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Last
year, Americans lost $14 trillion in net worth. That number is painful
no matter who you are – it touches everyone from families, to college
students, to small business owners, to family farms, to retirees. After
such significant loss in our economy and the impact that is having on
our lives, there is no question that we must act to restore faith in the
credit markets, instill confidence among consumers, and reignite the
economic engine of our nation.
However, the most dangerous principle we can assume as a nation is to
say that because something needs to be done, that anything should be
done even if it is wrong. When Washington has a knee-jerk reaction to
major crises, each “fix” that is a misstep causes the situation to be
worse than it was before, or permanently eliminates opportunities to
take a second or third effort to restore our economy.
As we look back over the past few months, many of us recognize that our
actions have made matters worse rather than making them better. In
short, we’ve taken a bad situation and made it an extremely bad
situation. Consider the following examples.
For the past several months President Bush, Chairman Bernanke, Secretary
Paulson, and, until recently, President Obama continually told the
American people that we would face “catastrophic meltdown”, “virtual
shutdown”, or “irreversible recession” if hundreds of billions of
dollars were not spent by the federal government in a matter of days and
weeks. In doing so, they created a self-fulfilling prophesy. In response
to this sky-is-falling approach, consumers across the country
locked-down on their spending, severely hurting businesses and retail
companies. We saw straight months of record decline in consumer
spending, triggering businesses to cut down on employee work hours,
reduce payrolls and many individuals lost jobs. When consumer spending
makes up 70% of our gross domestic product, claiming that the end of the
world was around the corner was not something we could afford to do.
Consumer confidence was shattered.
Additionally, we passed billions of dollars in bailout after bailout,
without basic principles of accountability, transparency, and
effectiveness. I am one of only 17 Members of Congress who has
consistently voted against all of the bailout and stimulus packages –
under both Presidents Bush and Obama – for the simple reason that I
wasn’t convinced they would work. We gave money to banks, which never
got to consumers for loans to buy cars, homes, and any other goods and
services that keep our economy going. The most recent economic stimulus
package was a $790 billion package that primarily redistributed what is
left of our economy rather than seeking to rebuild our economy. On top
of that, the new federal budget released last week by the White House
projects a deficit of $1.75 trillion for just 2009, a shortfall for one
year we have not seen since the years of World War II.
As a result of these actions, the American people have lost confidence
in their government and we’ve saddled our future generations with
enormous debt that will put great pressure on us in terms of global
competitiveness years down the road. However, we cannot allow the
situations of the past year to prevent us from continuing to seek the
best course of action for our economic situation.
First, we must apply the same confident and resilient attitude that has
made our nation great towards our current economic situation. During his
presidential address last week, President Obama finally began to provide
a message of optimism towards our economy. His message that “we will
recover” was drastically different from the end-of-the-world catastrophe
message we have been hearing each time a President has sought
congressional support for his particular bailout plan. It provided a
hopeful expectation that while our economic situation is a very
difficult and significant challenge to overcome, we as Americans can
prevail.
Second, at the very least we must make sure that our rhetoric is
matching up with our actions. Right now, the American people do not see
this happening with their elected officials in federal government. We
hear calls for balancing the budget, yet we still see more “stimulus”
spending that will postpone any serious effort to balance the budget for
a decade. The President has talked about cutting the deficit in half,
but we just increased our deficit to one of the highest amounts it has
been in the history of our nation. The federal government continues to
ask families and businesses to sacrifice their tax dollars for
legislation that no one is sure will work, while each new spending
proposal expands federal budgets more and more. But where is government
sacrificing? Fixing the economy will require shared sacrifice, and it is
time the government started fulfilling its share by eliminating wasteful
spending and inefficient programs that are not working or have no place
in the federal government.
Finally, we must take an objective look at the economic situations in
front of us. If ever there was a time that we needed an objective point
of view, it is now. Unfortunately, the 24/7 sound-bite driven media – in
an effort to drive up ratings – is providing deliberate spin instead of
the doing the fact-checking the American people need and deserve. This
means it is up to ordinary citizens to ask the tough questions about
whether or not we are making the right decisions as we are mortgaging
the future of our children and our grandchildren - whether it is in
their barber shops, in their Sunday school classes, at Little League
games, at work or in their grocery stores. Americans need to be asking
for and demanding the facts and figures that lie behind the proposals,
agendas, and budgets coming out of Washington.
We must rise as a nation with unity of purpose to protect our jobs,
protect our homes, and provide health care for our families. Right now,
there are two views of America’s future. Some place their hope for the
future in Washington; others place theirs in the work and ideas of the
American people who realize that we cannot borrow and spend our way to
the American Dream, we must earn it. And it is up to you and me to
determine which direction we will go.
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