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Mayor Giuliani at Ceremony


Countering Budget Gaps with Budgetary Discipline

By Mayor Rudy Giuliani


There is no one way to fully measure the impact of the September 11th attacks on America. Our hearts have been broken and we have been tested in ways that most of us had not previously thought possible. Yet we have stood strong in the face of this atrocity, and we have asserted our fundamental human right to live in freedom from fear.

Our City and our Nation have never been stronger or more united, and our faith in the strengths of community and humanity has been bolstered by countless stories of heroism and sacrifice. It is this unprecedented unity and confident spirit that will lead us to a complete and remarkable recovery, as a City and as a Nation.

As a result of the attacks, our City's economy faces a new set of challenges. We have every reason to believe that these challenges can be overcome. The basic economic health of our City is stronger than it has been in decades. Over the last eight years, we have benefited from record job growth, business development, and civic revitalization. This economic rejuvenation has been the product of a number of different factors, but perhaps the most important has been our administration's emphasis on fiscal responsibility.

The growth in City spending has slowed significantly in recent years. Targeted cuts in taxes and spending have given our City a strong reputation for budgetary discipline, and have boosted confidence among the record number of consumers, businesses, and investors who have been attracted to our City over the last eight years.

Due to the present national recession and the enormous costs of rebuilding Lower Manhattan in the aftermath of September 11th, fiscal responsibility and budgetary discipline continue to be of the utmost importance. Accordingly, I have proposed a number of budget modifications that will help us weather the current economic downturn, and which will have as little effect as possible on the quality of services that our City provides. By reducing expenditures, we will be in a better position to rebound from the recent economic setbacks and will put our City on a faster track to complete recovery.

In October, I directed City agencies to implement an immediate spending and hiring freeze to help us recover from the estimated $1 billion in lost tax revenue stemming from the attacks on the World Trade Center. Realizing that more needs to be done to make up for the vast economic shortfalls following September 11th, I have now proposed making these spending and hiring freezes permanent, as well as making an additional set of modifications which will underscore our commitment to budgetary discipline and economic recovery.

Although the challenges we now face are substantial, our City has faced other significant budget gaps in the past. In fact, when I took office in 1994, I inherited a budget gap of approximately $2.25 billion - the most severe gap that any administration had to face in two decades. Our effective fiscal policy has turned that deficit around over the last eight years, and despite the recent shortfalls, we will leave Mayor-Elect Bloomberg with a budget surplus for the year 2002. I am confident that our lessons of budgetary responsibility will carry us through these troubling economic times.

Over the past three months, we have proven to the world that New Yorkers do not back down from challenges. Equipped with this strong momentum and the recognition that fiscal responsibility has been key to our City's economic boom over the past eight years, I know that New York City will overcome any challenges that we may face in the future.