On a Sunday night a week after
my Inauguration I used the radio to tell you about
the banking crisis and the measures we were taking
to meet it. I think that in that way I made clear
to the country various facts that might otherwise
have been misunderstood and in general provided a
means of understanding which did much to restore confidence.
Tonight, eight weeks later,
I come for the second time to give you my report --
in the same spirit and by the same means to tell you
about what we have been doing and what we are planning
to do.
Two months ago we were facing
serious problems. The country was dying by inches.
It was dying because trade and commerce had declined
to dangerously low levels; prices for basic commodities
were such as to destroy the value of the assets of
national institutions such as banks, savings banks,
insurance companies, and others. These institutions,
because of their great needs, were foreclosing mortgages,
calling loans, refusing credit. Thus there was actually
in process of destruction the property of millions
of people who had borrowed money on that property
in terms of dollars which had had an entirely different
value from the level of March, 1933. That situation
in that crisis did not call for any complicated consideration
of economic panaceas or fancy plans. We were faced
by a condition and not a theory.
There were just two alternatives:
The first was to allow the foreclosures to continue,
credit to be withheld and money to go into hiding,
and thus forcing liquidation and bankruptcy of banks,
railroads and insurance companies and a recapitalizing
of all business and all property on a lower level.
This alternative meant a continuation of what is loosely
called "deflation", the net result of which
would have been extraordinary hardship on all property
owners and, incidentally, extraordinary hardships
on all persons working for wages through an increase
in unemployment and a further reduction of the wage
scale.
It is easy to see that the
result of this course would have not only economic
effects of a very serious nature but social results
that might bring incalculable harm. Even before I
was inaugurated I came to the conclusion that such
a policy was too much to ask the American people to
bear. It involved not only a further loss of homes,
farms, savings and wages but also a loss of spiritual
values -- the loss of that sense of security for the
present and the future so necessary to the peace and
contentment of the individual and of his family. When
you destroy these things you will find it difficult
to establish confidence of any sort in the future.
It was clear that mere appeals from Washington for
confidence and the mere lending of more money to shaky
institutions could not stop this downward course.
A prompt program applied as quickly as possible seemed
to me not only justified but imperative to our national
security. The Congress, and when I say Congress I
mean the members of both political parties, fully
understood this and gave me generous and intelligent
support. The members of Congress realized that the
methods of normal times had to be replaced in the
emergency by measures which were suited to the serious
and pressing requirements of the moment. There was
no actual surrender of power, Congress still retained
its constitutional authority and no one has the slightest
desire to change the balance of these powers. The
function of Congress is to decide what has to be done
and to select the appropriate agency to carry out
its will. This policy it has strictly adhered to.
The only thing that has been happening has been to
designate the President as the agency to carry out
certain of the purposes of the Congress. This was
constitutional and in keeping with the past American
tradition.
The legislation which has been
passed or in the process of enactment can properly
be considered as part of a well-grounded plan.
First, we are giving opportunity
of employment to one-quarter of a million of the unemployed,
especially the young men who have dependents, to go
into the forestry and flood prevention work. This
is a big task because it means feeding, clothing and
caring for nearly twice as many men as we have in
the regular army itself. In creating this civilian
conservation corps we are killing two birds with one
stone. We are clearly enhancing the value of our natural
resources and second, we are relieving an appreciable
amount of actual distress. This great group of men
have entered upon their work on a purely voluntary
basis, no military training is involved and we are
conserving not only our natural resources but our
human resources. One of the great values to this work
is the fact that it is direct and requires the intervention
of very little machinery. Second, I have requested
the Congress and have secured action upon a proposal
to put the great properties owned by our Government
at Muscle Shoals to work after long years of wasteful
inaction, and with this a broad plan for the improvement
of a vast area in the Tennessee Valley. It will add
to the comfort and happiness of hundreds of thousands
of people and the incident benefits will reach the
entire nation.
Next, the Congress is about
to pass legislation that will greatly ease the mortgage
distress among the farmers and the home owners of
the nation, by providing for the easing of the burden
of debt now bearing so heavily upon millions of our
people.
Our next step in seeking immediate
relief is a grant of half a billion dollars to help
the states, counties and municipalities in their duty
to care for those who need direct and Immediate relief.
