For Immediate Release
September 4, 2004
President's Radio Address
Cedar Rapids, Iowa
Audio
THE PRESIDENT: Good morning. America is the home to the most
dedicated, innovative, and decent workers in the world. And thanks to
their effort and enterprise, America's economy is strong and growing
stronger.
This past week we learned that we added 144,000 new jobs in August,
and nearly 60,000 more jobs in June and July than previously
estimated. Overall, we've added about 1.7 million new jobs since last
August. And the unemployment rate has fallen to 5.4 percent, nearly a
full point below the peak last summer, and lower than the average rate
of the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s. Our nation is proud of all our
workers, and on this Labor Day Weekend, we say thank you.
|
Radio
Address
|
Radio Interviews
|
The world is changing dramatically for American workers. The
global market is expanding, creating new markets for our goods and new
competition for our people. Workers are changing jobs more often, and
they need new skills to stay ahead. This time of change can be a time
of great opportunity for American workers, and government must take
their side.
To create more jobs in America, we must make sure that America
remains the best place in the world to do business. That starts with
encouraging investment and expansion by restraining federal spending,
reducing regulation, and making tax relief permanent. We also need to
make America less dependent on foreign sources of energy, to expand
trade and to level the playing field for American goods and services
across the globe. And we must protect workers and small business
owners from the frivolous lawsuits that threaten jobs across America.
Another drag on our economy is the tax code, which is a complicated
mess filled with special interest loopholes and saddling our people
with more than 6 billion hours of paperwork and headache every year.
American workers and their families deserve a simpler, fairer,
pro-growth system. So I will lead a bipartisan effort to reform and
simplify the federal tax code.
In this time of change, many workers want to go back to school to
learn new or different skills. So we will double the number of people
served by our principal job training program and increase funding for
our community colleges. We will change outdated labor laws to make the
workplace more family-friendly, and give workers more control over
their schedules through comp-time and flex-time.
I also have a plan to create American opportunity zones to help
communities that have lost manufacturing, textile and other jobs. In
these areas we'll provide tax relief, investment incentives, and
regulatory relief specifically designed to attract new businesses and
create new jobs. We will also improve housing, job training and
education in opportunity zones so these communities in transition have
all the resources they need to succeed.
We'll also work to build an ownership society in America. Our
nation is stronger when more people own their homes, their own health
plans and a piece of their retirement. We will strengthen Social
Security by allowing younger workers to save some of their taxes in a
personal account, a nest-egg they can call their own and government can
never take away.
With all these proposals we'll provide American workers with a path
to greater opportunity, more freedom and more control over their
lives.
American workers built this country and they continue to build our
prosperity today. They have our gratitude and our confidence. And all
Americans have my best wishes for a safe and enjoyable Labor Day
Weekend.
Thank you for listening.
|