III. THE CLINTON-GORE ECONOMIC RECORD
THE CLINTON-GORE ECONOMIC RECORD
WHAT A DIFFERENCE SEVEN YEARS MAKES
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After seven years, the results of President Clinton and Vice
President Gore's economic leadership for the American people
are clear. In 1992, when Bill Clinton was elected President,
the American economy was barely creating jobs and wages were
stagnant. His bold, three-part economic strategy focused on
establishing fiscal discipline; investing in education,
health care, science and technology; and opening foreign
markets so that American workers have a fair chance to
compete abroad. Seven years later the results of this
strategy are clear:
Deficits Replace By Surpluses: Keeping Us On Track to Be Debt Free by 2013
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1992. The deficit was $290 billion the highest
dollar level in history. When President Clinton took
office, the Congressional Budget Office projected the
deficit would grow to $404 billion in 1999 and $455 billion
in 2000.
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Today. In 1999, we had a budget surplus of $124
billion the largest dollar surplus on record (even
after adjusting for inflation) and the largest as a share
of our economy since 1951. This year the Administration
forecasts a surplus of $167 billion. With the President's
plan, we are now on track to eliminate the nation's
publicly held debt by 2013.
Government Spending: Lowest in Over Three Decades
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1981-92. Under Presidents Reagan and Bush, Federal
government spending as a share of the economy increased
from 21.6 percent in 1980 to 22.2 percent in 1992.
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Today. Under President Clinton, Federal government
spending as a share of the economy has been cut from 22.2
percent in 1992 to 18.7 percent in 1999 its lowest
level since 1966.
Taxes for Typical Families: Lowest in Over Two
Decades
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1981-92. The total Federal tax rate rises for
middle-income families from 23.7 percent in 1980 to
24.5 percent in 1992. (Total tax rates include both
the employer and employee portion of the Social Security
and Medicare payroll taxes.)
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Today. Under President Clinton, the total Federal tax
rate for middle-income families has dropped from 24.5
percent in 1992 to 22.8 percent in 1999 that's the lowest
tax rate since 1978. For families at one-half the median
income, the effective Federal tax rate has been slashed
from 19.8 percent in 1992 to 14.1 percent in 1999 that's
the lowest tax rate since 1968.
Jobs Are Up: Nearly 21 Million Created Since January 1993
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1981-1992. In their three terms combined, Presidents
Reagan and Bush created only 18.5 million new jobs despite
the growth of the labor force from the maturation of the
baby boom. Only 2.5 million jobs were created under
President Bush, with nearly half of them in the public sector.
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Today. The economy has created 20.8 million new jobs
since January 1993. This is the most jobs ever created
under a single President. There have been an average of
248,000 jobs created per month a faster rate than
any President. And 19.2 million 92 percent
of the new jobs were created in the private sector, the
highest share since Harry Truman was President.
Faster Economic Growth: 3.9 Percent Per Year
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1981-1992. The economy grew an average 1.7 percent
per year under President Bush and 2.8 percent per year
during the Reagan-Bush years.
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Today. Since President Clinton took office, growth
has averaged 3.9 percent per year.
Private-Sector Growth Is Up: 4.4 Percent Per Year
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1981-1992. The private sector of the economy grew 2.9
percent annually from 1981-1992.
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Today. The private sector of the economy has grown
4.4 percent annually since 1993.
Equipment and Software Investment Is Growing Faster Than
Ever
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1981-1992. Real equipment and software investment rose
just 3.8 percent annually during the previous Administration
and only 4.7 percent annually for the entire Reagan-Bush
period.
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Today. Real equipment and software investment is up
12.1 percent per year under President Clinton faster
than any Administration on record. We have seen seven
consecutive years of double digit growth in equipment and
software investment, for the first time on record.
Homeownership Is Up: The Highest in American History
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1981-1992. The homeownership rate fell from 65.4 percent
in 1981 to 64.2 percent in 1992.
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Today. In 1999, the homeownership rate was 66.8 percent
the highest ever recorded.
Inflation is Down: The Lowest Core Rate In 35 Years
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1981-1992. The underlying core rate of inflation
averaged 4.7 percent annually.
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Today. In 1999, the underlying core rate of inflation
was 1.9 percent the lowest since 1965.
Welfare Rolls Dropped Dramatically: Lowest Since 1969
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1981-1992. The number of welfare recipients increased
by almost 2.5 million (a 22 percent increase) to 13.6
million people.
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Today. Between January 1993 and June 1999, the number
of welfare recipients dropped by 7.2 million (a 51 percent
decline) to 6.9 million the lowest level since 1969.
over $266,000 enough to produce $24,000 a year of income in retirement.
Unemployment Is Down: The Lowest Rate in 30 Years
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1981-1992. The unemployment rate averaged 7.1 percent
and rose to more than 10 percent in 1982 and 1983.
