For eight years, our country has endured economic policies that have resulted in sluggish economic growth. When faced with a choice between growing the economy and pushing his ideological agenda, President Barack Obama chose the latter.
The slow 1% to 2% economic growth we’ve experienced since the end of the Great Recession isn’t enough to grow jobs, incomes, and opportunities.
But a new era is coming to Washington. As U.S. Chamber President and CEO Tom Donohue said at the State of American Business address, “We see a once-in-a-generation opportunity to enact major reforms that could transform the American economy from a low-growth to a high-growth economy.”
"It’s very clear what our nation’s top priority must be: to restore our country to vigorous economic growth in order to expand jobs, incomes, and opportunities for all Americans," Donohue declared.
Faster economic growth not only creates more good-paying jobs and boosts wages, it brings in more tax revenue allowing us to improve our infrastructure, invest in education, and support a strong national defense.
More growth gives the government the must-needed flexibility to reform our entitlement programs and stabilize federal spending.
Maybe most important, faster growth instills hope and revives belief in the American Dream that has been lost for too many Americans.
Economic growth can’t solve all our country’s problems, but without it we won’t be able to solve any of them.
In order to grow the economic pie, every policy proposal—whether it is covers regulations, trade, energy, infrastructure, entitlement programs, education, taxes, or legal issues--must be judged on whether it will support or impede growth.
“Government cannot create wealth or generate growth. It cannot grow the pie. It can only rearrange it, and more often it shrinks the pie for everyone,” Donohue explained. “It is American free enterprise—embodied in some 30 million businesses of every size—that spurs the growth, generates the wealth, creates the jobs, and expands the opportunities.”
Donohue laid out the U.S. Chamber's American Growth Agenda, a set of pro-growth policy priorities Washington should enact.
In addition, in light of last fall’s election, Donohue advised leaders to listen more—especially from businesses:
“The truest and most positive form of populism rests in those many millions of small, medium, and large companies," Donohue noted.
By listening our leaders will have a better sense of what policies Americans need to generate faster economic growth that creates jobs and increases economic opportunities for all.
Regulatory Relief and Reform
Health Care
Dodd-Frank and Financial Regulations
Energy
Infrastructure
Pro-Growth Tax Reform
Expanding American Trade
Education and Workforce Training
Advancing Legal Reform and Fighting Abusive Prosecution
About the authors
Sean Hackbarth
Sean writes about public policies affecting businesses including energy, health care, and regulations. When not battling those making it harder for free enterprise to succeed, he raves about all things Wisconsin (his home state) and religiously follows the Green Bay Packers.