January 25, 1983
Mr. Speaker, Mr. President, distinguished Members of the Congress, honored guests, and fellow
citizens:
This solemn occasion marks the 196th time that a President of the United States has reported on
the State of the Union since George Washington first did so in 1790. That's a lot of reports, but
there's no shortage of new things to say about the State of the Union. The very key to our success
has been our ability, foremost among nations, to preserve our lasting values by making change
work for us rather than against us.
I would like to talk with you this evening about what we can do together -- not as Republicans
and Democrats, but as Americans -- to make tomorrow's America happy and prosperous at home,
strong and respected abroad, and at peace in the world.
As we gather here tonight, the state of our Union is strong, but our economy is troubled. For too
many of our fellow citizens -- farmers, steel and auto workers, lumbermen, black teenagers,
working mothers -- this is a painful period. We must all do everything in our power to bring their
ordeal to an end. It has fallen to us, in our time, to undo damage that was a long time in the
making, and to begin the hard but necessary task of building a better future for ourselves and our
children.
We have a long way to go, but thanks to the courage, patience, and strength of our people,
America is on the mend.
But let me give you just one important reason why I believe this -- it involves many members of
this body.
Just 10 days ago, after months of debate and deadlock, the bipartisan Commission on Social
Security accomplished the seemingly impossible. Social security, as some of us had warned for so
long, faced disaster. I, myself, have been talking about this problem for almost 30 years. As 1983
began, the system stood on the brink of bankruptcy, a double victim of our economic ills. First, a
decade of rampant inflation drained its reserves as we tried to protect beneficiaries from the
spiraling cost of living. Then the recession and the sudden end of inflation withered the expanding
wage base and increasing revenues the system needs to support the 36 million Americans who
depend on it.
When the Speaker of the House, the Senate majority leader, and I performed the bipartisan -- or
formed the bipartisan Commission on Social Security, pundits and experts predicted that party
divisions and conflicting interests would prevent the Commission from agreeing on a plan to save
social security. Well, sometimes, even here in Washington, the cynics are wrong. Through
compromise and cooperation, the members of the Commission overcame their differences and
achieved a fair, workable plan. They proved that, when it comes to the national welfare,
Americans can still pull together for the common good.
Tonight, I'm especially pleased to join with the Speaker and the Senate majority leader in urging
the Congress to enact this plan by Easter.
There are elements in it, of course, that none of us prefers, but taken together it performs a
package that all of us can support. It asks for some sacrifice by all -- the self-employed,
beneficiaries, workers, government employees, and the better-off among the retired -- but it
imposes an undue burden on none. And, in supporting it, we keep an important pledge to the
American people: The integrity of the social security system will be preserved, and no one's
payments will be reduced.
The Commission's plan will do the job; indeed, it must do the job. We owe it to today's older
Americans and today's younger workers. So, before we go any further, I ask you to join with me
in saluting the members of the Commission who are here tonight and Senate Majority Leader
Howard Baker and Speaker Tip O'Neill for a job well done. I hope and pray the bipartisan spirit
that guided you in this endeavor will inspire all of us as we face the challenges of the year
ahead.
Nearly half a century ago, in this Chamber, another American President, Franklin Delano
Roosevelt, in his second State of the Union message, urged America to look to the future, to meet
the challenge of change and the need for leadership that looks forward, not backward.
``Throughout the world,'' he said, ``change is the order of the day. In every nation economic
problems long in the making have brought crises to [of] many kinds for which the masters of old
practice and theory were unprepared.'' He also reminded us that ``the future lies with those wise
political leaders who realize that the great public is interested more in Government than in
politics.''
So, let us, in these next 2 years -- men and women of both parties, every political shade --
concentrate on the long-range, bipartisan responsibilities of government, not the short-range or
short-term temptations of partisan politics.
The problems we inherited were far worse than most inside and out of government had expected;
the recession was deeper than most inside and out of government had predicted. Curing those
problems has taken more time and a higher toll than any of us wanted. Unemployment is far too
high. Projected Federal spending -- if government refuses to tighten its own belt -- will also be far
too high and could weaken and shorten the economic recovery now underway.
