In remarks that underscored an emerging concern about the direction of the economy, President Obama told business leaders Wednesday that, despite record corporate profits, stagnant wage growth is creating anxiety among workers.
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Appearing at a meeting of the Business Roundtable in Washington, D.C., the president also urged Congress to move forward on tax reform, immigration, and infrastructure spending, and expressed confidence that Washington could avoid yet another damaging standoff over funding the federal government.
But it was his comments on wages—which, though mild, offered a clear challenge to his audience of corporate leaders—that appeared to represent his main message.
“Although corporate profits are at their highest levels in 60 years, and the stock market is up, wages and income still haven’t gone up significantly and haven’t picked up the way they did in earlier generations,” Obama said. “That’s part of what’s causing disquiet in the general public, even though the aggregate numbers look good.”
Obama added that the shrinking of wages and income as a share of overall GDP had caused an “undertow” of pessimism, despite the improving economy, and said giving workers a raise would benefit corporations, too.
“When wages are good, and consumers feel like they’ve got money in their pockets, that ends up being good for business not bad for business,” he said.
Obama appeared relaxed and at ease, but his comments touched on a major emerging policy and political challenge, especially for his party, in an age of widening inequality: how to jump-start wage growth and ensure that economic gains are broadly shared. The issue has been the subject of heated public debate in the weeks since Republicans took full control of Congress propelled in part by voters’ economic anxieties. Several states and cities have raised the minimum wage lately, but a Democratic effort in Congress to do so nationally has failed to gain traction among the GOP.
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On immigration, Obama said he remains “hopeful” about the prospects of passing comprehensive reform through Congress, despite Republican claims that his executive order last month, which will ensure around 5 million undocumented immigrants can’t be deported, had “poisoned the well” with Congress.
But he said it likely wouldn’t happen soon. “I suspect that tempers need to cool a little bit in the wake of my executive action,” Obama said, predicting that Republicans would first try to undo his order, before ultimately coming to the table to work on a comprehensive plan.
Still, he said the current system must be overhauled. “I am not going to preside over a system in which we know these folks are in the kitchens of most restaurants in the country, are cleaning up most of the hotels that all of you stay in,” Obama said, “and we tolerate it because it’s good for us economically to have cheap labor and services, but we never give them a path to be a citizen of this country in a more full and fair way.”









