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The U.S. Chamber of Commerce has a couple of hilarious press releases.
The
first says that trade has been good for Michigan. The group
commits accounting malpractice by telling us only how much Michigan
exports, without discussing the other side of the ledger...
imports. And no mention of outsourcing. Odd. The full
release is below the fold. I wonder if some people, outside of
Michigan, actually believe them. Oh yeah. McCain believes
it.
The second says
that the U.S. Columbia trade agreement "will bring real benefits to
American workers, farmers and companies." Its really nice that they are
trying to help the farmers, even though farmers are not Chamber members.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASEMarch 20,
2008
Contact: Eric Wohlschlegel
Michigan Workers Economic Prosperity Depends
On Strong Trade and Transportation
LANSING, MIThe U.S. Chamber of Commerce today kicked off a nationwide
grassroots and advocacy campaign on the critical role of trade and
transportation to Americas workers, consumers, and businesses.
In a speech to the Lansing Regional Chamber of Commerce and the
Michigan State University International Business Center, Tom Donohue,
president and CEO of the U.S. Chamber said, We have to wake up to our
growing infrastructure challenges and the importance of opening up our
markets if Michigan is going to remain competitive globally. We cannot
effectively move people and goods with overcongested airports and
ports, as well as crumbling roads and bridges.
The Lansing event marks the kickoff of a campaign to raise awareness of
the important roles that a strong infrastructure and open trade
policies play in our nations economic well-being. The campaign
combines the Chambers multimillion-dollar Lets Rebuild America
initiative with the organizations TradeRoots program, which helps
educate small and medium-size businesses on the benefits of trade.
Michigan Transportation Fact: Vehicle travel has increased by 27% from
1990 to 2004jumping from more than 81 billion vehicle miles traveled
in 1990 to more than 103 billion vehicle miles in 2004. At the same
time, total lane miles increased by 4 %. The resulting delays from
bottlenecks cost Michigan consumers more than $32 an hour due to
congestion, unnecessary fuel usage, and lost time and productivity,
according to the American Highway Users Alliance and the American
Trucking Associations.
Michigan Trade Fact: Michigan exports $37.6 billion in manufactured
goods to the world. Eighty-eight percent of the 12,100 Michigan
businesses that sell their products overseas are small and medium-size
companies. With a stable transportation infrastructure in place,
Michigan can improve the efficient and safe movement of goods and
people, and consumers will benefit from lower prices and greater.
You
cant move goods in and out of your state without a strong
infrastructure, continued Donohue. Our job is to get everyone
talking, identify legislation to spur investment in transportation, and
open more doors for businesses so that they can take advantage of
opportunities to sell their products and services abroad.
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce is the worlds largest business federation
representing more than 3 million businesses and organizations of every
size, sector, and region.
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