This recovery will bring with it a revival of economic confidence and spending for consumer items
and capital goods -- the stimulus we need to restart our stalled economic engines. The American
people have already stepped up their rate of saving, assuring that the funds needed to modernize
our factories and improve our technology will once again flow to business and industry.
The inflationary expectations that led to a 21\1/2\-percent interest prime rate and soaring
mortgage rates 2 years ago are now reduced by almost half. Leaders have started to realize that
double-digit inflation is no longer a way of life.I misspoke there. I should have said ``lenders.''
So, interest rates have tumbled, paving the way for recovery in vital industries like housing and
autos.
The early evidence of that recovery has started coming in. Housing starts for the fourth quarter of
1982 were up 45 percent from a year ago, and housing permits, a sure indicator of future growth,
were up a whopping 60 percent.
We're witnessing an upsurge of productivity and impressive evidence that American industry will
once again become competitive in markets at home and abroad, ensuring more jobs and better
incomes for the Nation's work force. But our confidence must also be tempered by realism and
patience. Quick fixes and artificial stimulants repeatedly applied over decades are what brought us
the inflationary disorders that we've now paid such a heavy price to cure.
The permanent recovery in employment, production, and investment we seek won't come in a
sharp, short spurt. It'll build carefully and steadily in the months and years ahead. In the meantime,
the challenge of government is to identify the things that we can do now to ease the massive
economic transition for the American people.
The Federal budget is both a symptom and a cause of our economic problems. Unless we reduce
the dangerous growth rate in government spending, we could face the prospect of sluggish
economic growth into the indefinite future. Failure to cope with this problem now could mean as
much as a trillion dollars more in national debt in the next 4 years alone. That would average
$4,300 in additional debt for every man, woman, child, and baby in our nation.
To assure a sustained recovery, we must continue getting runaway spending under control to
bring those deficits down. If we don't, the recovery will be too short, unemployment will remain
too high, and we will leave an unconscionable burden of national debt for our children. That we
must not do.
Let's be clear about where the deficit problem comes from. Contrary to the drumbeat we've been
hearing for the last few months, the deficits we face are not rooted in defense spending. Taken as
a percentage of the gross national product, our defense spending happens to be only about
four-fifths of what it was in 1970. Nor is the deficit, as some would have it, rooted in tax cuts.
Even with our tax cuts, taxes as a fraction of gross national product remain about the same as
they were in 1970. The fact is, our deficits come from the uncontrolled growth of the budget for
domestic spending.
During the 1970's, the share of our national income devoted to this domestic spending increased
by more than 60 percent, from 10 cents out of every dollar produced by the American people to
16 cents. In spite of all our economies and efficiencies, and without adding any new programs,
basic, necessary domestic spending provided for in this year's budget will grow to almost a trillion
dollars over the next 5 years.
The deficit problem is a clear and present danger to the basic health of our Republic. We need a
plan to overcome this danger -- a plan based on these principles. It must be bipartisan.
Conquering the deficits and putting the Government's house in order will require the best effort of
all of us. It must be fair. Just as all will share in the benefits that will come from recovery, all
would share fairly in the burden of transition. It must be prudent. The strength of our national
defense must be restored so that we can pursue prosperity and peace and freedom while
maintaining our commitment to the truly needy. And finally, it must be realistic. We can't rely on
hope alone.
With these guiding principles in mind, let me outline a four-part plan to increase economic growth
and reduce deficits.
First, in my budget message, I will recommend a Federal spending freeze. I know this is strong
medicine, but so far, we have only cut the rate of increase in Federal spending. The Government
has continued to spend more money each year, though not as much more as it did in the past.
Taken as a whole, the budget I'm proposing for the fiscal year will increase no more than the rate
of inflation. In other words, the Federal Government will hold the line on real spending. Now,
that's far less than many American families have had to do in these difficult times.
I will request that the proposed 6-month freeze in cost-of-living adjustments recommended by the
bipartisan Social Security Commission be applied to other government-related retirement
programs. I will, also, propose a 1-year freeze on a broad range of domestic spending programs,
and for Federal civilian and military pay and pension programs. And let me say right here, I'm
sorry, with regard to the military, in asking that of them, because for so many years they have
been so far behind and so low in reward for what the men and women in uniform are doing. But
I'm sure they will understand that this must be across the board and fair.
