Published March 16, 2007 10:32 pm - America is poised to undergo a period of enormous technological change in the next 25 years, but government at all levels is going to have to change as well, according to Newt Gingrich, former Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives.
Gingrich visits Meadville for Excalibur foundation
By Keith Gushard
03/17/07
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America is poised to undergo a period of enormous technological change in the next 25 years, but government at all levels is going to have to change as well, according to Newt Gingrich, former Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives.
“It’s almost as if we live in two different worlds,” said Gingrich, a Republican who served in Congress for 20 years, the last four as speaker. He made the remarks to a crowd of 330 at Meadville Area Senior High School at a fund-raiser for the Excalibur Charitable Foundation.
“On the one hand, we have breakthroughs in the private sector where business is able to produce more with less,” he said. “On the other hand, you have government with a fossilized bureaucracy set in 1965. The challenge for our nation is getting the things that work (in the private sector) to migrate into government,” Gingrich said.
With technological advances such as computers and cell phones, a small business now can be wired to the whole world and sell worldwide instantly, Gingrich said.
He cited the example of a person being able to track packages via computer at each stage of their shipment, yet the government can’t track and locate the estimated 13 million illegal immigrants in this country.
He doesn’t blame illegal immigrants themselves for the problem, but U.S. businesses that hire illegals and the federal government for not enforcing immigration laws.
Gingrich said he wants to see a guest worker program where immigrants get on the path to U.S. citizenship.
They would have to obey all U.S. laws or face expulsion within 48 hours; not vote in any other country; and English would become the official language of the government, Gingrich said.
Because of increased competition, business models can change rapidly and small business is better at adapting than big business, but government is slow-moving and top-heavy, he said.
Gingrich said he’s convinced America can succeed economically while facing ever increasing competition from China and India as those countries develop their economies.
However, it will take reform of litigation, regulation, education, taxes, health care and energy policy for the U.S. to do so, he said.
He said America turns out more lawyers than engineers annually while China does the opposite.
Tax laws need to be reformed to encourage both saving and investment, he said.
Gingrich favors having tax write-offs of 100 percent in one year on equipment so business will invest in new equipment each year. He also favors ending taxes on savings and abolishing inheritance taxes.
“That’s the threat to business,” Gingrich said of inheritance taxes.