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Paul Ryan: Economic Recovery Alternative Creates Twice as Many Jobs at a Fraction of the Cost |
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Paul Ryan on Taxes and Economy
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Wednesday, 28 January 2009 00:00 |
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News Release by Congressman Paul Ryan
WASHINGTON – 1st District Congressman Paul Ryan voted against a trillion dollar spending bill today in the U.S. House of Representatives, expressing grave concerns that the wasteful spending spree will exacerbate the worst economic recession in generations. As a member of the Republican Economic Recovery Working Group, Paul Ryan and his colleagues proposed an alternative recovery package using fast-acting tax policy, while providing much needed assistance for those hit hardest by our deepening recession. Based on the Obama Administration’s methodology, Ryan’s alternative recovery legislation creates twice the number of jobs at half the cost. Brought to the floor without any Republican input, H.R. 1 – the so-called “American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009” – passed the House today by a vote of 244 – 188, without a single Republican in support. H.R. 1 is currently pending in the U.S. Senate. Regarding the severity of our economic crisis and the merits of H.R. 1, Paul Ryan issued the following statement: “This is the worst recession we’ve seen in generations. We’re losing tens of thousands of jobs a week and communities in Southern Wisconsin continue to be hit especially hard. Congress is making matters worse with a fiscal response that is slow, wasteful, and will leave us a nasty debt hangover for years to come. This bill is not worthy of our new President’s signature. “This trillion dollar spending bill misses the mark on all counts. This is not a crisis we can spend and borrow our way out of – that is how we got here in the first place. Yet this is precisely the path the Majority chose today. We’re repeating the mistakes of a flawed economic doctrine that deepened our depression in the 1930s and prolonged the economic stagnation in Japan in the 1990s.” Among the most troubling flaws of H.R. 1, Paul Ryan highlighted the following: -
Trillion Dollar Price Tag: The $816-billion package will be financed by borrowing, which will result in additional interest costs of $347 billion – putting the total cost of H.R. 1 to over $1 trillion. -
Does Very Little to Help Protect and Create Jobs: We need to help small businesses, entrepreneurs and the self-employed survive this recession and give them incentives to expand. 70% of our jobs in America come from small businesses. Yet there are more taxpayer dollars dedicated to arts and culture, cars for federal employees, and renovating federal buildings, than to helping small businesses grow. -
Wasteful Spending: $54 billion is spent on 19 programs deemed “ineffective” or “results not demonstrated” by the Office of Management and Budget. -
Special Interest Wish List: $600 million for brand new “green” cars for Federal government employees; $650 million for digital TV coupons; $7.7 billion to improve federal buildings; $200 million for sod and beautification of the National Mall; $50 million for the National Endowment of the Arts; and other dubious special interest projects. -
Not So “Timely” After All: Even if borrowing and spending is the answer to our economic crisis, only a small fraction of the spending in the Majority’s bill will take place in 2009. By the start of fiscal year 2011, roughly half of the spending from this bill will remain unspent. -
Another Round of Rebate Checks: The tax provisions in this bill do not encourage risk-taking; they do not encourage investment and job creation. The bulk of the tax ‘cuts’ are simply rebate checks - $10/week for individuals and $20/week for couples. We tried rebate checks last year, and they simply don’t work. -
Guarantees Future Tax Hikes: The calls for new record spending would only exacerbate our exploding budget deficit, a national debt nearing $11 trillion, and well over $50 trillion of unfunded promises. By adding over $1 trillion dollars to this abysmal fiscal situation, we are guaranteeing tax increases in the near future. To hit a recovering economy with massive tax increases is a recipe for disaster. Congressman Paul Ryan fought to improve the stimulus bill with amendments and alternative proposals aimed to empower the engines of economic growth. Before the House Ways and Means Committee and the House Rules Committee, Paul Ryan offered amendments aimed to boost incentives to expand business operations and create jobs (click here for video). Because the Democrats’ legislation provides no relief from the tax increases facing families and small businesses and not enough relief for small businesses to keep and create more jobs, Paul Ryan proposed to extend for two years the individual marginal income tax rates (which is the tax small businesses pay), provide for two years of full expensing for businesses, and make permanent the 15% tax rates on capital gains and dividends, indexed to inflation, rather than allow massive tax hikes to hit Americans at the end of 2010. The Democratic Majority, however, rejected his efforts to improve the legislation. Tapped to serve in the Republican