26 ~~ The Stock Market Crash—And After “This may be done in two ways: first, by putting additional value into goods or reducing prices to the level of actual values, and, second, starting a move- ment to increase the general wage level. Nearly everything in this country is too high priced. The only thing that should be high priced in this country is the man who works. Wages must not come down, they must not even stay on their present level; they must go up.” It may or may not be true that all goods at a given time are too high priced—probably it is not true; it may not be true that prices should be reduced, until costs are reduced; but it is true that the cost of production should be reduced all the time, with con- sequent enhancement of profits and of consumer income. It may be added that Mr. Ford “made good” upon his words by reducing the prices of his product to the public and increasing the wages of his employees, thus at once showing what might be done by the leader of our greatest industry and manifest- ing his confidence in the underlying factors of busi- ness. But if consumer purchasing power were the desid- eratum, some method had to be devised for stimu- lating payments to workers by industries both in large-scale and small-scale production. Not all of these industries were in the fortunate circumstances of Mr. Ford’s, which had benefited by intensive economies and consequent rapid reduction of unit costs. The problem was to benefit the wage earners in the whole gamut of American industries, big and