222 INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION AND WAGES In this American philosophy you may find economic chiv- alry by looking for it. If you do, it is implicit there. The conscious view is still pragmatic. Any other is obscured in a curious way. Long before, this state of society had been imagined, in which the desire for private gain as the para- mount economic motive should yield to the idea of social function; but nobody had ever imagined it would really pay. THE ESSENCE oF THE NEW INDUSTRIAL ORDER Corroborative citations as to the attitude of mind and principles of action of American trade, industry, and finance might be greatly multiplied. No such basis of proof, however, is necessary. The new order hds become a commonplace. Industry itself has even passed the point of being conscious of the revolutionary changes in thought and procedure which have occurred during the past five years. The old order of thinking and action has practically been forgotten. The employer now has come to sed the wage-earner as a consumer as well as a producer. The workers themselves and their leaders have had the vision of their real signifi- cance as producers, and of the relation of their possibilities in economic and social well-being to their productivity. Financiers, captains of industry and the leaders of or- ganized labor have accepted the fact that their mutual in- terests lie in increasing industrial output, reducing costs, and stimulating consumption and profits by better service and lower prices. The net result has been that the em- ployer, realizing that the continuing profitableness of in- dustry is dependent upon an expansion in purchasing power, has willingly accepted and declared that there may be indeterminate wage-increases as long as costs are not in- creased and the proper margin of profit is maintained. Organized labor has also given its adherence to this point