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U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Remarks by Deputy Secretary of the Treasury Wally Adeyemo at
the Roosevelt Industrial Policy Forum
October 7, 2022

As prepared for delivery
Thank you so much to Felicia and the Roosevelt Institute for inviting me to speak with you
today. I especially want to thank Felicia for all her support for the Administration’s work,
including her new role as a member of Treasury’s Advisory Committee on Racial Equity. As
Secretary Yellen has said, it is important that we have a diversity of voices and perspectives
around the table, and this committee will help ensure we do.
This gathering comes at a pivotal moment for our economy. Rarely has the federal government
been responsible for implementing initiatives on the scale and breadth of those that President
Biden and Congress have designed over the last two years. From infrastructure funding that will
support projects like broadband access for all Americans… to investments in semiconductor
manufacturing and development that will position us at the forefront of the 21st century
economy … to the most significant investment in American history to address the climate crisis,
we are at the beginning of a transformation that will lead to a more resilient and secure
American economy.
Two of these bills passed with bipartisan congressional support in both chamber of congress.
And all of these initiatives enjoy support from a diverse set of stakeholders, including the
business community and civil rights organizations. While these investments will be targeted to
specific areas of need, their impact will benefit all Americans.
History has shown what we can accomplish when government commits itself to investments
like these—from Eisenhower’s funding of the Interstate Highways system, which economists
estimate is worth more than $600 billion real GDP annually[1] … to the Marshall Plan, which
brought Europe’s economy back from the brink and set the stage for some of the fastest growth
in world history … to Operation Warp Speed, which combined the best of public-private
collaboration to deliver innovative vaccines that have saved millions of lives globally.[2]

We know there are places where the scale of capital needed is so great that government
investment is required. It is in those instances where the case for large scale public investment is
the strongest—where government is uniquely situated to catalyze a new path toward economic
prosperity. Today, I’d like to share some thoughts about our theory of the case when it comes to
executing the investment President Biden has secured and deploying these historic resources.
Addressing inequality is a critical part of this approach – using the federal government’s scale to
unleash the economic potential of communities that have for too long faced barriers to their full
participation is critical to building sustainable economic growth in this country. I spend the
majority of my time at Treasury thinking about the national security challenges and
opportunities we face as a country. These investments are where that thinking intersects with
the economic policy aspects of my job. I know that America will be more competitive—and more
secure—if every American is given the tools and opportunity to fully participate in our economy.
What Secretary Yellen has dubbed “modern supply side economics”—making investments to
expand our labor supply, build our human capital, renew our public infrastructure, and enhance
our economic capacity through R&D and green investments—are case in point. These
investments will promote sustainable and secure economic growth and advance economic and
racial equity. When we invest in the untapped potential of underinvested communities by
expanding labor market opportunity and building infrastructure like broadband to empower
these communities to fully participate in the modern economy, it boosts economic growth for
everyone.
At a high level, the President and Congress have given us two different types of economic policy
tools to pursue these goals. The first is direct financing—the ability for government to offer
direct economic support to industries and companies critical to achieving our economic goals.
The CHIPS Act is a great example of this tool. It includes $39 billion in support for semiconductor
manufacturing, research, and development that will incentivize American companies to invest
in this essential technology and help seed the ground for the next generation of innovators. The
CHIPS Acts allows the federal government to put these funds to work and direct them to where
they will have the greatest impact while crowding in additional private capital. This approach is
already working: Earlier this week, Micron, a member of the Economic Opportunity Coalition
that Vice President Harris announced this summer, is making an investment of up to $100 billion
to build a semiconductor manufacturing complex in upstate New York. This is an investment
that Micron has made clear is only possible because of the CHIPS Act.

