[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton (1993, Book I)]
[July 24, 1993]
[Pages 1172-1174]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



[[Page 1172]]


The President's Radio Address
July 24, 1993

    Good morning. Six months ago this week, I took office as your 
President. And together we dedicated ourselves to fulfilling a vision of 
change for our country, change that would set us firmly on the path to 
growth, to progress and prosperity based on some old-fashioned 
principles and some new ideas.
    The principles are that we all ought to be able to take more 
responsibility for ourselves, our families, and our neighbors; that we 
ought to have more opportunity in this country; and that together we can 
make a stronger American community so that all of us as individuals can 
do better.
    We decided to begin with an economic plan which puts aside trickle-
down economics and emphasizes bringing down this deficit and investing 
in our people and our economy; to be followed by an effort to control 
health care costs and provide affordable health care to all Americans; a 
welfare reform plan to move people from welfare to work; the national 
service program to open the doors of college education to millions of 
young people and give many, many of them a chance to pay their college 
loans back through service to their communities; a tougher crime bill; 
and a bill to reform the political system itself, to reduce the 
influence of big money and lobbyists and to open the process to the 
influence of ordinary people.
    We're making progress on all these efforts, but for the centerpiece, 
the economic plan, the moment of truth is almost at hand. Lawmakers on 
Capitol Hill are working on a final version of our budget plan, and in 
the next couple of weeks when your Senators and Representatives vote on 
this plan, they will determine whether we will reduce the deficit, 
rebuild our economy, and recharge our job-creating machine.
    This morning I want to talk to you again about that plan and the new 
jobs it will create. This is our historic opportunity for getting our 
economic house in order. If we pass the plan, we'll be on the way to 
reducing the deficit by $500 billion over the next 5 years, to putting 
millions more Americans to work, and providing middle class Americans 
and businesses with the tools they need to compete and win in the global 
economy.
    This plan represents fundamental change, and that's why we're not 
without our critics in Washington. The problem is that most of what the 
critics have told you about the plan, that there are no budget cuts, 
there's no deficit reduction, it's all a big tax increase on the middle 
class, all those things are absolutely untrue. The fact is, we're 
cutting $250 billion in spending, and a lot of those spending cuts are 
not popular. Over 100 of those cuts exceed $100 million each.
    The second thing is that there are as many spending cuts as tax 
increases in the plan, and all the cuts and the tax increases will be 
put into a deficit reduction trust fund so they can't be touched for any 
other purpose but bringing down our debt.
    And another thing you won't hear from the critics of the deficit 
reduction plan is that 70 percent--that's right, 70 percent--of the new 
taxes will be paid by the richest Americans, the 1.2 percent of us with 
incomes of $200,000 a year or more.
    Now, these things are very important. But it's also important what 
you will have to do, if you're a member of the middle class or the 
working poor. The middle class will be asked to make a contribution but 
a very modest one. A family of four with an average income of $50,000 
will be asked to pay about $50 a year in an energy tax, that's less than 
$1 a week, to help ensure the future of our children and our 
grandchildren. Working families with incomes of under $30,000 will be 
held harmless. And the working poor, for the first time in the history 
of this country, will be helped through the tax system to move out of 
poverty. That's right. We'll be able to say for the first time if you 
work full time and you have children in your home, you won't be poor any 
more. That's the biggest incentive to ending welfare as we know it that 
I can imagine. At the same time, this plan helps businesses with special 
incentives to create new jobs.
    Over 90 percent of the small businesses in this country will be 
eligible for a tax cut if they invest in their businesses to improve 
their productivity and to make it possible for them to grow. That's 
right. There is no income tax