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Today. In January 2000, the unemployment rate was 4.0
percent the lowest rate in 30 years. The
unemployment rate has been below 5 percent for 31
consecutive months.
Unemployment for African Americans the Lowest on Record
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1981-1992: African American unemployment reached 21.2
percent in January 1983 a record high, and never
dropped below 10 percent.
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Today. The African-American unemployment rate has
fallen from 14.2 percent in 1992 to 8.0 percent in 1999
the lowest rate on record.
Unemployment for Hispanics Recovered From Record Highs
to Achieve Record Lows
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1981-1992. Hispanic unemployment hit a record high of
15.7 percent in December 1982.
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Today. The Hispanic unemployment rate has dropped
from 11.6 percent in 1992 to 6.4 percent in 1999
the lowest rate on record.
Real Wages Rising Again: Fastest Growth in Two Decades
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1981-1992. Real average hourly earnings fell 4.3
percent under Presidents Reagan and Bush.
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Today. Real wages have grown 6.6 percent under President
Clinton. Real wages have grown for five consecutive years
for the first time since the 1960s.
Poverty For African-Americans Dropped to Lowest On Record
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1981-1992. Between 1980 and 1992, the poverty rate for
African American remained at 30 percent or more.
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Today. Since 1993, the African-American poverty rate has
dropped from 33.1 percent to 26.1 percent in 1998 the
lowest level recorded, and the largest five-year drop in
African-American poverty since 1967-1972.
Poverty For Hispanics Dropped to Lowest Since 1979
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1981-1992. Between 1980 and 1992, the poverty rate for
Hispanics increased from 25.7 percent to 29.6 percent.
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Today. Since 1993, the Hispanic poverty has dropped to
25.6 percent the lowest since 1979.
Poverty For Single Mothers is the Lowest On Record
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1981-1992. Between 1980 and 1992, an additional 2.1
million families with single mothers were pushed into poverty.
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Today. Under President Clinton, the poverty rate for
families with single mothers has fallen from 46.1 percent in
1993 to 38.7 percent in 1998 the lowest level on record.
Family Income Up More Than $5,000 Since 1993
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1988-1992. Median family income, adjusted for inflation,
fell by $1,864, dropping from $44,354 in 1988 to $42,490 in
1992.
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Today. Since 1993, real median family income has increased
by $5,046, rising to $46,737 in 1998.
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THE CLINTON-GORE ADMINISTRATION:
PAYING OFF THE DEBT BY 2013
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The Clinton-Gore Administrations' FY2001 budget proposes a plan
to keep America on track to pay off the debt by 2013. An era
of deficits has given way to an era of surpluses, with the
unified budget surplus projected to rise to $167 billion this
year the largest surplus ever and the third unified
surplus in a row. The budget also projects the on-budget
surplus, which excludes Social Security, to be $19 billion in
FY2000 the second consecutive on-budget surplus. The
President's budget builds on this historic fiscal strength with
a plan to invest in key priorities like education and health,
strengthen Social Security and Medicare, and pay down the debt
by 2013.
LARGEST UNIFIED SURPLUS EVER
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Instead of a $455 billion deficit, a $167 billion surplus
this year the largest ever. In 1992, the deficit
was $290 billion the largest dollar deficit in American
history. In January 1993, the Congressional Budget Office
projected that the deficit would grow to $455 billion by 2000.
Today, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) is projecting
a $167 billion surplus the third consecutive surplus and
the largest surplus ever, even after adjusting for inflation.
Compared with original projections, that is $622 billion less
in government drain on the economy and $622 billion more
available for private investment in one year alone.
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Largest surplus as a share of the economy since 1951. The
2000 surplus is projected to be 1.7 percent of GDP the
largest surplus as a share of GDP since 1951.
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Three surpluses in a row for the first time in over 50 years.
The $167 billion projected surplus in FY2000 follows a surplus
of $124 billion in FY 1999 and $69 billion in FY 1998. The
last time America had three surpluses in a row was over fifty
years ago in 1947-49. The FY2000 surplus marks the eight
consecutive year of fiscal improvement, for the first time in
American history surpassing the pre-Clinton best of
five straight years.
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A projected on-budget surplus of $19 billion in 2000 the
second consecutive on-budget surplus. OMB projects that the
on-budget surplus, which excludes Social Security, will be $19
billion in 2000. This follows an on-budget surplus of $0.7
billion in 1999. The last time America balanced the budget
without using Social Security funds was in 1960. The President
is committed to continuing to ensure that the entire Social
Security surplus is protected for debt reduction.