Economic Recovery Working Group, Paul Ryan helped craft an alternative based on fast-acting tax policy along while strengthening and expanding unemployment assistance. Based upon the same model used by the Obama Administration – which claims H.R. 1 would preserve or create 3 million jobs – the Republican Alternative would create 6.2 million jobs. Even if the Democrats’ bill produces 3 million jobs, it would cost taxpayers $275,000 per job. Alternatively, Ryan’s substitute would produce twice the jobs at half cost. Following tonight’s disappointing result on the House floor, Paul Ryan added the following: “It is not enough to simply oppose flawed legislation. I believe that the party of ideas must propose alternative solutions. I helped craft an alternative focused on fast-acting tax policy to boost incentives for business expansion and job creation. Using the President’s own measuring stick, our proposal will create twice as many jobs, at half the cost to taxpayers, compared to the Majority’s trillion dollar spending bill. Unfortunately, because the Majority shut out the Minority from the legislative process, the House passed a far inferior piece of legislation today. “These are painful economic times, and the desire for an immediate economic recovery is shared by all. Additional assistance to those hit hardest by this recession – including families in Southern Wisconsin coping with painful layoffs – is an important part of any recovery effort. We missed an opportunity today to enact an economic stimulus package that empowers the engines of economic growth, tackles the fear and uncertainty gripping the marketplace, and encourages sustained economic growth and real job creation. I will continue to fight on behalf of those I serve, and believe in the strength of the American people to overcome this recession.” Click here to watch Paul Ryan speak on the House floor about the need for economic recovery package that actually works.
Congressman Paul Ryan serves Wisconsin’s 1st Congressional District. To contact him by phone in Washington, D.C., call (202) 225-3031. Or visit Paul Ryan at www.house.gov/ryan
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Last Updated on Wednesday, 12 August 2009 09:40 |
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Paul Ryan: An Economic Stimulus That Actually Works |
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Paul Ryan on Taxes and Economy
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Tuesday, 27 January 2009 00:00 |
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By Congressman Paul Ryan
In the past several months, the federal government took action in our economy without precedent and with great haste. This week, the Democratic Majority will rush through Congress another unprecedented intervention: a trillion dollar spending package. The Majority’s bill (H.R. 1) is expected to come to the House floor this Wednesday. As drafted, this bill is not worthy of our new president’s signature. Despite claims of a new era of bipartisanship, this so-called “stimulus” legislation received no Republican input. The Democratic Majority roundly rejected my good-faith efforts last week to offer improvements to the bill to encourage job creation and economic growth. I hope – but don’t expect – that we can still make much needed improvements to enact a stimulus bill that actually works. We must arrest the painful job losses in Southern Wisconsin and get our economy back on track, and I fear that H.R. 1 moves us in the wrong direction. As outlined in previous posts, here is what economic recovery legislation could and should do:
- Immediate Tax Relief: Fast-acting tax policy would boost incentives to expand business operations and create jobs. Specific tax reforms include addressing our job-killing corporate income tax rate – the second highest in the industrialized world – and instilling tax certainty by dropping the Majority’s promise to increase taxes on investment, savings, businesses, families, and workers in 2010.
- Assistance for the Unemployed: Assistance should be directed to those hit hardest by this recession – including families in Southern Wisconsin coping with painful layoffs – by extending unemployment insurance and Trade Adjustment Assistance.
Unfortunately, here is what the Majority’s stimulus legislation looks like: - Wasteful, Special Interest Spending: The Majority’s stimulus bill amounts to little more than a special interest wish list: $600 million for brand new, “green” cars for Federal government employees; $650 million for digital TV coupons; $200 million for sod and beautification of the National Mall; and so on. $54 billion is spent on 19 programs deemed “ineffective” or “results not demonstrated” by the Office of Management and Budget. Only 5% of the spending is on transportation infrastructure, while most of the package amounts to throwing borrowed money at dubious special interest projects.
- Little Impact in the Short-Run: Even if borrowing and spending is the answer to our economic crisis, only a small fraction of the spending in the Majority’s bill will take place in 2009. By the start of fiscal year 2011, roughly half of the spending from this bill will remain unspent. Fast-acting tax policy is far more effective, with evidence demonstrating that marginal rate cuts give you a far larger bang for your buck than government spending.