Second, I will ask the Congress to adopt specific measures to control the growth of the so-called
uncontrollable spending programs. These are the automatic spending programs, such as food
stamps, that cannot be simply frozen and that have grown by over 400 percent since 1970. They
are the largest single cause of the built-in or structural deficit problem. Our standard here will be
fairness, ensuring that the taxpayers' hard-earned dollars go only to the truly needy; that none of
them are turned away, but that fraud and waste are stamped out. And I'm sorry to say, there's a
lot of it out there. In the food stamp program alone, last year, we identified almost [$]1.1 billion
in overpayments. The taxpayers aren't the only victims of this kind of abuse. The truly needy
suffer as funds intended for them are taken not by the needy, but by the greedy. For everyone's
sake, we must put an end to such waste and corruption.
Third, I will adjust our program to restore America's defenses by proposing $55 billion in defense
savings over the next 5 years. These are savings recommended to me by the Secretary of Defense,
who has assured me they can be safely achieved and will not diminish our ability to negotiate arms
reductions or endanger America's security. We will not gamble with our national survival.
And fourth, because we must ensure reduction and eventual elimination of deficits over the next
several years, I will propose a standby tax, limited to no more than 1 percent of the gross national
product, to start in fiscal 1986. It would last no more than 3 years, and it would start only if the
Congress has first approved our spending freeze and budget control program. And there are
several other conditions also that must be met, all of them in order for this program to be
triggered.
Now, you could say that this is an insurance policy for the future, a remedy that will be at hand if
needed but only resorted to if absolutely necessary. In the meantime, we'll continue to study ways
to simplify the tax code and make it more fair for all Americans. This is a goal that every
American who's ever struggled with a tax form can understand.
At the same time, however, I will oppose any efforts to undo the basic tax reforms that we've
already enacted, including the 10-percent tax break coming to taxpayers this July and the tax
indexing which will protect all Americans from inflationary bracket creep in the years ahead.
Now, I realize that this four-part plan is easier to describe than it will be to enact. But the looming
deficits that hang over us and over America's future must be reduced. The path I've outlined is
fair, balanced, and realistic. If enacted, it will ensure a steady decline in deficits, aiming toward a
balanced budget by the end of the decade. It's the only path that will lead to a strong, sustained
recovery. Let us follow that path together.
No domestic challenge is more crucial than providing stable, permanent jobs for all Americans
who want to work. The recovery program will provide jobs for most, but others will need special
help and training for new skills. Shortly, I will submit to the Congress the Employment Act of
1983, designed to get at the special problems of the long-term unemployed, as well as young
people trying to enter the job market. I'll propose extending unemployment benefits, including
special incentives to employers who hire the long-term unemployed, providing programs for
displaced workers, and helping federally funded and State-administered unemployment insurance
programs provide workers with training and relocation assistance. Finally, our proposal will
include new incentives for summer youth employment to help young people get a start in the job
market.
We must offer both short-term help and long-term hope for our unemployed. I hope we can work
together on this. I hope we can work together as we did last year in enacting the landmark Job
Training Partnership Act. Regulatory reform legislation, a responsible clean air act, and passage of
enterprise zone legislation will also create new incentives for jobs and opportunity.
One of out of every five jobs in our country depends on trade. So, I will propose a broader
strategy in the field of international trade -- one that increases the openness of our trading system
and is fairer to America's farmers and workers in the world marketplace. We must have adequate
export financing to sell American products overseas. I will ask for new negotiating authority to
remove barriers and to get more of our products into foreign markets. We must strengthen the
organization of our trade agencies and make changes in our domestic laws and international trade
policy to promote free trade and the increased flow of American goods, services, and
investments.
Our trade position can also be improved by making our port system more efficient. Better, more
active harbors translate into stable jobs in our coalfields, railroads, trucking industry, and ports.
After 2 years of debate, it's time for us to get together and enact a port modernization bill.
Education, training, and retraining are fundamental to our success as are research and
development and productivity. Labor, management, and government at all levels can and must
participate in improving these tools of growth. Tax policy, regulatory practices, and government
programs all need constant reevaluation in terms of our competitiveness. Every American has a
role and a stake in international trade.
