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9/9/2022

Remarks by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen at Ford Rouge Electric Vehicle Center | U.S. Department of the Tre…

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Remarks by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen at Ford
Rouge Electric Vehicle Center
September 8, 2022

As prepared for delivery
Thank you for that introduction. Itʼs great to be in Dearborn and, later today, in Detroit. As the
global capital of the automobile industry, this region will experience significant growth and
many good jobs from the recently enacted Biden economic plan.
Iʼd like to acknowledge Lieutenant Governor Gilchrist for hosting me here in Michigan today.
Thank you to Senator Stabenow, whose leadership on many provisions of the Inflation
Reduction Act and CHIPS Act made them a reality, including her critical work on the energy
manufacturing tax credit. Iʼd also like to thank Senator Peters for his equally strong advocacy
and leadership. Thank you, also, to the members of Congress who are here with us today –
Congresswomen Stevens and Lawrence – who have worked very hard over the past few
months on historic economic legislation. And I am grateful to the leaders at Ford for having
me at this cutting-edge EV assembly plant.
As Treasury Secretary, over the past year and a half – among other things – I have been
especially focused on addressing the pandemic-caused crisis. We have been rescuing the job
market from the pandemic downturn and stabilizing the economy a er its unprecedented
disruptions.
The pandemic exposed our vulnerabilities, but our economy had long been su ering from
soaring inequality, weak growth, and a sense of falling further behind for many – too many.
Sluggish productivity growth and declining labor force participation have weighed down our
economic potential. And growing disparities in economic conditions across geographies and
racial groups have exacerbated inequality. The pandemic and Putinʼs immoral war in Ukraine
remind us of our vulnerability to global supply shocks. But beyond that, the threat of climate
change looms very large.
Today, I will step back and describe the Administrationʼs e orts to stabilize the economy amid
a series of shocks and disruptions. We have brought the United States back to full
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Remarks by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen at Ford Rouge Electric Vehicle Center | U.S. Department of the Tre…

employment in record time.
Then, I will discuss the meaning, for the future, of the historic economic legislation enacted by
this Administration. Taken together, the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, the CHIPS Act, and the
Inflation Reduction Act authorize among the most significant investments our country has
ever made. I believe firmly that they will help us achieve stable, sustainable growth. And they
will move us toward a fairer and more resilient economy.

I. ECONOMIC STAB ILIT Y
When President Biden took o ice in January 2021, his immediate focus was to restore the
economy while protecting Americans from the threat of a deadly virus. At the time of his
inauguration, the pandemic had claimed over 400,000 lives.1 And 3,000 additional lives were
being lost each day.2 Our public health crisis had triggered an economic calamity. The
unemployment rate was over 6 percent with more than 800,000 new jobless claims, on
average, per week.
Itʼs important to remember the context for the Presidentʼs actions. At that time, we faced
unprecedented uncertainty about the fate of our economy. The truth is: in 2020 and 2021, the
tail risk of the pandemicʼs impact on our economy was a downturn that could match the Great
Depression. Our policy response had to su iciently address all the potential outcomes. So the
federal government intervened to keep businesses open, to keep Americans in their homes,
and to keep local governments well-resourced.
Our plan has worked. Due to the American Rescue Plan and our vaccination campaign, the
United States experienced the fastest pace of job creation in our history. Household balance
sheets are strong. Businesses continue to invest. Our broad and inclusive recovery has
outpaced that of many other large economies. And measured by gross domestic income, our
economy continues to expand and is operating above levels that would have been predicted
pre-pandemic.
Itʼs fair to say: by any traditional metric, we have experienced one of the quickest economic
recoveries in our modern history.
Now, Americans are rightfully concerned that higher prices are squeezing their day-to-day
budgets and their longer-term savings. The causes of inflation are largely global. But the pain
of inflation is personal. This Administrationʼs top economic priority is to combat inflation, even
as we know the Federal Reserve has the primary role to play in restoring price stability.
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Remarks by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen at Ford Rouge Electric Vehicle Center | U.S. Department of the Tre…

