The Threat to Business C57
wrong with business, and that if it were not so, these
meetings would be useless and would not be called.
But it is certainly highly important to keep business
moving steadily, in order to prevent the demand for
goods from slowing down too much, and also to
enable the customer to keep up his payments on in-
stallment purchases. If the Washington conferences
really have the effect of maintaining a little more
steadiness and activity in business they will probably
be worth while.”
As President Hoover himself has said, action
counts, not words. Of necessity the Washington
conferences dealt chiefly in words, because the action
following their deliberation required a great deal of
time before the moneys pledged for industrial pro-
grams could be applied. For the most part the coun-
try must take the situation as it is, with an undoubted
record in business recession, already achieved. but
also with many elements of reassurance.
Evidence of Dislocation
There are already evidences of some recession,
the roots of which were in the declines of automo-
bile production and building before the crash. These
declines have doubtless been accentuated by the
crash, but they represent a natural slowing down in
these industries due to the fact that the public is
nearer the “saturation point.” After the war there
was a great dearth of building, and the attempt to
fill the void led to a building boom which had largely
spent itself during 1929. It is quite possible, indeed