thumbs: The new industrial revolution and wages

CONSTRUCTIVE REMEDIES NEEDED 250 
difficulty of carrying out such a program. The great difficulty 
is in creating and maintaining an impartial and effective gov- 
ernment agency to exercise the necessary control to prevent 
intolerable abuses by huge business combinations. . . . 
I heartily endorse Mr. Javits’ suggestion that industry 
should create its own organization to deal with industrial 
problems instead of depending entirely or chiefly upon gov- 
ernment action. Certain it is, that business as a whole must 
be better coordinated than it has been in times past if we are 
to secure real prosperity, which can be attained only through 
a reasonable coordination and uniformity in our industrial 
levelopment and expansion. 
Only by such coordinated efforts to prevent over-expansion 
of investment and production in some lines to the detriment 
of all kinds of business enterprise can we prevent violent 
price upheavals accompanied by business depressions, crises 
and unemployment. The government should do everything 
possible to help smooth out the price and employment curves, 
but business itself must assume the principal burden in bring- 
ing about a better business organization, which will ensure 
stable prices, expanding production, full-time employment, 
and true prosperity for the whole country. 
President George M. Verity, of the American Rolling 
Mill Company, stated his entire sympathy for the new 
proposals, and the real need of working out a practical 
plan, but doubted somewhat whether industry had reached 
the point where it would realize its needs and cooperate 
on a national basis. He said: 
I have read Mr. Javits’ article with a great deal of inter- 
est. I agree with his main argument fully; in fact, I feel he 
has stated the situation definitely and clearly. 
That, however, leaves us just where we began and where 
we always land; what are we going to do about it? . . . 
I feel that each and all of our outstanding basic industries 
must first reach a point where they see the need of it and are 
willing “to think and act in terms of the general good.” Until
	        
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