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5 Supplement Department of State Dispatch 14 (1994)
Renewal of the Atlantic Economies: Crucial to Our Future

handle is hein.journals/dsptch13 and id is 50 raw text is: Economics and Trade

Renewal of the Atlantic Economies:
Crucial to Our Future
President Clinton
Address to the American business community, Brussels, Belgium,
January 11, 1994 (introductory remarks deleted)

came to Europe hoping that
together we might begin to realize
the full promise of the end of the
Cold War-recognizing clearly that
this is a difficult economic time in
Europe, there are still profound
difficulties in the United States, and
these factors are having an impact on
the politics of Europe and the United
States and on what we might do.
Nonetheless, it seemed to me that
the time has come to try to define, here
on the verge of the 21st century, what
the elements of a new security in
Europe and in the United States should
be in the aftermath of the Cold War-
one premised not on the division of
Europe, but on the possibility of its
integration-its political integration
around democracies, its economic
integration around market economics,
and its defense integration around
mutual defense cooperation.
Yesterday, when the NATO
Alliance adopted the concept of the
Partnership for Peace, we did what I
believe history will record as a very
important thing. We opened up the
possibility of expanded NATO mem-
bership to nations to our east, not only
all the former Warsaw Pact countries,
but also other non-NATO members
in Europe-all who wish to begin work
on joint planning and operations with
us and to work toward being able to
assume the full responsibilities of
membership. We did it by opening up
the possibility to everyone and making
no decisions now. We did it in a way
that did not have the United States and
NATO prematurely drawing another

line in Europe to divide it in a different
way, but instead gave us a chance to
work for the best possible future for
Europe-one that includes not only the
countries of Eastern Europe, but also
countries that were part of the former
Soviet Union and, indeed, Russia itself.
So we have made, I think, a very good
beginning in the right way.
We also are having today the first
summit with the European Union after
the ratification of the Maastricht
Treaty, to talk about what we can do
together to rebuild the rate of economic
growth and opportunity here and
throughout the world.
Our firms--our American firms--
are deeply woven into the fabric
of Europe's economies. Over 60%
of the overseas profits of Ameri-
can companies come from Europe.
America has $225 billion invested
here, employing nearly 3 million
Western Europeans alone. And back
home, trade with Europe generated
$120 billion worth of exports and about
2.5 million jobs in 1993. We all know--
you know better than I-that this
continent faces high unemployment and
very sluggish growth rates. We also
see that in Japan. Even though in our
country the unemployment rate is
coming down, we see in every advanced
economy great difficulty today in
creating jobs and generating higher
incomes, even when people are working
harder and working smarter.
The renewal of the Atlantic econo-
mies is critical to the future of America
and, I would argue, critical to the
future of our Alliance. For in a democ-
racy, as we have seen time and time

again in votes at home, in Europe, and
in Russia, when people feel that they
are anchored and stable and secure;
when they believe they will be re-
warded for their work; when they
believe that the future will be better
than the past-they vote in a certain
way. When they are in economic and
emotional free-fall; when they feel
disoriented; when they don't know
whether the future will be better than
the past-they often vote another way
and in ways that, indeed, make their
futures more difficult and life for all
people more difficult.
When I became President, it
seemed to me that my first order of
business ought to be to put our own
economic house in order. And so we
worked hard to reverse the exploding
deficits of the last 12 years, to begin
investing in our own people, trying to
do it in a way that would keep interest
rates and inflation low and turn the tide
of private investment in the United
States. We have begun to do that.
Last year more new jobs came into our
economy than in the previous four
years. Millions of Americans refi-
nanced their homes and businesses.
Consumer confidence at the end of the
year rose to its highest level in many
years, and people began to believe that
they could pay their debts and control
their lives. In November, delinquen-
cies on home mortgage payments in
America reached a 19-year low. So we
are beginning to believe that we have
some discipline, some control of our
own destiny.
We also had to make a tough
decision in America last year as a
people. That was whether we could
grow internally or whether we could
continue to grow by reaching out to
compete and win in a global economy
and help our friends and neighbors to
grow. That debate was, I suppose,
captured more clearly for the people of
our nation and the people of the world
in the congressional debate over
NAFTA than in any other way.

14                                                     U.S. Department of State Dispatch Supplement * January 1994 * Vol. 5, No. 1

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