LARGEST DEBT REDUCTION EVER
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The President's plan would eliminate the debt by 2013
2 years earlier than planned. The President's plan to
use the entire Social Security surplus for debt reduction, to
devote the interest savings from this debt reduction to extend
the life of Social Security to at least 2050. The President's
plan also uses nearly half of the non-Social Security surplus
over the next decade for debt reduction and to extend the life
of Medicare by shoring up the Hospital Insurance trust fund,
would put America on the path to eliminate the debt in 2013.
This is two years earlier than projected in the President's
June 1999 plan.
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Interest payments would be eliminated. Currently we spend
13 cents of every Federal dollar on interest payments. These
payments, which were once projected to grow to 26 percent of
all federal spending in 2013, would be eliminated under the
President's plan.
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On track to pay down $297 billion in debt held by the public
over three years. In 1998 and 1999, the debt held by the
public was reduced by a combined $140 billion. OMB is
projecting that the United States will pay down an additional
$157 billion in debt held by the public this fiscal year.
That will bring the total debt pay down to $297 billion
the largest three-year debt pay down in American history.
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The debt held by the public is on track to be $2.4 trillion
lower in 2000 than was projected when the President took
office. In 1993, the debt held by the public was projected
by the Office of Management and Budget to balloon to $5.9
trillion by 2000. Instead, shrinking deficits and surpluses
in the last three years are projected to bring the debt down
to $3.5 trillion in 2000 $2.4 trillion better than
expected. In 1993, the debt held by the public was 49.5
percent of GDP and projected to rise to 64.7 percent of GDP
in 2000. Instead, it has been slashed to a projected 36.3
percent of GDP.
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As a result, interest payments on the debt in 2000 are $128
billion lower than projected. In 1993, the net interest
payments on the debt held by the public were projected to grow
to $348 billion in 2000. Fiscal discipline has slashed this
figure to a projected $220 billion a $128 billion improvement
for one year alone.
REDUCING SPENDING WHILE CUTTING TAXES FOR MIDDLE-INCOME
FAMILIES
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Federal spending as a share of the economy is the lowest since
1966. The spending restraint under President Clinton has
brought spending down from 22.2 percent of GDP in 1992 to 18.7
percent of GDP in 1999 the lowest in over thirty years.
At the same time, President Clinton has increased investments
in education, technology and other areas that are vital to
growth.
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While balancing the budget and paying down the debt, President
Clinton has provided tax relief for working families. The tax
cuts signed into law by the President in 1993 and 1997
for example, the expanded Earned Income Tax Credit, the $500
child tax credit, the $1,500 HOPE Scholarship Tax Credit, and
the expanded IRAs have reduced taxes for American families.
The total Federal tax rate for middle-income families has
dropped from 24.5 percent in 1992 to 22.8 percent in 1999
that's the lowest tax rate since 1978. For families at one-half
the median income, the effective Federal tax rate has been
slashed from 19.8 percent in 1992 to 14.1 percent in 1999
that's the lowest tax rate since 1968.
WHAT FISCAL DISCIPLINE MEANS FOR AMERICA
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Lower interest rates have already cut mortgage payments by
$2,000 for families with a $100,000 mortgage. Because of
the policy of deficit and debt reduction, it is estimated that
a family taking out a home mortgage of $100,000 expects to save
roughly $2,000 per year in mortgage payments. This has helped
raise the homeownership rate to 66.8 percent in 1999 the
highest rate on record.
- Lower interest rates cut car payments by $200 annually for
families taking out a typical car loan.
- Lower interest rates cut student loan payments by $200
annually for a person with a typical student loan.
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Lower debt will help maintain strong economic growth.
With the government no longer draining resources out of capital
markets, businesses have more funds for productive investment.
This has helped to fuel a 12.1 percent real annual increase in
productive equipment and software investment since 1993
the seventh consecutive year of double digit growth, the
strongest period of growth on record. This compares to 4.7
percent annual growth from 1981-92, a period that saw the debt
held by the public quadruple.
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Rising investment has contributed to a pickup in productivity
growth. Non-farm business productivity has grown at a 2.7
percent average annual rate for the last four years. This
compares to 1.5 percent growth from the 1970s through the early
1990s.
WHAT THE EXPERTS SAY
Experts agree that President Clinton's 1993 economic plan helped
reduce the deficit, lower interest rates, spur business
investment, and strengthen the economy. The economy and the
budget are now working in a virtuous circle lower deficits
have led to lower interest rates which have led to faster
business investment which led to faster growth which led to even
lower deficits. Experts agree that the President's 1993 Economic
Plan helped create this virtuous circle:
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Alan Greenspan, Federal Reserve Board Chairman, 1/04/00 with
President Clinton at Chairman Greenspan's re-nomination
announcement: My colleagues and I have been very
appreciative of your [President Clinton's] support of the Fed
over the years, and your commitment to fiscal discipline
has been instrumental in achieving what in a few weeks
will be the longest economic expansion in the nation's
history.
