34,000. That
is a 44 to one advantage on Korea's side. That doesn't sound like an
agreement that is working to me. Why model the new TPP on that
agreement. The Korean deal isn't working.
The sad thing is the American people have been told the same free-
trade agreement lies for the past quarter century. All the lies that
are contained in them have resulted in a sea of red ink that is costing
us jobs. It is no surprise America has amassed a $17 trillion budget
deficit when you have a $9 trillion accumulated trade deficit over the
last 25 years. Too much of our economic powerhouse has been traded
away.
Mr. Speaker, it is time for Congress to stop these bad trade deals.
Focus on creating jobs inside our country. I call on Republican leaders
to sideline the Trans-Pacific Partnership deal and bring up my bill
H.R. 192, the Balancing Trade Act, as a start.
This legislation would require the administration to outline actions
to balance the trade deficit with every single country with which we
have a trade deficit--including Korea--country by country. America can
then again begin to create jobs in this country at a level that the
American people expect--to yield a vibrant economy here at home--and
grow our middle class forward, not backward.
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