The President and his entire economic team have focused particularly on our supply chains
and energy markets. Last year, when supply chain bottlenecks contributed to upward pressure
on prices, the Administration worked with partners to recruit more truck drivers, to fund popup container yards, and to get several ports on 24/7 operations.3 We also have released a
million barrels of oil per day from our Strategic Petroleum Reserve. By Treasury estimates, the
Presidentʼs decision has reduced the price of gas by between around 17 and 42 cents per
gallon this year.4
In markets where we could not help lower prices by expanding supply, we have aimed to
mitigate the pain directly, through cost relief. The newly passed Inflation Reduction Act boldly
reduces everyday costs for families across the country. Without the law, healthcare premiums
would have spiked for millions of Americans in January. Instead, 13 million Americans will
continue to save an average of $800 a year.5
In coming years, Medicare will be able to negotiate, and thereby lower the price of high-cost
prescription drugs. That corrects a market distortion that has placed excessive pricing power
in the hands of pharmaceutical companies.
In sum, while costs to American families remain unacceptably high, I believe this
Administrationʼs actions have made a meaningful di erence. And they will continue to do so.

II. SUSTAINAB LE GROW T H
As we continue to tackle inflation, President Biden has made clear: we cannot just return to
the old normal. The recent trifecta of legislation our Administration has signed into law will
strengthen the foundations of long-term growth at the core of our post-pandemic economy.
Earlier this year, I described many of these policies as “modern supply-side economics.” I
described how, prior to the pandemic, higher inequality was accompanied by slower growth.
Now, with an economy at full employment, we are uniquely suited for a supply-side expansion
that delivers sustainable growth and reduces inequality.
Just over half a year a er we introduced this concept, the Biden Administration has delivered
on key aspects of the modern supply-side agenda. In doing so, we are making a generational
investment in the strength of our economy and in the prosperity of our citizens.
In particular, I want to touch upon three economic impacts of the newly passed Biden
economic plan. They are: expanded productive capacity of our economy; increased resilience
to global shocks; and greater fairness for workers and businesses.
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Remarks by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen at Ford Rouge Electric Vehicle Center | U.S. Department of the Tre…

A. Expanding the Productive Capacity of Our Economy
The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, CHIPS Act, and Inflation Reduction Act will expand the
productive capacity of our economy. They will raise the ceiling for what our economy can
potentially produce. They will provide a historic injection of funding into investments that
have been too-long neglected.
Economists have long stressed the importance of basic public infrastructure for economic
growth. Yet more than 40,000 bridges 6 – and one in five miles of highways and major roads in
America – are in poor condition.7
Our plan provides the funds to fix roads, ports, bridges, and public transit. People and goods
will move faster – and with fewer bumps and costly supply-chain snarls such as the ones we
have seen during the pandemic. These improvements will expand output. They will enhance
the
productivity of American workers. Studies show that a 10 percent increase in government
infrastructure investment grows national output by over 1 percent in the long run.8
Our plan will also bring high-speed internet to unserved and underserved communities across
the country. During the pandemic, I heard heartbreaking stories about parents who drove each
day to parking lots with wi-fi so their children could complete their homework online.9 With
this closing of the digital divide, more children will be able to complete their online
schoolwork right at home. The economic opportunities for millions of Americans currently
without adequate internet service will be broadened. Regardless of where they live, they will
have access to new jobs or customers around the world.
Economists have also long underscored the contribution of investments in research and
development to American productivity growth. While recent attention on the CHIPS Act has
been focused on semiconductor manufacturing, our plan also authorizes tens of billions in
federal government investment into research and development across a range of agencies.
This authorization could not come too soon: the United States now ranks tenth in the world
in terms of R&D investments as a share of output. Over half a century ago, the federal
government spent 1.9 percent of GDP on R&D, in part to fuel the race to the moon. In recent
years, it has spent a third of that. The estimated cost of the retreat in public R&D is $200
billion per year in lost economic output.10 Meanwhile, competitors in China and the rest of the

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Remarks by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen at Ford Rouge Electric Vehicle Center | U.S. Department of the Tre…

world are marching forward. The Biden economic plan marks our governmentʼs intent to
return to serious scientific research and innovation.
Iʼve heard laments of the days when America built and America innovated. The Biden
economic plan provides significant investments in the capacity of the American economy to
do just that.