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Paul Volcker, Federal Reserve Board Chairman (1979-1987), in
Audacity, Fall 1994: The deficit has come
down, and I give the Clinton Administration and President
Clinton himself a lot of credit for that. [He] did something
about it, fast. And I think we are seeing some benefits.
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Business Week, 5/19/97: Clinton's 1993 budget
cuts, which reduced projected red ink by more than $400 billion
over five years, sparked a major drop in interest rates that
helped boost investment in all the equipment and systems that
brought forth the New Age economy of technological innovation
and rising productivity.
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Goldman Sachs, March 1998: One of the reasons Goldman
Sachs cites for the best economy ever is that on
the policy side, trade, fiscal, and monetary policies have been
excellent, working in ways that have facilitated growth without
inflation. The Clinton Administration has worked to liberalize
trade and has used any revenue windfalls to reduce the federal
budget deficit.
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Lehman Brothers, 1/10/94: Lower deficits, lower
long-term rates and higher real growth was the overall
promise. With the data now rolling in for December 1993, it
seems clear that President Clinton delivered on all three
counts
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A SMALLER BUT MORE PROGRESSIVE GOVERNMENT
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President Clinton and Vice President Gore have cut Federal
spending and cut the Federal workforce, reversing twelve years
when the Republicans exploded the deficit and more than
quadrupled the debt. At the same time, the Clinton-Gore
Administration has made investments in everything from education
to science and technology to health care to tax relief for
working families.
PAYING OFF THE DEBT BY 2013
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The debt quadrupled under President's Reagan and Bush.
The debt held by the public increased from $712 billion in
1980 to $3.0 trillion in 1992. In early 1993, the debt was
projected to rise to $5.9trillion in 2000. The President's
fiscal discipline has slashed that to a projected $3.5 trillion
in 2000. That is $2.4 trillion less in debt than was projected
seven years ago.
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On track to pay-down $297 billion in debt held by the public
over three years. In 1998 and 1999, the debt held by the
public was reduced by $140 billion. The Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) is projecting that the United States will
pay-down an additional $157 billion in debt held by the public
this fiscal year. That will bring the total debt pay-down to
$297 billion the largest three-year debt pay down in
American history. This keeps us on track to pay off the debt
held by the public by 2013 two years ahead of the
President's previous projection.
LOWEST GOVERNMENT SPENDING IN OVER THREE DECADES
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Federal spending as a share of the economy is the lowest since
1966. The fiscal restraint under President Clinton has
brought spending down from 22.2 percent of GDP in 1992 to
18.7 percent of GDP in 1999 the lowest since 1966. At
the same time, President Clinton has increased investments
that are vital for future growth, including nearly doubling
education and training. Under Presidents Reagan and Bush,
Federal government spending as a share of the economy
increased from 21.6 percent in 1980 to 22.2 percent in 1992.
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Non-defense discretionary Federal spending as a share of the
economy is the lowest on record. Since President Clinton
took office, non-defense discretionary spending has fallen from
3.7 percent of GDP in 1992 to 3.3 percent of GDP in 1999
the lowest as a share of the economy on record. Over this
period, total discretionary spending fell from 8.6 percent of
GDP to 6.3 percent of GDP, also the lowest on record.
(Comparable data for these categories goes back to 1962.)
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Discretionary spending down under President Clinton and
up under the previous two Administrations. Real
discretionary spending has fallen by 1.1 percent per
year under President Clinton; from 1980 to 1992, real
discretionary spending increased 1.0 percent per year.
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Lower general government spending as a share of GDP
than any major economy in the world. According to the
OECD, the U.S. has lower total government spending
Federal, state, and local as a share of GDP than any
major economy in the world.
SMALLEST FEDERAL WORKFORCE IN 40 YEARS
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The smallest Federal civilian workforce in 40 years. The
Federal civilian workforce increased from when President Reagan
took office to when President Bush left office. Since President
Clinton took office, the Federal workforce has been cut by
377,000 nearly a fifth and is now lower than any
time since 1960.
LOWEST TAXES FOR MIDDLE-INCOME FAMILIES IN OVER TWO
DECADES
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While balancing the budget and paying down the debt,
President Clinton has provided tax relief for working families.
The tax cuts signed into law by the President in 1993 and 1997
for example, the expanded Earned Income Tax Credit, the
$500 child tax credit, the $1,500 HOPE Scholarship Tax Credit,
and expanded IRAs, have reduced taxes for American families.
The total Federal tax rate for middle-income families has
dropped from 24.5 percent in 1992 to 22.8 percent in 1999
that's the lowest tax rate since 1978. For families at one-half
the median income, the effective Federal tax rate has been
slashed from 19.8 percent in 1992 to 14.1 percent in 1999
that's the lowest tax rate since 1968.
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