[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 69 (Thursday, May 8, 2014)]
[House]
[Pages H3985-H3988]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
AMERICAN RESEARCH AND COMPETITIVENESS ACT OF 2014
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Pursuant to clause 1(c) of rule XIX, further
consideration of H.R. 4438 will now resume.
[[Page H3986]]
The Clerk read the title of the bill.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. When proceedings were postponed earlier
today, 28\3/4\ minutes of debate remained on the bill.
The gentleman from Michigan (Mr. Camp) has 19\3/4\ minutes remaining,
and the gentleman from Michigan (Mr. Levin) has 9 minutes remaining.
The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Michigan (Mr. Camp).
Mr. CAMP. I reserve the balance of my time.
Mr. LEVIN. Mr. Speaker, I now yield 2 minutes to the gentleman from
Maryland (Mr. Hoyer), our distinguished whip.
Mr. HOYER. Mr. Speaker, I rise with a great deal of sadness. We are
punting. USA Today said, ``House action on tax extenders forfeits
credibility on deficits and national debt.'' They are right.
The distinguished chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, who is my
friend, offered a real bill on tax reform. The problem with that real
bill was it had tough choices to make. Congratulations to the gentleman
from Michigan (Mr. Camp) for having the courage to suggest those tough
choices.
This vote today requires absolutely no courage at all. It gives the
ice cream and says forget about the spinach. It is the reason that we
have trillions of dollars in debt today on our national debt, because
we didn't pay for the '01 or '03 tax cuts.
Now, Mr. Camp will tell me that I voted for R&D tax cuts six times
that were temporary, that were annual, that were not a permanent change
in the base. That is what the Republicans want to do. That is what they
did in '01 and '03, and that is all inside jargon. And yes, they didn't
waive statutory PAYGO, which we passed, which USA Today says was one of
the reasons we got to balance 4 years in a row. That is why.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The time of the gentleman has expired.
Mr. LEVIN. I yield the gentleman from Maryland an additional 1
minute.
Mr. HOYER. Mr. Speaker, I have 3 minutes to discuss with the American
public why their country is going to be put deeper into debt by passing
this legislation.
It would be good legislation if it were paid for. It was good
legislation when it was included in Mr. Camp's overall tax reform bill.
But it is very bad policy and very bad legislation in this unpaid-for,
discreet form. And, by the way, there is about another $160 billion of
debt to follow.
What a sad day for America. What a sad day for this House. What a sad
day for the Ways and Means Committee. What a sad day for fiscal
responsibility.
Mr. Speaker, I urge my colleagues not to vote for the temporary
political benefit of saying you gave somebody a tax cut, but vote for
fiscal responsibility. Vote to keep on a path of a big deal to solve
the fiscal challenges that confront our country. I urge my colleagues
to vote ``no.''
Mr. CAMP. Mr. Speaker, I yield myself such time as I may consume.
Well, I would just say that the gentleman from Maryland is correct.
He has voted six times to extend the research and development tax
credit without paying for it, for a total of 14 years.
Look, I think it is time we are honest with the American people. If
we are going to extend these policies again and again and again--in
this case, 30 years--and not pay for it, look, we shouldn't have to
raise taxes to keep taxes the same.
So, again, I would urge my colleagues to support this legislation,
and I reserve the balance of my time.
Mr. LEVIN. I now yield 2 minutes to the gentleman from New York (Mr.
Rangel), a distinguished member of our committee, to put it mildly.
(Mr. RANGEL asked and was given permission to revise and extend his
remarks.)
Mr. RANGEL. Mr. Speaker, I am opposed to this bill because I didn't
think it was honest with the American people, and the chairman says he
wants to be honest. I am just surprised that he is responding to this,
because I don't think too many people believe this is on the level.
The Senate has spoken on this issue. This is not going to become law.
It is not Benghazi. It is not affordable care. So I would think that
this has to be something else that we are preparing for in 2014. And I
really don't think that the American people are going to go to sleep
tonight wondering whether or not we take this billion-dollar bill--even
though all of us love the concept of research and development. But so
many people are going to be going to sleep hungry. They haven't got
extended unemployment insurance. They need a variety of affordable
housing. And now we are doing this for 2014. It doesn't fly. It doesn't
get off the ground.
Well, what I am saying to the chairman is that he has such a great
start with the tax reform, something that we could have worked on
together, to pick out one good thing that we have, even though we don't
have money to pay for it, is an ideal thing for Democrats and
Republicans to sit down and wonder, ``How can we make certain that
America stays ahead in research and development?'' but to do this
because we are running out of things to try to embarrass Democrats on
is really not fair to our Nation. I really think our national security
is being impacted because of our inability to work and get something
done.
So I oppose this, as any other thing that is just trying to find
something to embarrass us, but I do hope for 2014 that we find
something, anything--immigration, unemployment compensation--so that
when we do get there there will be a Republican Party.
I really love Democrats. But this used to be the party of Dixiecrats.
Now they left us, and I want to make certain that they don't come back.
Mr. CAMP. I reserve the balance of my time.
