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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Obama aims to boost hiring


By Michael A. Fletcher
Washington Post

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Obama said his jobs creation plan would build on the nearly $800 billion economic stimulus package passed this year, including tax cuts for small businesses, hiring incentives and a fresh round of spending on the nation's infrastructure.

SUSAN WALSH | Associated Press

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WASHINGTON — President Obama yesterday outlined a response to the nation's intensifying job crisis that encourages businesses to hire new workers by easing the flow of credit and implementing a series of tax cuts.

But his plan leaves important details — including the plan's cost — to be hashed out by Congress.

Obama's job creation ideas build largely on elements of the $787 billion economic stimulus package passed earlier this year, including tax cuts for small businesses, incentives to hire new workers and a fresh round of infrastructure spending.

The president also recommended that Congress enact a new "cash for caulkers" program, which would offer financial incentives for homeowners to weatherize their homes. Senior administration officials said the program, based on the popular Cash for Clunkers automobile rebate program, would leverage hiring in construction and manufacturing — sectors especially hard-hit by the recession — while promoting energy efficiency, resulting in long-term savings for homeowners.

Obama, who has been under pressure to put out a specific jobs strategy, also called on Congress to extend unemployment insurance, emergency aid to cash-starved states and cities, aid to senior citizens and health care help for the jobless — help he called essential as his administration grapples with ways to reduce the nation's highest unemployment rate in more than a quarter century.

"Even though we have reduced the deluge of job losses to a relative trickle, we are not yet creating jobs at a pace to help all those families who've been swept up in the flood," Obama said at a speech at the Brookings Institution, a nonpartisan research organization. "There are more than 7 million fewer Americans with jobs today than when this recession began. That's a staggering figure and one that reflects not only the depths of the hole from which we must ascend, but also a continuing human tragedy."

Obama sketched his jobs plan while emphasizing that he is also concerned about reducing the nation's burdensome debt, a complex message that pleased neither liberal advocates pushing for a more aggressive jobs initiative or conservatives who say the president should turn his attention squarely to deficit reduction.

With Wall Street firms repaying federal bailout funds faster than anticipated, administration officials have concluded that the Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP, should cost the federal government $200 billion less than expected. Obama said the government could use that money both to pay for elements of his jobs initiative and lower the deficit.

Many Republicans, however, want the money earmarked strictly for deficit reduction. "Using bailout funds for another spending spree would violate both current law and our pledge to return every dollar to the taxpayers," said Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky. "Americans' patience is running awfully thin with politicians who promise jobs but deliver only more debt."

White House aides were confident both goals could be achieved. "The American people are a lot smarter than people in Washington think," said Dan Pfeiffer, White House communications director. "They understand we have to deal with jobs and deficits in a coordinated strategy. Talking about one without the other would be disingenuous and do a disservice."

Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, called reducing unemployment essential to fixing the federal budget. "Recessions don't mean loss of federal revenue because we are adding federal programs," he said. "They mean a loss of revenue because people aren't paying taxes and are relying on more government programs."

White House officials did not put a price tag on the president's jobs package, saying the cost would be determined by the scale of programs enacted by Congress. Obama called it "a false choice" to suggest that the government must choose between reducing the deficit and investing in job creation at a time the nation is dealing with a 10 percent unemployment rate.

Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., has said the Senate would take up a jobs bill in January, while House leaders have promised to pass a jobs package this month.

"We've got to get back to Main Street. Wall Street has had its moment," said Rep. Peter Welch, D-Vt., who has authored legislation calling for federal subsidies for home weatherization. "We have to address high unemployment."