LOWER COSTS AND HIGHER WAGES 213
order to maintain and increase the prosperity of the
~ountry.?
The continuance of good times for the employed and of
general business prosperity [he stated] depends largely upon
maintaining throughout this land the highest possible wage
rate that can be paid to those who labor for a livelihood. It
matters not what the occupation may be, the common laborer,
the mechanic, the bank clerk, the professional subordinate of
all classes should be more seriously considered by those who
are their employers.
We should rise above paying only such wages as the sup-
ply and demand requires us to do; we should pay a living
wage to all, and then with well-paid assistance hustle to con-
tinue in business.
The wage-earners constitute the great majority of our pop-
ulation. These people are the spenders of the nation, and
upon their ability to spend freely the general business of our
country depends. Manufactured products of all kinds must be
furnished them as well as the necessary staples of life. It is
the wage of these people that makes good times or bad,
dependent on what they are earning over and above the
actual necessities of life.
The farmer and the tradesman look to them as a market
for their products, and if the wage-earner is short of funds
all trade suffers and general business suffers severely.
The standard of life among the masses has not advanced
greatly since the World War, and it must not move backward.
One of our leading merchants and publicists, Edward
A. Filene, of Boston, has taken, so far as the international
aspect of the matter is concerned, an attitude opposed to
Mr. Untermyer. While recognizing the policy of mass
Production and high wages as the foundation of American
prosperity, he contends also that its stability is in large
measure dependent upon increasing the buying power of
. 1 “Speeding Up For Prosperity,” by Samuel M. Vauclain, President, Bald-
win Locomative Works, Philadelphia; Nation's Business. Nay. 1928.