President Sends Annual Economic Report to Congress


THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary


For Immediate Release February 10, 1998


REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
UPON DEPARTURE

The Rose Garden
9:40 A.M. EST

THE PRESIDENT: Thank you very much. Thank you and good morning. Let me begin by saying how very pleased I am for the support we are receiving from all around the world for our stand against Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction program. Friends and allies share our conviction that Saddam must not be allowed to develop nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons or the missiles to deliver them.

Yesterday, the governments of Canada and Australia announced that they are prepared to join the United States, Great Britain, and other allies in a military operation should one prove necessary. As I have said before, I hope we can avoid the use of force. The choice is up to Saddam Hussein. Let the weapons inspectors back on the job with free and unfettered access.

But if Saddam will not comply with the will of the international community, we must be prepared to act. And I am very grateful that others are prepared to stand with America.

Now, today, as has been said, I am transmitting to Congress the annual Economic Report of the President. Let me begin by thanking the Council of Economic Advisors for their hard work in preparing the report. I also want to thank our wonderful economic team for all they have done to promote prosperity for the American people. As the Economic Report of the President makes clear, our economy is strong, our prosperity is deep, our prospects are bright.

For five years our nation has pursued a new economic strategy for the information age. We have reduced the deficit to slash interest rates and spur private sector investment. We've opened markets to create high-wage jobs. We've invested in the skills and education of our people, so that every American has the chance to reap the benefits of the new economy. All around us we see the results in revitalized basic industries, thriving new industries, an investment boom, a vibrant American economy.

In this report, the Council of Economic Advisors projects continued growth through at least the next year. That would mark the longest peacetime expansion in the history of the United States. As this report makes plain, the expanding economy is producing wider opportunity and rising incomes for American families. Since 1993 the income of a typical family has increased $2,200 beyond inflation. We've seen the fastest growth in real hourly wages in 20 years, after 12 years in which real wages actually fell.

The standard of living is rising faster than the cost of living now. And America has grown together, not apart, with the poorest fifth of our families seeing the largest percentage jump in their income. While incomes are rising, taxes are falling. A typical family earning $50,000 a year now has the lowest tax burden in two decades; families earning $25,000 a year, the lowest tax burden in three decades.

This economy is the envy of the world. But the progress was not predestined. We must press forward with the strategy that is now expending opportunities for American families, not abandon it. Above all, we must maintain our fiscal discipline. It is the foundation of our prosperity. My view is clear. Every penny of any projected budget surplus should be reserved until we have taken all the steps necessary to save Social Security for the 21st century.

I am heartened my the strong support this approach has gained from the American people, including the young people to whom I spoke yesterday at Georgetown University. And I am pleased by the strong support members of Congress of both parties have given for saving Social Security first.

In the past week, some have said that before we save Social Security, we should repeal the iron laws of fiscal discipline. They want to weaken the long standing pay-as-you-go rule for taxes, which says that any spending proposal or any new tax cut must be paid for in the budget. This rule has been a key to our drive to balance the budget.

Let me be clear: fiscal irresponsibility gave us 12 years of exploding deficits, division, declining wages. Fiscal responsibility has given us the strongest economy in a generation. I will not allow a return to the policies that have failed us in the past. Let us maintain fiscal responsibility, save Social Security first, and prepare for an even brighter future for our people. Thank you very much.



What's New - February 1998

Efforts To Protect Children's Health

Annual Economic Report

Departure Statement on Iraq

Ron Brown Corporate Leadership Award Ceremony

Welcome Prime Minister Blair

Disaster Sites In Florida

Clean Water Action Plan

Millennium Programs

Support For Internet Legislation

Pass Patients' Bill of Rights

NATO Expansion Protocols

Education Discussion with Governors

Congressional Democrats

Statement on Iraq

Joint Press Conference With Prime Minister Tony Blair

American Association for the Advancement of Science

First Balanced Budget in 30 Years

Commitment to Child Care

Ford's Theater Gala

Los Alamos National Laboratories

Dialogue on Social Security Reform

"High Hopes" Education Partnerships

National Prayer Breakfast

American Position in Persian Gulf


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