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on over 90 percent of the small businesses in this country, and all of 
them will be eligible for a tax reduction if they invest more money in 
their businesses. There are special incentives to get people to invest 
in new businesses, to support research and development, to encourage our 
bigger companies to employ their resources for new plant and equipment 
so they can hire new people, to revitalize the real estate industry. 
There is a provision here that in new communication technology alone can 
create 300,000 jobs in the next 10 years.
    Yesterday the Treasury Department issued a new State-by-State study 
of the jobs the economy has projected to create over the next 4 years if 
the Congress passes the economic plan. Based on projections from several 
leading independent analysts, this report says that over the next 4 
years the economy will create 8 million jobs. The Treasury also reports 
that in the first 5 months of this administration, there have been 
740,000 private sector jobs created, about 150,000 a month. That's over 
seven times the rate of job creation during the previous administration.
    These forecasts indicate that individual States should show dramatic 
improvements compared to the previous 4 years. For example, California's 
projected to create nearly 2 million new jobs, more than 10 times the 
number created during the last administration; Georgia, about 400,000 
jobs, more than 10 times the number created during the previous years; 
and Massachusetts projected to create about 100,000 jobs. That's very 
important there, because in the late 1980's and early 1990's, 
Massachusetts actually lost over 180,000 jobs. We can help these States 
with our economic plan and all the others as well, helping to get 
America moving again, generating permanent, productive private sector 
jobs.
    In the meantime, we're already seeing the dividends from our 
commitment to fix the economy. As the Chairman of the Federal Reserve 
Board, Alan Greenspan, reported to the House last week, confidence that 
we're going to reduce the deficit through this budget plan has inspired 
those people who determine what the interest rates in our country are, 
so that now we have the lowest long-term interest rates in 22 years. As 
a result, many of you listening today may be thinking of refinancing 
your home, or maybe you're one of the millions of homeowners who have 
already done it or all the people who are refinancing their business 
loans. If you do that, you can save a whole lot more on lower interest 
rates than you'll be asked to pay in higher taxes to make this plan 
work.
    None of this would have been possible without the determination of 
our administration to reduce the deficit and to rebuild the economy. 
We've all gotten an earful from our opponents who would really rather 
just leave things the way they are. They've misrepresented who is paying 
the taxes and how much the budget cuts are and the fact that small 
businesses by and large are getting a tax cut, not a tax increase.
    You may recall that I've asked those critics to come up with an 
alternative. Because let's face it, if there's a better way than the way 
I've proposed to fix the mess I inherited, I'm sure I want to hear it 
and you do too. So our critics came up with a plan. And if you have a 
problem remembering the details, there's a good reason. There weren't a 
lot of details in the last Senate Republican plan on reducing the 
deficit. You see, it reduced the deficit a lot less than our plan; $66 
billion of the so-called spending cuts weren't even specified. They 
said, ``Well, trust us. We'll come up with that for later.'' And as for 
burden-sharing, they didn't ask the wealthiest Americans, whose taxes 
went down while their incomes went up in the 1980's, to pay one red 
cent. They just wanted to cut more in Medicare for the elderly, in 
programs for the working poor and the middle class. It was burden-
shirking, not burden-sharing.
    In sum, our opponents' plan was a rerun of the same old trickle-down 
economics we tried in the 1980's. We've all seen that movie before. They 
said, ``It's spending, stupid.'' But when they had their chance, when 
our budget was before the Senate Finance Committee, the Republicans on 
the committee did not offer one red cent in specific spending cuts.
    Someone once said that the truth is like a torch that glows in the 
fog. Well, I want that torch to burn brightly, to burn away all the fog 
that's surrounded the debate on this economic program and let the real 
picture of positive change for America shine through. Make no mistake 
about it, we're on the verge of doing something historic for our 
country. It'll be a challenge, but we always welcome a challenge.
    This week, on the 24th anniversary of the first walk by an American 
on the Moon, we should remember the challenge laid down by President 
Kennedy. He said, and I quote, ``We

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choose to go to the Moon and to do other things not because they're easy 
but because they're hard, because the challenges are ones we are willing 
to accept, unwilling to postpone, and ones we intend to win.''
    We should be willing to accept this challenge, unwilling to postpone 
it, and let's intend to win.
    Thanks for listening, and God bless you all.

Note: The address was recorded at 8 p.m. on July 22 in the Oval Office 
at the White House for broadcast at 10:06 a.m. on July 24.