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Background on the President's meeting with the President's Economic Recovery Advisory…

November 2nd, 2009 No comments

THE WHITE HOUSE Office of the Press Secretary __________________________________________________________________________ For Immediate Release                                                                                                November 2, 2009 Meeting of the President’s Economic Recovery Advisory Board (PERAB) Roosevelt Room   11:10AM EDT   As the economy moves beyond crisis and into recovery, the President’s Economic Recovery Advisory Board (PERAB) will hold a meeting with the President to discuss long-term, innovation based ideas to sustain growth and continue to create jobs of the future in the Roosevelt Room. The meeting will be the second full board meeting of the PERAB and it will be live streamed at www.whitehouse.gov/live from start to finish. Expected attendees:Members of the PERAB: • Anna Burger, Chair, Change to Win • John Doerr, Partner, Kleiner, Perkins, Caufield & Byers • William H. Donaldson, Former Chairman, SEC • Roger W. Ferguson, Jr., President & CEO, TIAA-CREF • Mark T. Gallogly, Founder & Managing Partner, Centerbridge Partners L.P. • Timothy Geithner, Secretary of the Treasury • Austan Goolsbee, Staff Director and Chief Economist • Jeff Immelt, Chairman & CEO, GE • Monica C. Lozano, Publisher & Chief Executive Officer, La Opinion • Charles E. Phillips, Jr., President, Oracle Corporation • Penny Pritzker, Chairman & Founder, Pritzker Realty Group • Larry Summers, Director of the National Economic Council • David F. Swensen, Chief Investment Officer, Yale University • Richard L. Trumka, President, AFL-CIO • Paul Volcker, Chairman • Robert Wolf, Chairman & CEO, UBS Group AmericasAdministration Staff: • David Axelrod, Special Advisor to the President • Carol Browner, Office of Energy and Climate Change Director • Rahm Emanuel, Chief of Staff • Valerie Jarrett, Senior Advisor to the President and Director of Inter-governmental Affairs ##    

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Background on the President's meeting with the President's Economic Recovery Advisory…

Remarks by the President during the meeting of the President's Economic Recovery Advisory Board

November 2nd, 2009 No comments

11:24 A.M. EST THE PRESIDENT:  Hello, everybody.  I am pleased to be joined this morning by my Economic Recovery Advisory Board.  Each of these men and women have extraordinary and diverse expertise in the economy. I want to especially thank Paul Volcker, who has been a terrific advisor to me since the transition and has continued to help steer this group in ways that are providing us some very practical advice as we move forward. I’ve said before, but I think it bears repeating, that we have come a long way since January, when at that time we were losing 700,000 jobs per month and across the political spectrum I think there was fear of the possibility of another Great Depression.  We have pulled the economy back from the brink.  We got good news last week showing that for the first time in over a year the economy was actually growing once again.  And we have seen some other indicators that manufacturing is beginning to pick up.  That’s all good news and we are pleased that the actions that we took swiftly through the Recovery Act helped to stem what could have been a disastrous situation for the economy and we are starting to see stabilization and, indeed, some improvement. But the reason we’re here today is because we just are not where we need to be yet.  We’ve got a long way to go.  We are still seeing production levels that are significantly below peak levels and most distressing is the fact that job growth continues to lag.  Now, we all know that in every economic recovery there is going to be a lag between the economy growing again, businesses investing again and businesses hiring again.  But given the severity of the job losses that took place at the beginning of the year and the need for us to make up a whole lot of job loss, is going to require I think some old, innovative action on our part and on Congress’s part and on the private sector’s part. It’s also going to require that we look at new models for where future growth is going to come from, because one of the I think key understandings coming out of this past financial crisis is that a lot of our growth was debt-driven — credit cards being maxed out, home equity loans being taken out to finance a lot of purchases.  Consumers I think wisely recognized that they can’t get that overextended any more and businesses are going to be more cautious in terms of how they approach taking on a lot of debt.  The government is going to have to get serious about reducing our debt levels. And so one of our challenges now, and I’ve been speaking about this for many months now, is how do we get what I call a post-bubble growth model, one that is sustainable.  That’s what we’re going to be discussing here today.  As I said, we’ve got experts from a wide range of business sectors, and what we’re going to talk about is, are there mechanisms that we can start putting in place where we see the kind of growth that used to characterize the U.S. economy — export-driven growth, manufacturing growth, growth that pays high wages and provides high living standards for a broad-based middle class. And I think that there are some excellent ideas that are already on the table.  Some of them are being talked about in Congress.  It’s likely this week that we start seeing some discussion about potential tax cuts and credits that could make some difference in hiring, but we want to go beyond just tax policy. So, for example, we’ve got John Doerr sitting next to me, who has been one of the leading venture capitalists in the innovation economy and helped to spur on the revolution in the computer industry.  John has unequal passions for the possibilities of green job growth in the future, and how, through projects like weatherization and retrofitting of buildings, we could generate millions of jobs and create huge prospects for growth over the long term. Jeff Immelt of GE — down at the end — has been at the helm of one of our greatest manufacturers, an international company.  Jeff, I think, recognizes that if we don’t do more to export, we are not going to succeed in a global competition.  And so how we coordinate more effectively in our trade policies, in our approaches to working with manufacturing here in the United States — if we don’t do that effectively, we’re not going to succeed. Rich Trumka has been talking about infrastructure for a long time, as have I, and I think my team will testify when we got several trillion dollars worth of infrastructure that is falling apart, we need to put people to work, doing the work that America needs done.  But we’re also in an era of fiscal constraint, which means that we’ve got to start finding more creative, new approaches to financing these projects. So those are the discussions we’re going to be having, not just today but in the weeks and months to come.  This is my administration’s overriding focus.  Having brought the economy back from the brink, the question is how are we going to make sure that people are getting back to work and able to support their families.  It’s not going to happen overnight, but we will not rest until we are succeeding in generating the jobs that this economy needs. And I couldn’t ask for a better group of people to bounce ideas off of, and we are going to be soliciting ideas from the private sector, from businesses large and small, from academia and from all political persuasions.  If somebody can show me a strategy that’s going to work, then we are happy to consider it. And just — I want to end by saying this.  We anticipate that we’re going to continue to see some job losses in the weeks and months to come.  As I said before, there is a — always a lag of several months between businesses starting to make profits again and investing again, and then actually rehiring again.  But I want to emphasize I am confident that having moved the economy on the right track, that if we apply some good common sense and some — and reinvigorate that sector of our economy that’s based on innovation and dynamism and entrepreneurship, that there’s no reason why we’re not going to be able to not only create jobs, but the kind of sustainable economic growth that everybody is looking for. So, thank you very much, everybody. END 11:33 A.M. EST  

