[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 101 (Thursday, June 23, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4543-S4545]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
ECONOMIC GROWTH
Mr. SULLIVAN. Mr. President, I have been on the floor quite a bit in
the past several months talking about a topic I think the vast majority
of Americans want us to focus on, and that is the economy. That is, in
my opinion, something we don't do enough here, and certainly the
current administration doesn't do enough. They never even seem to want
to talk about the economy, and they do not because the news isn't good.
When they do try to talk about the economy, they typically try to spin
the facts and the bad news into good news. For the most part, as has
become abundantly clear, when they do this, the media tries to
repackage it, put a bow on it, and then the administration sells it
back to the American public. Everything is going great, they tell us,
or to use the language of the President's speechwriter and one of his
chief spin doctors, in a recent New York Times magazine piece, he
stated:
We created an echo chamber. . . . They--
The media--
were saying things that validated what we had given them to
say.
So to put that in simple terms: We tell them our spin, they print it,
and that is good.
Well, with regard to the economy, I don't think many in America are
buying it. And I am glad our Presidential candidates are finally
starting to talk about this issue--economic growth for middle-class
families. Secretary Clinton recently gave a speech on the economy where
she mostly lambasted her opponent. She said that under Mr. Trump, the
U.S. economy would be a disaster. Well, no disrespect to the former
Secretary of State and former Senator, but in case Mrs. Clinton didn't
notice, the economy already is a disaster right now, and we need to fix
it.
I want to talk about that a little bit because it is something you
never hear about from the media, from the administration, even from
this body enough, to be honest, and yet Americans are feeling it all
across the country. Under this administration, we have now had the
worst economic recovery since the Great Depression. The executive
branch may have a reverberating echo chamber, but the American people
know what is going on when it comes to the economy, and it is not a
pretty picture.
Let me provide some examples of the Obama administration's anemic
economy and what it has done to the thing we all believe in--we all
believe in--and that is the American dream.
First, let's talk about our country's gross domestic product. As you
know, the GDP of the United States is really a marker for our country's
health. It is
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basically a marker of American progress. It is a marker of the American
dream. And with regard to the health of the economy, right now it is
not healthy. We have a sick economy.
Last quarter, this economy grew at only 0.8 percent GDP growth. It
essentially didn't grow. To put that in perspective, if you look at one
of the things that have made our Nation great, it is that year after
year, decade after decade, Democratic or Republican administration, we
have always typically grown at traditional levels of American GDP
growth--3 percent, 3.5 percent, 4 percent GDP growth, 5 percent, 6
percent in some eras.
Looking at this chart, which I have brought to the floor many times,
it looks at the Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon, Ford, Carter, Reagan, Bush,
and Clinton administrations. Obviously, there are ups and downs. There
was some really strong growth--Kennedy, Johnson, Reagan, Clinton; 4
percent, 4.5 percent, 5 percent GDP growth. But this red line right
here, this 3 percent, that is at least the number we need to hit, that
everybody thinks we should be hitting. For most administrations, it has
been way above that. In the 8 years now with President Obama, it never
hit once--not once. Never hit 3 percent GDP growth.
That is not what we were promised by this administration when they
put forward their policies, many of which, in the early years of this
administration, were supported by the Congress. Remember the stimulus
package? Remember the Affordable Care Act? These were all things that
were going to stimulate the economy. As a matter of fact, we were
told--and these were numbers from the Obama administration--that by
2010, we would see 3 percent GDP growth, and that by 2011 to 2014, we
would be at 4.1 percent GDP growth. That would have been good. Four
percent is strong. That is what they told us. That is what they
predicted with their policies. We never came close, and now they do not
talk about that. You never hear the President talk about 3 percent, 4
percent. He sure did a lot early on. But their policies drove us in the
other direction.
Now even the Federal Reserve, noting that we don't even hit 2 percent
GDP growth any more, is essentially saying these numbers are not going
to improve. They predicted just a couple of weeks ago that maybe we
will hit 2 percent in the next 2 to 3 years--stagnant growth,
surrendering the American dream. Yet nobody is talking about this.
This is the biggest issue facing our country. As Michael Boskin, a
very well respected Stanford economics professor, stated recently,
``Mr. Obama will likely go down as having the worst economic growth
record of any president since the trough of the Great Depression in
1933.'' That is right here. These are his numbers, by the way, right
here.
So that is one thing, GDP growth. Let's talk about jobs. The American
people are feeling what is happening with regard to jobs. Yes, the
President likes to tout an unemployment rate that is going down. While
that is true, the main reason the unemployment rate is going down is
because the labor force participation rate is crashing. So most of the
unemployment rate declines the President likes to talk about, his
administration likes to talk about, have occurred because people have
stopped looking for work. They have quit. They are done. They are so
discouraged, they have just quit.
Let me give an example. Last month, in May, the jobs report sounded
like a pretty good jobs report. Unemployment went from 5.1 percent down
to 4.7 percent. That normally sounds good. But what really happened?
Only 38,000 jobs were created and almost 700,000 Americans quit looking
for work. They just quit. They were that frustrated. That is how we
have this unemployment rate going down, not because of strong growth or
a strong economy but because the American worker--the greatest
workforce in the world, which built this amazing country--is now
saying: I have had enough. I am so discouraged, I am just going to stop
looking for a job. And that sends the unemployment rate down.
