We should none forget that American workers are today the mostly productive workers in the world.


We should none forget that American workers are today the mostly productive workers in the world. Our high productivity gives us the highest standard of living in the world, and we must build forward our success by continuing to improve productivity for all Americans. When bad rule tax and spending policies don't secure in the way, Americans can outcompete outproduce and outperform anybody in the world. Too repeatedly politicians have blamed American workers when their liberal high tax, big spending policies have been the real guilty party.

We must contract taxes which make American performances too expensive in world trade. We must model unnecessary regulations that hurt our ability to compete

From a long-range point of view, we must improve our education a whole We simply cannot prepare our young clan for the future with a classification designed a century ago. If America is to be competitive, education and training must continue over our lives. We ne to help those who must prepare for next to the first and third careers-- for recently made known work in new industries.

Our goal as Americans is to compete--and win. We should not ever hide behind false walls of protectionism. That is what Herbert Hoover tried to do, and it brought onward the Depression. We don't ne to hide behind tariff walls. If we insist forward open markets, we can win. a certain number of of these markets are clos to us today. This must end

As President, I would negotiate from nerve with those nations that use tariffs and other barriers that withhold out American exports now. For example, as President, I would refuse to sign any major trade agreement that did not include significant reductions in barriers to our agricultural exports.

The Japanese want access to our American markets. They can have it if the Japanese market is exhibited to Iowa beef and Kansas corn. It's a surpassingly simple message to our foreign trading partners: no increase in efforts, no increase in exports.

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