[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 157 (2011), Part 1]
[House]
[Page 478]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                        THE GOLDEN RULE OF TRADE

  The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under a previous order of the House, the 
gentlewoman from Ohio (Ms. Kaptur) is recognized for 5 minutes.
  Ms. KAPTUR. Mr. Speaker, before all of the pomp and circumstance of 
tonight's State dinner honoring Chinese President Hu Jintao, a closed-
door meeting took place between President Obama, the Chinese President, 
and the power brokers from some of the largest global corporations that 
seem to create more jobs outside this country than inside it: Steve 
Ballmer of Microsoft; Jeffrey Immelt of General Electric; Jim McNerney 
of Boeing; David Rubenstein of the Carlyle Group; Ellenn Kullman, the 
CEO of DuPont. And many greedy Wall Street bankers showed up: John 
Thornton, the chairman of HSBC Holdings; and Lloyd Blankfein, my gosh, 
the chief executive officer of Goldman Sachs--where have we heard about 
them before?--whose imprudent firms are responsible for the economic 
meltdown that the rest of America is trying to dig out of as we speak 
tonight.
  Too often, these international corporations and megabanks have taken 
America's ingenuity and hard work that were built with so much effort 
and shipped them overseas, destroying American jobs and ballooning our 
half trillion dollar trade deficit.
  China remains a communist country, and it is a command-and-control 
economy described as ``Market Leninism''--not free enterprise. Yes, 
China's people should be able to develop their land and their economy 
and improve their lives. They surely need it. But their growth should 
not come at the expense of American jobs and our businesses and our 
workers.
  The moment has arrived to deal with China as the great economic power 
that it is and proceed on the basis of reciprocity. If a treaty affects 
our companies one way, we'll treat them the same way. If they exclude 
our investments and our imports, we will exclude their investments and 
their imports. We should give them the exact same deal as they give us. 
That is the Golden Rule of trade.
  While we wish China well, we must defend the interests of jobs in our 
country, and even more, the highest political ideals to which we 
aspire. And our highest calling is freedom.
  It is not a coincidence that America's trade deficit with Communist 
China has ballooned since China entered the World Trade Organization in 
2001. The trade deficit for 2010 with China and the United States alone 
stood at $253 billion--a quarter of a trillion dollars.
  Since 2001, jobs in our country in manufacturing decreased by 25 
percent. And according to the U.S. Department of Commerce, for every 
billion dollars of trade deficit we maintain, 5,405 American jobs are 
lost. This means in 2010 alone, over 1,400,000 more jobs were lost in 
our country attributable just to our trade deficit with China. This is 
a major factor in the weakness that our economy is suffering.
  China consistently disregards international trade laws. She 
manipulates her currency, and she does nothing to protect American 
intellectual property. In fact, of all of the products seized at the 
U.S. border for infringement of intellectual property rights in 2009, 
79 percent were from China.
  Communist China's illegal subsidies and no-interest loans to Chinese 
companies have put American firms at a serious competitive 
disadvantage. In fact, there's a new 15-year tax holiday for solar 
companies. And a major firm in Massachusetts just announced it's 
closing its doors and going to China.
  Dumping of products like steel pipes cripple the American steel 
industry. And earlier today, the White House announced China will 
purchase 200 Boeing aircraft. Isn't that convenient. A few airplanes. 
It's great to hear, but positive press releases for one-time purchases 
will do nothing to erase the $253 billion deficit that grows with China 
every year.
  Holding China accountable and creating an environment where Communist 
China's best interest is to follow international trade laws, to protect 
intellectual property rights, to stop illegal subsidies and no-interest 
loans to Chinese companies, and to further work to create a level 
playing field for all is in the hands of the Obama administration, the 
new majority in this House, and our colleagues in the Senate.
  Congress and the administration must stand up most importantly for 
freedom and the rule of law. For American businesses and our workers 
and our economy to prosper, we have to hold Communist China accountable 
to the Golden Rule. And that means reciprocity, not Market Leninism.

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