As I mentioned, year after year, the labor force participation rate
has gone down dramatically and--I know this is kind of an economic
term--a little wonky. I think it is really a measure of the optimism or
the hope of the American worker. I like to call it the American worker
hope index, and if you look at where it is right now, we haven't had a
hope index this low since the malaise of the Carter years. As a matter
of fact, the hope index we have right now under President Obama--just
look at that--is cratering. It is the same as it was in 1978.
So, Mr. President, that is the job situation. That is what is
happening with the hope of American workers, but also, just looking at
the straight numbers, in the last 7 years Americans have become poorer.
Under the President--under his administration--real median household
income has gone down by 2.3 percent, from $54,920 to $53,600. That
doesn't seem like a lot, this number, but for decades the trend and
this number, of course, have always been up--always. So the fact that
it is going in the wrong direction is a very bad sign. Essentially,
Americans and their families have become poorer.
The same with home ownership. Look at this number. One of the biggest
indicators of the American dream is home ownership. Again, the number
is going in the wrong direction. Household income and home ownership
are down, causing Americans to increasingly have to rely on government
assistance. We are a proud people. This is not what most Americans want
to be doing. Yet, when we look at the number of Americans on food
stamps, it has almost increased by 40 percent--40 percent--from 33
million Americans to nearly 46 million. These are people who want to
work. These are people who want jobs to care for their families. Yet
that number is soaring.
Finally, I want to talk briefly about the Nation's fiscal outlook. If
we want to talk about a number that is soaring, look at this number:
The national debt of the United States--literally, one of the most
important issues facing our Nation--has essentially doubled since the
President took office. The national debt was $10 trillion. Today it has
exploded to over $19 trillion. No other President in the history of the
United States has racked up so much debt and done so much damage to the
balance sheet of our Nation. Let me give one example.
Our debt now is so high, for the first time in U.S. history, our AAA
credit rating--the full faith and credit of the United States. We have
always had it, ever since there has been a rating, for 70 years. It was
downgraded. A lot of people forget that. It was downgraded.
I look at these hard-working pages and this debt issue. If we don't
get control of it, if the Congress doesn't get control of it, if the
administration doesn't, it is going to be on their backs, our young
people, and that is simply--simply--not fair.
I would like to summarize. The number of people giving up looking for
work in our country has increased dramatically by the millions; wages
for jobs have been stagnant; household incomes--families, essentially--
have become poorer; economic growth is at alltime lows, at least in the
last 70 years; the dream of buying a house is slipping away; and the
national debt has exploded. This is the economy of this administration.
What is still interesting is 7\1/2\ years after they took office--
with their policies, where they promised a 4-percent GDP growth, strong
job growth--they are still looking in the rearview mirror, and when
they are shown some of these numbers, they point fingers at the people
who came before them, after nearly two terms in office. Well, this is
the President's economy. He owns it. He should take responsibility for
it, and he should start talking about it and instituting policies that
start to change this, but we don't hear him or his administration do
that. We don't hear them tout their record. They start to focus on this
echo chamber. Fortunately, others in the public eye are more
forthcoming. We are starting to talk about it more on the Senate floor.
I wish my colleagues on the other side of the aisle would come out and
talk about it a little bit.
Certainly, as I mentioned, former Senator Clinton was talking about
it, and her husband, former President Bill Clinton, has been talking
about the economy. To be honest, President Clinton has actually put his
finger on what is happening. He stated:
Millions and millions and millions and millions of people
look at that pretty picture of [the America economy] Obama
[has] painted
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and they cannot find themselves in it to save their lives.
Former President Clinton also recently said this:
The problem is, 80 percent of the American people are still
living on what they were living on the day before the [2008
financial] crash. And about half the American people, after
you adjust for inflation, are living on what they were living
on the last day I was president 15 years ago.
That is what the matter is. That is former President Clinton. Even
Secretary Clinton has apparently decided it is prudent to step out of
the echo chamber of the administration she used to work for and confirm
to the American people what is happening because when you leave
Washington, DC, you see it, you hear it.
In an interview with the Washington Post on Tuesday, she talked about
how our current economy has failed many in this country. She even
stated:
What people are feeling is that the economy failed them,
their government failed them. You don't have to go just to
coal country to see that. You can go to a lot of parts of
America, where people had good, decent jobs that provided a
good middle class life for them and their kids. That was the
American Dream. That's how we used to define it.
That is a former Secretary of State, former Senator, who is putting
her finger on what is actually happening.
We need to rekindle the American dream. We need to rekindle
traditional levels of American growth. Our economy is sick. The
American worker can't find the great jobs that have sustained him and
her in the past. What this body needs to do is focus more on these
issues. Certainly, what the Obama administration needs to do is level
with the American people about these challenges because besides
protecting the Nation's national security, the No. 1 thing we can be
doing here is focusing on policies that drive economic growth, that
drive true hope, and job creation. That is what we need to be doing
more of in the U.S. Senate.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Sullivan). The Senator from the great
State of Alaska.
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