[Congressional Record Volume 168, Number 24 (Monday, February 7, 2022)]
[Senate]
[Pages S532-S533]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                              THE ECONOMY

  Mr. DURBIN. Madam President, there was another set of numbers that 
was released last Friday that testifies to good news, and America needs 
it. It testifies to the resilience of the American people and the 
American spirit.
  Many economists had braced for a disastrous January jobs report. The 
most optimistic among them predicted that the U.S. economy might grow 
by 150,000 or maybe 250,000 jobs last month. Some warned that it could 
show massive job losses. Here is what we learned:

  Despite the Omicron surge and the global supply chain shortages, U.S. 
employers added 467,000 new jobs last month--467,000. On top of that, 
the Bureau of Labor Statistics shows us the economy added 700,000 more 
jobs in November and December than we initially calculated. All told, 
the U.S. economy has added 6.6 million jobs in the last year--the 
strongest first-year job gain of any President in history.
  When Joe Biden took over the office a little over a year ago, he 
inherited

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one of the weakest and fraught economies in generations.
  At the start of the pandemic, the U.S. unemployment rate spiked to 
14.7 percent. Last February, the Congressional Budget Office forecasted 
that the United States would not see 3.9 percent unemployment for 
another 5 years. The unemployment rate now is actually 4 percent. 
America's economic recovery is breaking records. The United States was 
the first country in the G7 to recover all of its GDP lost by the 
pandemic. Average wages were up 5.7 percent last month from a year ago. 
The increases were not all at the top; workers in the middle and lower 
rungs of the economy earned more too.
  I have to say, as important as that is, we all know that people 
working in this economy are also facing inflation and higher prices. 
Whether it is for gasoline or groceries, they are finding it more 
expensive to meet the basic necessities of life. Although this is good 
news, that is bad news that we have to address and should address on a 
bipartisan basis.
  The progress that we have made was not inevitable; it was a product 
of good old-fashioned American ingenuity. It is also the result of bold 
and decisive economic decisions by the Biden administration.
  The American Rescue Plan, which Congress passed without the support 
of a single Republican Member of Congress--all Democrats all the way--
broke the grip of the pandemic on our economy. We were able to get 
shots in arms, help small businesses stay afloat, and rush emergency 
assistance to people who had lost jobs or had seen their hours cut 
drastically. That emergency help worked in Illinois, and it worked all 
over this country.
  We also passed the bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act. 
Let me remind those who follow, if you are wondering about the 
infrastructure bill passed by the Trump administration, let me put your 
concern to rest. There was no bill. There was no legislation. There was 
no infrastructure plan despite President Trump's repeated promises to 
deliver one. He walked away from the table, and I was in the room when 
he did. He wouldn't even negotiate.
  We have not fixed all of the weaknesses in our economy. The jobless 
rate among Black workers is still twice that of White workers. 
Unemployment among teens and young adults is still too high. Research 
from the National Women's Law Center shows that, while men have 
recouped all job losses since the pandemic started, there are nearly 
1.1 million fewer women in the workforce. Daycare is part of that 
calculation, I might add. If we want to reach our full economic 
potential, we need to help families find affordable, quality daycare, 
and we have to address the issue of inflation nonstop.

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