LOWER COSTS AND HIGHER WAGES 201 general increases in consumption and general purchasing power. This expansion in the demand for commodities, it was assumed, would in turn also make possible further wage advances and prosperity, for the reason that the wid- ening demand for and consumption of manufactured prod- ucts would enable greater economies to be realized through mass production. Since the year 1923, therefore, American industry has proceeded more and more upon these assumptions. Wage- cuts as a means of heading off depressions have been dis- carded as a worn-out fallacy. Increases in wages have been urged as a substitute. PurcHASING PowER or CoNsuMPTION URGED AS THE DoMINANT FACTOR IN PROGRESS So far as wage rates are concerned, the result of the adoption of this new view of progress has been indeed sur- prizing. The consuming power of the people has increased by leaps and bounds. Production has not only been guided at a comparatively even pace with advances in consump- tion, but has also been made to yield an increasing quantity of commodities at a lower level of prices. Standards of living of industrial employees throughout the country have risen to heights never before attained. What had been accomplished in this direction prior to 1923, and never realized, has been cited as an earnest of the still greater achievements possible. It has repeatedly been pointed out on all sides that there has been a great growth in our power to consume, due to greater productivity; that the increased use of what were formerly regarded as lux- uries has not been an extravagance or any retrenchment upon savings, but “the product of better organized effort” and a condition of continued prosperity. By way of illus- tration the Secretary of Labor, Mr. James J]. Davis. has