B. Building Economic Resilience
The second critical impact of the Biden Administrationʼs modern supply-side agenda is to
improve American economic resiliency. Americans know the unsettling feeling of seeing empty
new car lots – or volatile gas prices due to supply shocks beyond our control. Since the private
sector does not always optimize their supply chain to consider external risks, government has
a critical role to play.
We have become too vulnerable to countries like China using their market advantages in
certain technologies or natural resources to exercise leverage against other countries for
their own benefit. Our plan takes significant steps toward reducing these economic and
national security risks. At the same time, we will maintain mutually beneficial trade and keep
our deep ties with other countries. This begins with two sectors that are core to 21st century
resilience: semiconductors and energy.
While semiconductors are found everywhere in everyday goods, the United States produces
only 12 percent of semiconductors today. That is down from more than a third in the 1990s.11
The impact of a chip shortage has recently been felt acutely across our economy. Factories
have been idled and consumers have faced skyrocketing prices for cars and other goods that
rely on chips as a key input.
Our plan, which is powered by the CHIPS law, provides around $40 billion in incentives to
onshore semiconductor manufacturing in the United States. That helps support the cost of
investing here rather than elsewhere. There will be greater certainty in our increasingly
technology-dependent economy. Progress has already been made: a number of
semiconductor manufacturers have already announced expansions of their U.S. footprint since
passage of the law.12
The past few years have also reminded us of our vulnerability to geopolitical and climaterelated shocks. These shocks have increased in both frequency and scale. As I speak here, the
southwest United States is in a “megadrought” – an ongoing 22-year drought that is the
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Remarks by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen at Ford Rouge Electric Vehicle Center | U.S. Department of the Tre…

driest period in over 1,200 years.13As part of our plan, the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law
allocates around $50 billion toward climate resilience and weatherization. It will protect
farmers, homeowners, and communities against the increasing number and scale of droughts,
heat waves, and floods.14
Given the existential threat posed by climate change, it is imperative that we address it. Our
plan – powered by the Inflation Reduction Act – represents the largest investment in fighting
climate change in our countryʼs history. It will put us well on our way toward a future where
we depend on the wind, sun, and other clean sources for our energy. We will rid ourselves from
our current dependence on fossil fuels and the whims of autocrats like Putin.
In policy terms, experts estimate this law puts the United States on a path to reducing
emissions relative to 2005 levels by approximately 40% within the next eight years. That
places President Bidenʼs goal of cutting our emissions in half by 2030 well within reach. While
there is much more work to do, we can finally say to ourselves and to the world that we are
on a path to a net-zero emissions economy.
I am proud that Treasury is at the forefront of implementing this plan. Today, countries
representing around 90% of global GDP have made net-zero commitments by mid-century or
soon therea er.15 By mobilizing private capital, the clean energy tax credits implemented by
Treasury will propel our economy and workers to a leadership position in the fastest growing
markets and technologies of today and the future, with positive spillovers to the rest of the
world.
This includes the U.S. clean vehicle sector, where we can expect greater investment – and
more good jobs, like the ones here at Ford – as we develop the supply chain here at home.
Further, in the process of boosting domestic clean energy production, the law will support our
energy security and insulate us from the type of fossil fuel-driven energy volatility that weʼve
seen in the past year.

III. ECONOMIC FAIRNESS
I want to end by speaking about fairness in the economy. To me, fairness is a goal of policy.
And itʼs a moral issue. But progress has been elusive: long before the virus arrived, we were
living in an economy where wealth built upon wealth and a growing number of working
families – and communities – were being le behind.

