President Barack Obama
Weekly Address
The White House
January 24, 2015
Hi, everybody. This week, in my State of the Union
Address, I talked about what we can do to make sure middle-class
economics helps more Americans get ahead in the new economy.
See, after some tough years, and thanks to some tough
decisions we made, our economy is creating jobs at the fastest pace
since 1999. Our deficits are shrinking. Our energy production is
booming. Our troops are coming home.
Thanks to the hard work and
resilience of Americans like you, we’ve risen from recession freer to
write our own future than any other nation on Earth.
Now we have to choose what we want that future to look
like. Will we accept an economy where only a few of us do spectacularly
well? Or will we commit ourselves to an economy that generates rising
incomes and rising chances for everyone who makes the effort?
I believe the choice is clear. Today, thanks to a growing
economy, the recovery is touching more and more lives. Wages are
finally starting to rise again. Let’s keep that going – let’s do more
to restore the link between hard work and growing opportunity for every
American.
That’s what middle-class economics is – the idea that this
country does best when everyone gets their fair shot, everyone does
their fair share, and everyone plays by the same set of rules.
Middle-class economics means helping workers feel more
secure in a world of constant change – making it easier to afford
childcare, college, paid leave, health care, a home, and retirement.
Middle-class economics means doing more to help Americans
upgrade their skills through opportunities like apprenticeships and two
years of free community college, so we can keep earning higher wages
down the road.
Middle-class economics means building the most competitive
economy in the world, by building the best infrastructure, opening new
markets so we can sell our products around the world, and investing in
research – so that businesses keep creating good jobs right here.
And we can afford to do these things by closing loopholes
in our tax code that stack the decks for special interests and the
superrich, and against responsible companies and the middle class.
This is where we have to go if we’re going to succeed in
the new economy. I know that there are Republicans in Congress who
disagree with my approach, and I look forward to hearing their ideas for
how we can pay for what the middle class needs to grow. But what we
can’t do is simply pretend that things like child care or college aren’t
important, or pretend there’s nothing we can do to help middle class
families get ahead.
Because we’ve got work to do. As a country, we have made
it through some hard times. But we’ve laid a new foundation. We’ve got
a new future to write. And I’m eager to get to work.
Thanks, and have a great weekend.
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