Now, some might say we should leave decisions like these to the private sector alone. But the
pandemic taught us that fragile supply chains are a danger to our economic and national
security, a danger the private sector cannot resolve on its own. Simply put, moments like these
have reaffirmed the clear need for government to step up and fill the void.
In addition, in too many cases the private sector has shown itself unwilling to make capital
intensive investments in marginalized communities, leaving their economic potential untapped.
Our semiconductor investment has already led several companies to announce plans to make
major investments in under-resourced communities, from Ohio to upstate New York.
We need to continue to focus on ensuring that the communities too often left behind when it
comes to technological investment benefit from the CHIPS Act. That’s why the CHIPS Act
includes workforce and research investments targeted at both underserved geographies and
institutions like Historically Black Colleges and Universities that will help broaden opportunity
to enter STEM fields.
The second tool we are using to make these large-scale investments is tax incentives—the use of
the tax code to provide economic support for activities that advance policy objectives and meet
national needs. We have long used the tax code to promote our equity goals, through programs
such as the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit, which has helped add roughly 3 million affordable
housing units to alleviate our nation’s acute housing shortage. The Inflation Reduction Act (IRA)
will similarly help advance these goals. It includes roughly $270 billion in tax incentives that will
lower the cost of building out a clean energy economy. These incentives will catalyze trillions in
private sector investment across clean energy production and related technology and
manufacturing sectors.[3]
While we know these investments will assist under-invested communities because low-income,
rural and, working class communities, and communities of color often bear the brunt of climate
change’s effects, they also highlight how tax incentives can be used to build a more inclusive
economy. The more-than one million jobs we estimate will be supported by the IRA’s green
provisions will benefit from strong labor protections—including incentives to adopt prevailing
wage standards and hire qualified apprentices. In addition, the IRA includes a place-based tax
credit for clean electricity energy facilities located in low-income communities, on Indian land,
or as part of certain federally subsidized housing programs. This additional incentive will help
ensure that these communities participate in building a clean energy economy and are able to
directly benefit from the resulting economic opportunities.

Let me conclude by talking about the infrastructure through which these tools are often
executed and through which the tax revenue generated by higher growth will be collected and
distributed—the Internal Revenue Service. The IRS and its tax experts make sure these credits go
to the people who need them and to companies helping to effectuate our policy goals. And they
are the ones who collect the taxes we use to fund these investments—especially from
corporations and the wealthy who for too long have not paid their fair share. Today, more
federal incentives flow through the IRS than anywhere else in the federal government. The IRS
touches every American household and business. And yet, for too long it hasn’t had the tools it
needs to provide the quality of service our citizens deserve.
That is why the Inflation Reduction Act is so crucial. It will allow the IRS to upgrade the 1960s
technology it currently relies on. It will enable the IRS to administer the system of credits the IRA
has put in place to turbocharge our transition to a green economy. This investment in the IRS is
yet another way we are using federal investments to advance level the playing field—by
renewing the essential infrastructure we use to deliver our policies.
However, this isn’t just about implementation of tax credits. Every investment we make—
including the direct economic support we provide under legislation like the CHIPS Act or
through the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law—depends on our ability to collect revenue. For too
long, the IRS hasn’t had the resources it needs to perform that essential role. Every year, the top
one percent of taxpayers underpay the taxes they owe by more than $160 billion. If left
unaddressed, the gap between taxes owed and taxes paid will grow to a total of about $7 trillion
over the next decade. That shortfall is driven primarily by high earners and corporations that
accrue income in opaque ways that are difficult for an under-resourced IRS to detect.
This is hugely consequential as a matter of revenue-raising—but what gets lost sometimes is
how important this is as a matter of fairness. If you’re a regular American worker, you’re already
paying all the taxes that you owe—your taxes are automatically deducted from your paycheck.
It’s only if you are at the top of the distribution that you get to play by a different set of rules. The
IRA’s funding for the IRS will help put an end to this two-tiered system, advancing equity both
now and in the future through the further investments financed by the revenue we are able to
collect.
To take a step back, this is what equitable investments look like—direct economic support and
tax incentives that give the federal government the tools required to make the investments our
country needs to ensure all Americans have access to opportunity. Together, these investments
will unlock trillions of dollars in private sector investment, which will result in an economy that

is stronger, cleaner, and more equitable. And our investment in the IRS will help ensure we can
continue to deliver on these goals for decades to come, as our economy continues to evolve.
Thank you again.

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[1] https://www.nber.org/system/files/working_papers/w27938/w27938.pdf

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[2] https://www.thelancet.com/journals/laninf/article/PIIS1473-3099(22)003206/fulltext#:~:text=Findings,%2C%20and%20Dec%208%2C%202021.
[3] https://repeatproject.org/docs/REPEAT_IRA_Prelminary_Report_2022-08-04.pdf

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