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Remarks by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen at Ford Rouge Electric Vehicle Center | U.S. Department of the Tre…

The modern supply-side policies that I spoke of are not just pro-growth. They are also profairness. The traditional approach to supply-side economics – which focuses on providing tax
incentives to owners of capital in order to boost private investment – has, in many cases,
contributed to deepening income and wealth disparities. We saw that in the previous
Administrationʼs signature piece of economic legislation – a tax bill that overwhelmingly
benefitted the wealthiest Americans and biggest corporations.
In contrast, the modern supply-side agenda is concerned with a broad range of productivityboosting investments and with a broad distribution across sectors, people, and places. It
recognizes that investing in disadvantaged communities o en results in higher returns on
investment. And it boosts growth by tapping all our resources. In laymanʼs terms, this
approach embraces the notion that some of the best opportunities for growth occur when we
invest in people and places that have been forgotten and overlooked.
We know that a disproportionate share of economic opportunity has been concentrated in
major coastal cities. Investments from the Biden economic plan have already begun shi ing
this dynamic. Given its manufacturing focus – and manufacturingʼs reliance on strong
infrastructure and supply chains – we expect to see dollars catalyze innovative investments
across cities and towns that havenʼt seen such investment in years.
As an example, to spur regional economic development, the Commerce Department will
establish at least 20 regional technology and innovation hubs. They will be geographically
dispersed with priority for underserved and underrepresented communities. Such dispersal of
economic opportunity across the country will mean good new jobs in industries of the future.
It will also lead to cascading economic progress for local communities that are so vital to the
economic and social fabric of this country.
Beyond our growth strategy, the Administration is also focused on other ways to build
fairness in our economy. That includes fixing the tax system.
With the Presidentʼs leadership, we secured $80 billion of funding for the IRS. That reverses a
decade of steep decline.16 Billions of dollars will go toward tangible improvements that
taxpayers will see when they interact with the IRS. We will have improved customer service;
more answered calls; expedited return processing and refunds; updated computer systems;
and simplified tax filings.
Furthermore, this funding will also help correct a two-tiered tax system by ensuring that large
corporations and high-income earners cannot avoid paying the taxes they owe. The tax gap –
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the amount of money that is owed but not paid to the IRS – is huge. It is estimated at $7
trillion over the next decade. And itʼs disproportionately concentrated among high earners.
These earners have more complex and opaque sources of income. And due to the IRSʼ
resource constraints, they are very rarely audited. That means that an increased burden in
funding our government and investing in our economy falls on working- and middle-class
families that are doing everything right.
These resources will enable the IRS to increase audits of taxpayers at the high end and collect
taxes from those who have not paid their full bill. I have made clear that this funding will not
be used to raise audit rates relative to recent years for households making under $400,000
annually. Rather, with the right technological infrastructure in place, audit rates for honest
taxpayers will actually decline.
This funding will help the IRS to collect billions in revenue, which can be used to reduce the
deficit, fund additional public investments, or lower taxes for working families. Combined with
the corporate tax reforms in the law, this funding also represents some of the most
significant steps weʼve taken in recent years to build a fairer and more e ective tax system.

IV. CLOSING
To summarize, the decisive actions taken by President Biden to vaccinate individuals and
control the virus saved countless American lives. These lifesaving measures were
accompanied by policies to revive and reinvigorate the economy. Over the past year and a half,
the United States has experienced a historic jobs recovery; expanded our capacity for
sustainable, resilient growth; and advanced economic fairness.
So – where do we go from here?
As we look to the fall and the months beyond, our Administration is ready to build on the
achievements of the past year.
The most immediate challenge is to return to an environment of stable prices without
sacrificing the economic gains of the past two years. To ensure our long-term economic
stability, we must keep our public finances on sound footing. We will build on the momentum
of the Inflation Reduction Actʼs corporate tax reforms to advocate for additional reforms of
our tax code and the global tax system. This includes closing loopholes and returning tax
rates for high earners and corporations to historical norms. By making everyone pay their fair