Mr. LEVIN. Mr. Speaker, I yield 2 minutes to the gentleman from Texas
(Mr. Doggett), a most distinguished member of our committee.
Mr. DOGGETT. Mr. Speaker, this bill represents only the first of many
installments of hundreds of billions of dollars that the Republicans
plan to finance with more debt, borrowing from the Chinese or whoever
will lend it to us. Surely we don't need any more research this
afternoon to know that such an irresponsible approach is the wrong way
to go.
In January of last year, Republicans came to this floor and they told
us that they had reserved H.R. 1 for a bill that would do it all. It
was going to simplify the Tax Code, it was going to lower the rates,
and it would not add a penny to the debt because it would all be
financed by closing loopholes.
Where is that bill? It is still reserved, and it will be reserved
until the end of this term because the truth of the matter is
Republicans could not stand up to the special interests that like those
loopholes, that like the complexity of the Tax Code, that benefit from
that complexity. They would not stand up to pass a bill that was
fiscally responsible.
Both parties, as the chairman has indicated, have repeatedly
supported temporary extensions, but neither has had the audacity to
come to this floor and say we are going to borrow enough to make it
permanent without closing a single loophole. They are doing exactly the
opposite of what they have repeatedly promised us and the American
people that they would do.
I support a permanent research and development credit to incentivize
research for new products. It has never been a question of whether to
support research, but how to do it and how to pay for it. And if the
only goal is to encourage more job growth, there are ways we can
redesign this credit to get even more growth than it does now.
The Government Accountability Office said the credit in its current
form is a windfall for some corporations, and some multinationals have
used it as a way to get the taxpayer to subsidize research here and
then shift the benefits overseas.
I believe a better research credit on a permanent basis is the best
way to encourage growth, not an irresponsible unpaid tax credit.
Mr. CAMP. Mr. Speaker, at this time, I yield such time as he may
consume to the gentleman from Texas (Mr. Brady), a distinguished member
of the Ways and Means Committee and the chairman of the Joint Economic
Committee.
Mr. BRADY of Texas. I thank the chairman for yielding.
Mr. Speaker, I was touring a hospital in the Rio Grande Valley the
other day, and we were going through the critical care unit, with young
babies 25, 26 weeks old who in past years would, frankly, have never
survived. But
[[Page H3987]]
today, because of medical breakthroughs, they will not only not have a
lifetime of chronic diseases and disabilities, but they will live a
full life because the medical breakthroughs and innovations developed
here in America are giving them a life, frankly, their parents never
hoped for.
I see our veterans coming back from war, some of them with such
terrible injuries, who not only are having their lives restored but,
through these remarkable prosthetics, are living full lives that,
again, wouldn't have been possible in recent years, even, because we
are doing innovation here in America.
Each day, we read of another U.S. company being courted to move those
medical breakthroughs and that research overseas to other countries, to
China, to Europe, to others. We are seeing America lose our edge in
innovation, even though everyone knows--Republicans and Democrats--that
the country that innovates the most will lead the world in economic
growth, period. We know it.
And I look at statements such as this. And I will read this. It is a
direct quote:
I believe it is critical that our tax system provide strong
incentives to help our manufacturing base. One of the most
important tax incentives for the manufacturing sector is the
research and development tax credit. Manufacturers do about
70 percent of the private sector R&D conducted in the United
States. I have long been a strong and persistent voice for
making the R&D credit a permanent part of our Tax Code and
strengthening it so that all companies have a strong
incentive to do R&D here in the United States.
{time} 1845
That wasn't me; that wasn't Chairman Camp. That was our distinguished
ranking member, Sandy Levin.
He is not alone. Democrats and Republicans together long have sought
a permanent R&D tax credit to make America competitive again. Make no
mistake. Today, you have heard people say this really isn't about
supporting innovation, technology, biosciences and medical
breakthroughs; today, it is about fiscal responsibility and pay-fors;
yesterday, it was some other bills we wanted. The truth is that we
can't afford these excuses, and that is what they are.
Today, it is a clear choice between those who will stand for medical
innovation in America, technology innovation in America, and energy
innovation and manufacturing innovation that will create good-paying
jobs and good-paying wages for Americans.
I ask our Democrat colleagues to set aside the politics. We know it
is an election year. Set that aside. Stay consistent with the values
that you have said over and over again that the research and
development tax credit needs to be made permanent, and let's send a
bill to the Senate so that they, too--we can discover and learn whether
they are willing to stand with their past, longtime statements that the
R&D tax credit should be permanent.
Mr. LEVIN. Mr. Speaker, I yield myself the balance of my time.
Mr. Speaker, I support R&D. Mr. Speaker, I support it now. I have
never voted to make it permanent without paying for it. So this bill is
a dangerous dodge.
Mr. Camp, you paid for what you suggested was permanent, and I salute
your being forthright. That isn't what is happening, is not happening
today. So this isn't only fiscally irresponsible. What it does is to
threaten programs that we care about. What was not done with one hand
yesterday, automatic cuts, will be done by the Republicans with the
other. They will use this deficit to cut programs we care about
mentioned earlier: medical research, Head Start, Pell Grants, and other
extenders that we deeply care about.