We Americans are still the technological leaders in most fields. We must keep that edge, and to do
so we need to begin renewing the basics -- starting with our educational system. While we grew
complacent, others have acted. Japan, with a population only about half the size of ours,
graduates from its universities more engineers than we do. If a child doesn't receive adequate
math and science teaching by the age of 16, he or she has lost the chance to be a scientist or an
engineer. We must join together -- parents, teachers, grassroots groups, organized labor, and the
business community -- to revitalize American education by setting a standard of excellence.
In 1983 we seek four major education goals: a quality education initiative to encourage a
substantial upgrading of math and science instruction through block grants to the States;
establishment of education savings accounts that will give middle- and lower-income families an
incentive to save for their children's college education and, at the same time, encourage a real
increase in savings for economic growth; passage of tuition tax credits for parents who want to
send their children to private or religiously affiliated schools; a constitutional amendment to
permit voluntary school prayer. God should never have been expelled from America's classrooms
in the first place.
Our commitment to fairness means that we must assure legal and economic equity for women,
and eliminate, once and for all, all traces of unjust discrimination against women from the United
States Code. We will not tolerate wage discrimination based on sex, and we intend to strengthen
enforcement of child support laws to ensure that single parents, most of whom are women, do not
suffer unfair financial hardship. We will also take action to remedy inequities in pensions. These
initiatives will be joined by others to continue our efforts to promote equity for women.
Also in the area of fairness and equity, we will ask for extension of the Civil Rights Commission,
which is due to expire this year. The Commission is an important part of the ongoing struggle for
justice in America, and we strongly support its reauthorization. Effective enforcement of our
nation's fair housing laws is also essential to ensuring equal opportunity. In the year ahead, we'll
work to strengthen enforcement of fair housing laws for all Americans.
The time has also come for major reform of our criminal justice statutes and acceleration of the
drive against organized crime and drug trafficking. It's high time that we make our cities safe
again. This administration hereby declares an all-out war on big-time organized crime and the
drug racketeers who are poisoning our young people. We will also implement recommendations
of our Task Force on Victims of Crime, which will report to me this week.
American agriculture, the envy of the world, has become the victim of its own successes. With
one farmer now producing enough food to feed himself and 77 other people, America is
confronted with record surplus crops and commodity prices below the cost of production. We
must strive, through innovations like the payment-in-kind crop swap approach and an aggressive
export policy, to restore health and vitality to rural America. Meanwhile, I have instructed the
Department of Agriculture to work individually with farmers with debt problems to help them
through these tough times.
Over the past year, our Task Force on Private Sector Initiatives has successfully forged a working
partnership involving leaders of business, labor, education, and government to address the training
needs of American workers. Thanks to the Task Force, private sector initiatives are now
underway in all 50 States of the Union, and thousands of working people have been helped in
making the shift from dead-end jobs and low-demand skills to the growth areas of high
technology and the service economy. Additionally, a major effort will be focused on encouraging
the expansion of private community child care. The new advisory council on private sector
initiatives will carry on and extend this vital work of encouraging private initiative in 1983.
In the coming year, we will also act to improve the quality of life for Americans by curbing the
skyrocketing cost of health care that is becoming an unbearable financial burden for so many. And
we will submit legislation to provide catastrophic illness insurance coverage for older
Americans.
I will also shortly submit a comprehensive federalism proposal that will continue our efforts to
restore to States and local governments their roles as dynamic laboratories of change in a creative
society.
During the next several weeks, I will send to the Congress a series of detailed proposals on these
and other topics and look forward to working with you on the development of these
initiatives.
So far, now, I've concentrated mainly on the problems posed by the future. But in almost every
home and workplace in America, we're already witnessing reason for great hope -- the first
flowering of the man-made miracles of high technology, a field pioneered and still led by our
country.
To many of us now, computers, silicon chips, data processing, cybernetics, and all the other
innovations of the dawning high technology age are as mystifying as the workings of the
combustion engine must have been when that first Model T rattled down Main Street, U.S.A. But
as surely as America's pioneer spirit made us the industrial giant of the 20th century, the same
pioneer spirit today is opening up on another vast front of opportunity, the frontier of high
technology.
In conquering the frontier we cannot write off our traditional industries, but we must develop the
skills and industries that will make us a pioneer of tomorrow. This administration is committed to
keeping America the technological leader of the world now and into the 21st century.
