LOWER COSTS AND HIGHER WAGES 207
perity lay in higher wages and purchasing power of labor,
or, stated in general terms, on a more equitable! distribu-
ion of wealth produced. His statement, in part, was as
follows *
In my opinion, the ratio between production and consump-
lion cannot be balanced, corrected or materially improved
either by the creation of further credits or by regulating the
low of Government expenditures. The first cannot affect
the ultimate purchasing power or permanently increase either
production or consumption. Credits are already ample. The
banks are now overflowing with money, altho far too much of
it, in this section of the country, is being used in stock specu-
lation. Any manufacturer in fair standing with surplus
stocks of merchandise can borrow.
So far as concerns the ultimate effect of regulating Gov-
ernment expenditures, it would be about as important as a fly
on an elephant.
The only ways that occur to me of increasing production,
and relatively increasing consumption, so as to assure steady
employment, are by either adding to our exports or by resort-
ing to other means of increasing the purchasing power of our
own people.
The chances of relief from the first alternative are growing
dimmer day by day as the European nations are reviving
from the paralysis of the war and are becoming keener com-
petitors. We cannot hope to compete in the world’s markets
with pauper labor of Europe. The most we can do is to build
a “Chinese Wall” against flooding our markets with their
products.
Our most promising avenue of relief will, I think, be found
in the other alternative if it can be brought about. There
must be a wider distribution of wealth. The vast fortunes
and incomes therefrom in the hands of a relatively few indi-
viduals are not on the whole employed in manufacturing in-
dustries, nor is an adequate proportion of these fortunes and
1 New York Evening Post. February 11. 1928.