President Barack Obama said on Oct. 16 that he wants to create tax incentives for businesses that innovate and create new jobs."I want to give every business in America a tax break so they can write off the cost of all new equipment they buy next year," the president said in his weekly radio address. "That's going to make it easier for folks to expand and hire new people."
The comments came after data showed the economy shed 95,000 jobs in September just weeks ahead of key mid-term elections.
The unemployment rate remained unchanged at 9.6% from August.
Obama also said he wanted to make the research and experimentation tax credit permanent as job creation depended on promoting new ideas and technologies.
He also said he wanted to provide a tax cut for clean energy manufacturing in America.
But Obama criticized previsions in the tax law that give billions of dollars in tax breaks to companies that create jobs and profits in other countries, saying: "I want to close these tax loopholes."
The president he said Republicans in Washington had consistently fought to keep these corporate loopholes open.
"Over the last four years alone, Republicans in the House voted 11 times to continue rewarding corporations that create jobs and profits overseas -- a policy that costs taxpayers billions of dollars every year," Obama said, adding: "That doesn't make a lot sense."
Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2010