But let us turn briefly to the international arena. America's leadership in the world came to us
because of our own strength and because of the values which guide us as a society: free elections,
a free press, freedom of religious choice, free trade unions, and above all, freedom for the
individual and rejection of the arbitrary power of the state. These values are the bedrock of our
strength. They unite us in a stewardship of peace and freedom with our allies and friends in
NATO, in Asia, in Latin America, and elsewhere. They are also the values which in the recent
past some among us had begun to doubt and view with a cynical eye.
Fortunately, we and our allies have rediscovered the strength of our common democratic values,
and we're applying them as a cornerstone of a comprehensive strategy for peace with freedom. In
London last year, I announced the commitment of the United States to developing the
infrastructure of democracy throughout the world. We intend to pursue this democratic initiative
vigorously. The future belongs not to governments and ideologies which oppress their peoples,
but to democratic systems of self-government which encourage individual initiative and guarantee
personal freedom.
But our strategy for peace with freedom must also be based on strength -- economic strength and
military strength. A strong American economy is essential to the well-being and security of our
friends and allies. The restoration of a strong, healthy American economy has been and remains
one of the central pillars of our foreign policy. The progress I've been able to report to you
tonight will, I know, be as warmly welcomed by the rest of the world as it is by the American
people.
We must also recognize that our own economic well-being is inextricably linked to the world
economy. We export over 20 percent of our industrial production, and 40 percent of our farmland
produces for export. We will continue to work closely with the industrialized democracies of
Europe and Japan and with the International Monetary Fund to ensure it has adequate resources
to help bring the world economy back to strong, noninflationary growth.
As the leader of the West and as a country that has become great and rich because of economic
freedom, America must be an unrelenting advocate of free trade. As some nations are tempted to
turn to protectionism, our strategy cannot be to follow them, but to lead the way toward freer
trade. To this end, in May of this year America will host an economic summit meeting in
Williamsburg, Virginia.
As we begin our third year, we have put in place a defense program that redeems the neglect of
the past decade. We have developed a realistic military strategy to deter threats to peace and to
protect freedom if deterrence fails. Our Armed Forces are finally properly paid; after years of
neglect are well trained and becoming better equipped and supplied. And the American uniform is
once again worn with pride. Most of the major systems needed for modernizing our defenses are
already underway, and we will be addressing one key system, the MX missile, in consultation with
the Congress in a few months.
America's foreign policy is once again based on bipartisanship, on realism, strength, full
partnership, in consultation with our allies, and constructive negotiation with potential
adversaries. From the Middle East to southern Africa to Geneva, American diplomats are taking
the initiative to make peace and lower arms levels. We should be proud of our role as
peacemakers.
In the Middle East last year, the United States played the major role in ending the tragic fighting
in Lebanon and negotiated the withdrawal of the PLO from Beirut.
Last September, I outlined principles to carry on the peace process begun so promisingly at Camp
David. All the people of the Middle East should know that in the year ahead we will not flag in
our efforts to build on that foundation to bring them the blessings of peace.
In Central America and the Caribbean Basin, we are likewise engaged in a partnership for peace,
prosperity, and democracy. Final passage of the remaining portions of our Caribbean Basin
Initiative, which passed the House last year, is one of this administration's top legislative priorities
for 1983.
The security and economic assistance policies of this administration in Latin America and
elsewhere are based on realism and represent a critical investment in the future of the human race.
This undertaking is a joint responsibility of the executive and legislative branches, and I'm
counting on the cooperation and statesmanship of the Congress to help us meet this essential
foreign policy goal.
At the heart of our strategy for peace is our relationship with the Soviet Union. The past year saw
a change in Soviet leadership. We're prepared for a positive change in Soviet-American relations.
But the Soviet Union must show by deeds as well as words a sincere commitment to respect the
rights and sovereignty of the family of nations. Responsible members of the world community do
not threaten or invade their neighbors. And they restrain their allies from aggression.
For our part, we're vigorously pursuing arms reduction negotiations with the Soviet Union.
Supported by our allies, we've put forward draft agreements proposing significant weapon
reductions to equal and verifiable lower levels. We insist on an equal balance of forces. And given
the overwhelming evidence of Soviet violations of international treaties concerning chemical and
biological weapons, we also insist that any agreement we sign can and will be verifiable.