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share, these reforms will provide our government with additional fiscal room to make critical
investments.
We will also continue to support sustainable, resilient growth. In the coming months, we
expect to see significant movements of private capital into growing industries, such as clean
energy production and semiconductor fabrication. We will coordinate permitting reform
across the government to speed up these investments while upholding bedrock standards
and laws. We also understand the importance of reliable and sustainable sourcing of raw
minerals and materials – such as polysilicon, lithium and cobalt, and iron and steel – as we
build the chips, batteries, and infrastructure of the future.
We especially understand the urgency of investing in and expanding Americaʼs most valuable
economic asset: our workforce. Programs like free community college and expanded
workforce training increase the productivity of our labor force. Further, we must invest in
structural reforms that increase our labor force participation rate. A wide body of research
has shown that high-quality, a ordable childcare and free preschool increase the likelihood
that parents, particularly mothers, will participate in the workforce. They also provide lasting
benefits on the outcomes of their children.
Lastly, we will continue to pursue economic fairness. The policies I have just outlined – from
the tax reforms to a ordable childcare – are powerful tools to level the playing field. But
there is more. In particular, I believe it is a national imperative to increase the a ordability of
housing, which will confer substantial health, social, and economic benefits on low- and
middle-income families.
Simply put, it should be easy – not hard – to put a roof over your head. Even as the
Administrationʼs policies prevented the tsunami of pandemic-related evictions that we had
feared, we must continue advancing our coordinated government approach to expand the
supply of housing.
For all there is le to do, I will say this: a er the progress we have made over the past few
months, I am more optimistic about the course of our economy than I have been for quite a
while. We are headed in the right direction.
Thank you.

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1 https://www.nytimes.com/2021/01/19/us/politics/biden-inauguration-coronavirus.html
2 https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/#trends_dailydeaths_select_00
3 https://www.transportation.gov/briefing-room/dot-lays-out-actions-strengthen-supply-chains-and-revitaliz e-economy
4 https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/jy0887
5 https://www.hhs.gov/about/news/2022/08/07/statement-by-hhs-secretary-xavier-becerra-on-senate-passage-of-the-inflationreduction-act.html
6 https://www.bts.gov/content/condition-us-highway-bridges
7 https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2021/07/28/fact-sheet-historic-bipartisan-infrastructure-deal
8 https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/joes.12037 (as cited in https://www.whitehouse.gov/cea/writtenmaterials/2021/11/15/the-time-is-now-to-moderniz e-u-s-infrastructure)
9 https://www.nytimes.com/2020/05/05/technology/parking-lots-wifi-coronavirus.html
10 https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/Innovation-Investment-and-Inclusion-CEA-April-23-2021-1.pdf

11 https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2022/01/21/fact-sheet-biden-harris-administration-bringingsemiconductor-manufacturing-back-to-america-2/
12 https://investors.micron.com/news-releases/news-release-details/micron-announces-40-billion-investment-leading-edgememory; https://www.reuters.com/technology/qualcomm-globalfoundries-sign-pact-double-chip-manufacturing-2022-08-08/.
13 https://www.nature.com/articles/s41558-022-01290-z .epdf?sharing_token=mrpFQPUp8z -4Fl6jPhKfNRgN0jAjWel9jnR3ZoTv0OkweMbawmVFM1UCLmLxuyBpGKtFJa1_Bxz J7UFQSQZ6Emv9HL6pPShd4a33wO3LD9oaV6S5ENjO429qQVjjCMtKbY32gFCcenz 4I68d_9s470cKB61XvVL09PBRG_HtdZC_TP5UQtsWi-OewYIYYnwCyFFew3HqGLeCFscmRU8KbbVq0W-msEUuBlfaUdjw%3D&tracking_referrer=www.washingtonpost.com
14 https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/BUILDING-A-BETTER-AMERICA_FINAL.pdf
15 https://z erotracker.net/analysis/net-z ero-stocktake-2022
16 https://home.treasury.gov/system/files/136/The-American-Families-Plan-Tax-Compliance-Agenda.pdf

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