- Recycled Rebate Checks: Much has been made about the inclusion of tax cuts in H.R. 1. The tax provisions in this bill do not encourage risk-taking; they do not encourage investment and job creation. The bulk of the tax ‘cuts’ are simply rebate checks - $10/week for individuals and $20/week for couples. We tried rebate checks last year, and they simply don’t work.
- Does Very Little to Help Protect and Create Jobs: Only 2.7% of this stimulus package is dedicated to helping businesses keep and create jobs. We need to help small businesses, entrepreneurs and the self-employed survive this recession and give them incentives to expand. 70% of our jobs in America come from small businesses. Yet there are more taxpayer dollars dedicated to arts and culture, car for federal employees, and renovating federal buildings, than to helping small businesses grow. Even if it produces the 3 million jobs -- as claimed by the Obama Administration -- it will cost $275,000 per job. This dwarfs the annual income of the average American or the tax bill he or she pays. They are the ones that will ultimately foot this bill.
- Guarantees Future Tax Hikes: The last thing taxpayers need is a tax increase. The calls for new record spending would only exacerbate our exploding budget deficit, a national debt nearing $11 trillion, and well over $50 trillion of unfunded promises. By adding over $1 trillion dollars to this abysmal fiscal situation, we are guaranteeing tax increases in the near future. To hit a recovering economy with massive tax increases is a recipe for disaster. Worse yet, people’s future expectations of tax hikes on the horizon chills investment today –discouraging firms to grow, discouraging people from hiring, discouraging job creation.
Here is what economic recovery legislation can’t do:
- Can’t Spend Our Way Into Prosperity: If – as Washington likes to suggest – higher government spending leads to stronger economic growth, our economy today would be the strongest in our nation’s history. Rather than focus on a short-term pop, policies should emphasize a permanent boost to American competitiveness and long-term recovery.
- No Silver Bullet: Our economic crisis cannot be solved with a single silver-bullet piece of legislation, especially one that is focused on throwing borrowed money at a deeply rooted financial problem. We must heed the lessons from history – both at home and elsewhere – that warn of the dangers of excessive government spending, taxing, and borrowing.
These are painful economic times, and the desire for an immediate economic recovery is shared by all – but we have to be realistic about the pitfalls of costly missteps. We should enact a stimulus package that tackles the fear and uncertainty gripping the marketplace, empowers the engines of economic growth, and encourages sustained economic growth and real job creation. Congressman Paul Ryan serves Wisconsin’s 1st Congressional District. To contact him by phone in Washington, D.C., call (202) 225-3031. Or visit Paul Ryan at www.house.gov/ryan
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Last Updated on Wednesday, 12 August 2009 09:40 |
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Paul Ryan: Additional Tarp Funds Are Unjustifiable |
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Paul Ryan on Taxes and Economy
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Thursday, 22 January 2009 00:00 |
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News Release by Congressman Paul Ryan
WASHINGTON – Earlier today, Wisconsin's 1st District Congressman Paul Ryan voted to prohibit the release of the second half of funds allocated for the Troubled Assets Relief Program (TARP). As a result of Ryan’s efforts this past October to craft a much improved financial rescue package, Congress has the power to disapprove of the second half of the $700 billion TARP funds if it feels they are not needed or would not be used effectively. Today’s disapproval resolution (H.J. Res. 3) comes on the heels of yesterday’s passage of H.R. 384, which shifted TARP’s original purpose from addressing the systemic risk in the financial system to picking the winners and losers in the marketplace. H.R. 384 expands the Treasury Department’s authority to distribute TARP funds, while adding new provisions unrelated to financial stabilization efforts. By altering the original intent of the financial rescue package, today’s disapproval resolution was all the more important. Despite today’s bipartisan House vote to prohibit the release of the additional funds, failure to do the same in the U.S. Senate will allow the final $350 billion to be released to the Treasury Department. Arguing that such action cannot be justified, Paul Ryan issued the following statement: “My fear is that the second $350 billion in TARP funding will go far beyond the original mission of preserving overall financial market stability, and instead will be used to fund a heavy-handed, neo-industrial policy. Various industries have already marshaled their lobbyists for a claim on these public dollars. And now that the Federal Reserve has additional authority to address a financial crisis, this funding is no longer justified.” Please click here to view Congressman Paul Ryan’s floor statement. Congressman Paul Ryan serves Wisconsin’s 1st Congressional District. To contact him by phone in Washington, D.C., call (202) 225-3031. Or visit Paul Ryan at www.house.gov/ryan
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Last Updated on Wednesday, 12 August 2009 09:40 |
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