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Remarks by the President during the meeting of the President's Economic Recovery Advisory Board

Executive Order Amending Executive Orders 13183 and 13494.

November 2nd, 2009 No comments

THE WHITE HOUSE Office of the Press Secretary __________________________________________________________________________ For Immediate Release                                                                                                October 30, 2009 EXECUTIVE ORDER ——————————–                           AMENDMENTS TO EXECUTIVE ORDERS 13183 AND 13494:     By the authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and the laws of the United States of America, including 40 U.S.C. 101, it is hereby ordered as follows: Section 1. Executive Order 13183 of December 23, 2000, as amended, is further amended as follows: (a) The preamble is amended by deleting ", includingPublic Law 106-346." (b) Section 1 is amended by adding the following sentence after the second sentence: "It is also the policy of the executive branch to improve the treatment of Puerto Rico in Federal programs and to promote job creation, education, health care, clean energy, and economic development on the islands." (c) Section 3 is amended by deleting the second, third, and fourth sentences and inserting in lieu thereof the following: "The Task Force shall ensure official attention to and facilitate action on matters related to proposals for Puerto Rico’s status and provide advice and recommendations on such matters to the President and the Congress. The Task Force shall also identify and promote existing Federal initiatives that benefit Puerto Rico; provide advice and recommendations to the President and the Congress on the treatment of Puerto Rico in Federal programs; and provide advice and recommendations to the President and the Congress on policies and initiatives that promote job creation, education, health care, clean energy, and economic development on the islands." (d) Section 4 is amended by deleting the first sentence and inserting in lieu thereof the following: "The Task Force shall submit to the President a report on the actions it has taken to perform the functions set forth in section 3 no later than 1 year from the date of this order. The Task Force shall also report to the President, as appropriate, on other matters relating to the Task Force’s responsibilities under this order.   Sec. 2. In furtherance of the policy set forth in section 1 of Executive Order 13494 of January 30, 2009, section 3 of that order is amended to read as follows: "Sec. 3. Contracting departments and agencies shall treat as allowable costs incurred in maintaining satisfactory relations between the contractor and its employees (other than the costs of any activities undertaken to persuade employees to exercise or not to exercise, or concerning the manner of exercising, the right to organize and bargain collectively), including costs of labor management committees, employee publications, and other related activities. See 48 C.F.R. 31.205-21." Sec. 3. This order is not intended to, and does not, create any right or benefit, substantive or procedural, enforceable at law or in equity by any party against the United States, its departments, agencies, or entities, its officers, employees, or agents, or any other person. BARACK OBAMA THE WHITE HOUSE, October 30, 2009. # # #

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Executive Order Amending Executive Orders 13183 and 13494.