President Hoover Acts 29 large reserves of our leading industries, which had providently plowed-back into surpluses from their expanded earnings of recent years. It could be provided by new public and private issues of securi- ties, especially of bonded securities. For this purpose, Chairman Barnes points out, vast credits are available to such extent that money rates have gone down. Until confidence is fully restored and business is again in full volume there should be the certainty that our credit structure will be more than equal to the extensions demanded. That should tide the country over the period of dislocation. But it might be objected that interest and sinking fund payments would soon become due on the added bond issues—installment payments on the country’s added circulation of purchasing power which will add to public and private burdens. But these burdens can be better carried if the dislocation produced by the panic is prevented from destroying real values in enforced idleness and depreciation of plant and product, unemployment, and business stagnation. Of course added public and private expenditures in emergencies must be controlled in such manner that new credit issues shall not increase faster than the supply of goods. The aim should be an increase in real income; that is, the distribution of greater quantities of goods on a stable level of prices. To achieve this dynamic balance on an expanding pro- gram requires the codrdination of data from many sources in indexes of production, trade, employ- ment and consumption. It will require the coordi-