64 The Stock Market Crash—dAnd After commitments. Because of such fear it might have suspended its plans for building factories. It might have retrenched in expenditures, it might have dis- charged employees, shut up works, and fallen into a state of paralysis which would spread as the unem- ployed in industry ceased to have purchasing power to sustain business. In that case, fear would have produced the same effect as if there were some reason in conditions themselves for a business depression. In particular, some business executives who sus- tained heavy personal losses in the stock market were, indeed, reduced to a state of panic, or overcaution in their commitments, so that they were not so ready to carry forward programs mapped out before the crash. Many executives in the important industrial concerns had believed in their own companies and had invested heavily in them. Undoubtedly this is true of the stocks of hundreds of companies. Under the impact of their losses these executives were ac- tually frightened into beginning to curtail operations, not so much because it accorded with their deliberate and reasoned judgment, but because of the abnormal state. of mind into which they had been thrown because of their personal losses. To the extent that these executives did shut down their shops or withhold business expenditures, their acts, engendered by fear, would cause unemployment and maldistribution of consumer purchasing power. In such a situation the emergency measures taken by the President and the United States Chamber of Commerce were calculated to allay the first effects