This bill today is, as I said, a dangerous dodge. We should not be
party to it. We should not be party to it. It is irresponsible, it is
hypocritical, and it is harmful to what we really care about and what
the American people care about.
I urge a ``no'' vote on this bill, and I yield back the balance of my
time.
Mr. CAMP. Mr. Speaker, I yield myself such time as I may consume.
Mr. Speaker, the research and development tax credit has been
extended repeatedly by members of the other side and members of this
side for nearly 30 years, and it has not been paid for in those
extensions.
But what does that really mean? Well, what we have done in America,
which no other country has done, is we have taken a valuable tax policy
like that, something that should be certain and dependable, and made it
temporary. Not only do we make it temporary, we allow it to expire for
a year at a time. So over this 30-year period, employers, innovators,
businesses, and companies have not known whether they can count on this
policy in order to do something really important.
I heard Mr. Brady talk about the medical innovation and how critical
that is to making peoples' lives better. I think of Big Rapids,
Michigan, and Wolverine Worldwide, which makes military footwear and
boots. They are constantly innovating that so that our military
servicemen and -women have the best possible equipment on their feet.
You can imagine the kinds of climates that we find our military in and
how important this is.
But if companies like that don't know whether this tax policy is
dependable, yet we extend it 30 years backwards retroactively and
forward for a year, then we allow it to expire for a year, it
absolutely makes no sense. By allowing it to expire repeatedly, we have
called into question whether this R&D credit is available at all.
I would just say by supporting permanent policies--the reason it is
so important to make this permanent, we can actually promote certainty
for American businesses, and we need to generate certainly greater
economic growth. The reason we are seeing the worst recovery since the
Depression, 0.1 percent economic growth, none of us should be satisfied
with that, and I don't think any of us are. We can generate more growth
by making these things permanent. So we need to wake up to the reality
and start offering some concrete solutions that really strengthen the
economy and help hardworking taxpayers.
Let me just say the nonpartisan Joint Committee on Taxation, which is
our referee on these matters, says that if we make the credit permanent
that actually more research and development will take place, the kind
of innovation that really puts America at the forefront of job creation
and an economy that is strong and vibrant, that up to 10 percent more
research and development will occur. We certainly need more of that,
because that is more jobs, more innovation, and higher wages.
Let me just say that the President of the United States voted to
extend the research and development tax credit unpaid for when he was a
Senator. He signed legislation twice to extend the research and
development tax credit unpaid for. I think 30 years of uncertainty has
actually been a detriment--a detriment to U.S. business employers and
certainly their employees because the jobs they provide are so
dependent on our being at the cutting edge.
Look, this is the 21st century. We can't live in the past as if these
policies don't matter. This is a very competitive world, and most of
our constituents understand the kind of competition that we face. We
need to make this permanent. We need to do it now. Let's do something
positive and good for America, something that we have repeatedly done.
Let's be honest about it.
Since we are going to extend it at some point temporarily another 2
years, let's make this permanent. Let's make this certain. Let's make
this something that our employers can depend on so they can create the
kind of jobs that we haven't seen.
With that, I yield back the balance of my time. Vote ``yes'' on this
legislation.
Ms. ESHOO. Mr. Speaker, I rise today in support of the American
Research and Competitiveness Act of 2014, a bill to simplify and
permanently extend the U.S. research and development (R&D) tax credit.
Over the past thirty years, the R&D tax credit has been a key economic
tool for businesses in my Silicon Valley district and across our
country by directly rewarding business investment in R&D.
At a time of great partisanship in Congress, I think the R&D we speak
of today can be said to be `Republicans and Democrats' because of the
bipartisan support this legislation enjoys. For years the R&D tax
credit has been essential for out-innovating and out-competing the rest
of the world, but now other countries are catching up or already have.
While the U.S.
[[Page H3988]]
was the first nation to offer a tax incentive for research and
development in 1981, according to a study by the Information Technology
& Innovation Foundation (ITIF), we now rank 27th out of 42 countries in
terms of the generosity of the R&D incentives we offer.
Congress needs to do so much more to improve our national economy,
and updating the R&D tax credit is an important policy that will
encourage businesses to invest in new technologies which in turn will
create jobs and shape a better economy in our future.
Nearly six months have passed since the R&D tax credit expired. To
maintain our nation's competitiveness, let's not wait another day to
give businesses the certainty they need to continue innovating and
investing in America's future.
I thank Representatives Kevin Brady and John Larson for their
leadership in bringing this bill to the floor today and I urge my
colleagues to support H.R. 4438.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. All time for debate has expired.
Pursuant to House Resolution 569 and House Resolution 576, the
previous question is ordered on the bill, as amended.
The question is on the engrossment and third reading of the bill.
The bill was ordered to be engrossed and read a third time, and was
read the third time.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Pursuant to clause 1(c) of rule XIX, further
consideration of H.R. 4438 is postponed.
____________________