In the case of intermediate-range nuclear forces, we have proposed the complete elimination of
the entire class of land-based missiles. We're also prepared to carefully explore serious Soviet
proposals. At the same time, let me emphasize that allied steadfastness remains a key to achieving
arms reductions.
With firmness and dedication, we'll continue to negotiate. Deep down, the Soviets must know it's
in their interest as well as ours to prevent a wasteful arms race. And once they recognize our
unshakable resolve to maintain adequate deterrence, they will have every reason to join us in the
search for greater security and major arms reductions. When that moment comes -- and I'm
confident that it will -- we will have taken an important step toward a more peaceful future for all
the world's people.
A very wise man, Bernard Baruch, once said that America has never forgotten the nobler things
that brought her into being and that light her path. Our country is a special place, because we
Americans have always been sustained, through good times and bad, by a noble vision -- a vision
not only of what the world around us is today but what we as a free people can make it be
tomorrow.
We're realists; we solve our problems instead of ignoring them, no matter how loud the chorus of
despair around us. But we're also idealists, for it was an ideal that brought our ancestors to these
shores from every corner of the world.
Right now we need both realism and idealism. Millions of our neighbors are without work. It is up
to us to see they aren't without hope. This is a task for all of us. And may I say, Americans have
rallied to this cause, proving once again that we are the most generous people on Earth.
We who are in government must take the lead in restoring the economy. [Applause] And here all
that time, I thought you were reading the paper. [Laughter]
The single thing -- the single thing that can start the wheels of industry turning again is further
reduction of interest rates. Just another 1 or 2 points can mean tens of thousands of jobs.
Right now, with inflation as low as it is, 3.9 percent, there is room for interest rates to come
down. Only fear prevents their reduction. A lender, as we know, must charge an interest rate that
recovers the depreciated value of the dollars loaned. And that depreciation is, of course, the
amount of inflation. Today, interest rates are based on fear -- fear that government will resort to
measures, as it has in the past, that will send inflation zooming again.
We who serve here in this Capital must erase that fear by making it absolutely clear that we will
not stop fighting inflation; that, together, we will do only those things that will lead to lasting
economic growth.
Yes, the problems confronting us are large and forbidding. And, certainly, no one can or should
minimize the plight of millions of our friends and neighbors who are living in the bleak emptiness
of unemployment. But we must and can give them good reason to be hopeful.
Back over the years, citizens like ourselves have gathered within these walls when our nation was
threatened; sometimes when its very existence was at stake. Always with courage and common
sense, they met the crises of their time and lived to see a stronger, better, and more prosperous
country. The present situation is no worse and, in fact, is not as bad as some of those they faced.
Time and again, they proved that there is nothing we Americans cannot achieve as free men and
women.
Yes, we still have problems -- plenty of them. But it's just plain wrong -- unjust to our country
and unjust to our people -- to let those problems stand in the way of the most important truth of
all: America is on the mend.
We owe it to the unfortunate to be aware of their plight and to help them in every way we can.
No one can quarrel with that. We must and do have compassion for all the victims of this
economic crisis. But the big story about America today is the way that millions of confident,
caring people -- those extraordinary ``ordinary'' Americans who never make the headlines and will
never be interviewed -- are laying the foundation, not just for recovery from our present problems
but for a better tomorrow for all our people.
From coast to coast, on the job and in classrooms and laboratories, at new construction sites and
in churches and community groups, neighbors are helping neighbors. And they've already begun
the building, the research, the work, and the giving that will make our country great again.
I believe this, because I believe in them -- in the strength of their hearts and minds, in the
commitment that each one of them brings to their daily lives, be they high or humble. The
challenge for us in government is to be worthy of them -- to make government a help, not a
hindrance to our people in the challenging but promising days ahead.
If we do that, if we care what our children and our children's children will say of us, if we want
them one day to be thankful for what we did here in these temples of freedom, we will work
together to make America better for our having been here -- not just in this year or this decade
but in the next century and beyond.
Thank you, and God bless you.
Note: The President spoke at 9:03 p.m. in the House Chamber of the Capitol. He was introduced
by Thomas P. O'Neill, Jr., Speaker of the House of Representatives. The address was broadcast
live on nationwide radio and television.