THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
RADIO ADDRESS OF THE PRESIDENT TO THE NATION The Roosevelt Room
THE PRESIDENT: Good morning. Today I want to talk to you about upholding our values, expanding our economy and moving our country forward together; about giving every American family the opportunity to succeed in the new global economy; and about what some American businesses are doing and what more American businesses can do to increase economic opportunity and security for their employees and their families in a way that is good for business and grows our economy.
In the last three years I have worked hard to give the American people a government that is more responsible, that promotes economic opportunity, brings Americans together and challenges all Americans to take responsibility for themselves, their families, their communities and their country. I've challenged parents to get more involved in their children's education. I've challenged welfare recipients to move from welfare to work. I've challenged the entertainment industry to put our children first and voluntarily rate the programs they put on television so parents can protect their children from excessive violence or other inappropriate material.
That same ethic of responsibility must guide all of us in our work lives as well. And I believe American business, the engine of our prosperity and the envy of the world, clearly has a role to play.
We've made much progress already. Three years ago our economy was drifting. The deficit was twice as high as it is today. Unemployment was high and job growth was very low. I took office determined to change our economic course. Since then, we've cut the deficit in half, invested in the education and training of our people, expanded exports through tough trade agreements, and reduced the size of government by over 200,000, while cutting regulations, giving more responsibilities to state and local governments, limiting the abuse of lobbying, without cutting essential services.
And the American people have responded. In three years and a month, our economy has created 8.4 million new jobs. And every year, more and more of them are good, higher-paying jobs. The combined unemployment, inflation and home mortgage rates are at their lowest levels in 27 years. We've halted the decade-long slide in real average hourly wages. Every year entrepreneurs have started a record number of new small businesses, and in key industries like autos and semiconductors America now leads the world again.
We are moving in the right direction, but we must do more to grow the economy and to support America's working families. Too many Americans are still working harder and harder just to keep up, and they worry that they'll be left behind by the new economy. We have to make sure all Americans who are willing to work for it can be winners of economic change, and that all of our people share in the benefits of our growing economy.
Of course, government must play a role. We must finish the job of balancing the budget in seven years to bring interest rates down even further. We should increase the minimum wage. We should ensure access to health care, to education, to training, to pensions for our people. We should reform welfare, to move people from welfare to work.
But we know that business has a role to play, too, if we want people to have better lives, provide for their families and face the future with confidence. Let me be clear: The most fundamental responsibility for any business is to make a profit, to create jobs and incomes by competing and growing. After all, in the last three years, nearly all the new jobs created in the world's advanced economies, nearly all of them were made in America by American business.
We recognize, too, that not every business can afford to do more than worry about the bottom line -- especially a lot of small businesses. But many of America's most successful businesses have shown that you can do well by doing right by employees and their families.
Let me mention five ways businesses can show good citizenship toward their employees. First, they can be friendly to families. We know that most people play more than one role; we're employees and parents, too, and people have to be able to succeed at home and at work for America to succeed. So many companies call for employees' flexible work schedules, help with child care, or good leave policies. And every business should let their employees know what is already their right under the Family and Medical Leave Act I signed into law -- to take some time off without losing your job in case of a family emergency.
Second, businesses can give their employees health care and pension benefits. We're trying hard here in Washington to pass the Kassebaum-Kennedy bill so that workers don't lose their insurance when they change jobs or when someone in the family gets sick. We passed pension reform legislation to protect the pensions of 40 million workers, and we're working to get money that is owed to pension funds paid in. We're also proposing to simplify rules so that small businesses can provide pensions for their workers and the owners of the businesses more easily. But business has to do more, too.
Third, businesses can invest in their most important asset -- their employees. The most successful companies do give workers broad opportunity for improved education and training, both within the firm and outside it. Every worker should know that whatever the new economy brings, he or she will be ready. When workers lose their jobs, I want government to be there with a G.I. Bill for America's workers, a voucher worth up to $2,500 a year so that people can immediately be retrained.
When people need further education, I want government to provide up to $10,000 a year in tax deduction for the cost of education after high school. But companies should do their part, too, with education and training. Upgrading the skills of our existing work force is the single best way to raise the incomes of America's workers and the productivity of our businesses and the growth of our economy.
Fourth, businesses can work in partnership with their employees. That can mean giving employees a greater voice in the production process. It can mean collective bargaining. It can mean sharing the benefits of good times through stock bonuses, employee ownerships, and other means of gains sharing. And when layoffs are necessary for the long-term health of the company, the best companies provide adequate notice and good severance, so employees have a chance at a new job with a good income.
Fifth, every company in America has a duty to provide a safe workplace. No one should have to put themselves at risk just to put food on the table at home. Government has a part to play, too, with the Occupational Safety and Health Administration. But the safest workplaces are those that work in partnership, where the value at work is a safe and healthy workplace.
These acts of good corporate citizenship are good for employees, but many, many thousands of American businesses have proved they're good for business, too. Our changing economy puts a real premium on skill, ingenuity, creativity and loyalty of the work force. The quality and productivity of America's workers are our greatest source of economic strength.
Family-flexible workplaces, health care and pensions, training, partnership, safe workplaces -- five challenges many of America's best businesses are now meeting. We want others to follow their lead. Government should support them in doing so. That's the way to create strong, lasting growth for our economy, and that's the way to make sure that every American -- every American -- has the chance to reap the rewards of economic change and economic growth.
We can meet these economic challenges the way we best meet all our challenges -- by working together as partners, all of us doing our part. Remember, the greatest lesson of our democracy is this: When we are divided, we defeat ourselves. But when we are united, America never loses.
Thank you very much.
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