The Congress also passed legislation
authorizing the sale of beer in such states as desired.
This has already resulted in considerable reemployment
and, incidentally, has provided much needed tax revenue.
We are planning to ask the
Congress for legislation to enable the Government
to undertake public works, thus stimulating directly
and indirectly the employment of many others in well-considered
projects.
Further legislation has been
taken up which goes much more fundamentally into our
economic problems. The Farm Relief Bill seeks by the
use of several methods, alone or together, to bring
about an increased return to farmers for their major
farm products, seeking at the same time to prevent
in the days to come disastrous over-production which
so often in the past has kept farm commodity prices
far below a reasonable return. This measure provides
wide powers for emergencies. The extent of its use
will depend entirely upon what the future has in store.
Well-considered and conservative
measures will likewise be proposed which will attempt
to give to the industrial workers of the country a
more fair wage return, prevent cut-throat competition
and unduly long hours for labor, and at the same time
to encourage each industry to prevent over-production.
Our Railroad Bill falls into
the same class because it seeks to provide and make
certain definite planning by the railroads themselves,
with the assistance of the Government, to eliminate
the duplication and waste that is now resulting in
railroad receiverships and continuing operating deficits.
I am certain that the people of this country understand
and approve the broad purposes behind these new governmental
policies relating to agriculture and industry and
transportation. We found ourselves faced with more
agricultural products than we could possibly consume
ourselves and surpluses which other nations did not
have the cash to buy from us except at prices ruinously
low. We have found our factories able to turn out
more goods than we could possibly consume, and at
the same time we were faced with a falling export
demand. We found ourselves with more facilities to
transport goods and crops than there were goods and
crops to be transported. All of this has been caused
in large part by a complete lack of planning and a
complete failure to understand the danger signals
that have been flying ever since the close of the
World War. The people of this country have been erroneously
encouraged to believe that they could keep on increasing
the output of farm and factory indefinitely and that
some magician would find ways and means for that increased
output to be consumed with reasonable profit to the
producer.
Today we have reason to believe
that things are a little better than they were two
months ago. Industry has picked up, railroads are
carrying more freight, farm prices are better, but
I am not going to indulge in issuing proclamations
of overenthusiastic assurance. We cannot bally-ho
ourselves back to prosperity. I am going to be honest
at all times with the people of the country. I do
not want the people of this country to take the foolish
course of letting this improvement come back on another
speculative wave. I do not want the people to believe
that because of unjustified optimism we can resume
the ruinous practice of increasing our crop output
and our factory output in the hope that a kind providence
will find buyers at high prices. Such a course may
bring us immediate and false prosperity but it will
be the kind of prosperity that will lead us into another
tailspin. It is wholly wrong to call the measure that
we have taken Government control of farming, control
of industry, and control of transportation. It is
rather a partnership between Government and farming
and industry and transportation, not partnership in
profits, for the profits would still go to the citizens,
but rather a partnership in planning and partnership
to see that the plans are carried out.
Let me illustrate with an example.
Take the cotton goods industry. It is probably true
that ninety per cent of the cotton manufacturers would
agree to eliminate starvation wages, would agree to
stop long hours of employment, would agree to stop
child labor, would agree to prevent an overproduction
that would result in unsalable surpluses. But, what
good is such an agreement if the other ten per cent
of cotton manufacturers pay starvation wages, require
long hours, employ children in their mills and turn
out burdensome surpluses? The unfair ten per cent
could produce goods so cheaply that the fair ninety
per cent would be compelled to meet the unfair conditions.
Here is where government comes in. Government ought
to have the right and will have the right, after surveying
and planning for an industry to prevent, with the
assistance of the overwhelming majority of that industry,
unfair practice and to enforce this agreement by the
authority of government. The so-called anti-trust
laws were intended to prevent the creation of monopolies
and to forbid unreasonable profits to those monopolies.
That purpose of the anti-trust laws must be continued,
but these laws were never intended to encourage the
kind of unfair competition that results in long hours,
starvation wages and overproduction.The same principle
applies to farm products and to transportation and
every other field of organized private industry.
We are working toward a definite
goal, which is to prevent the return of conditions
which came very close to destroying what we call modern
civilization. The actual accomplishment of our purpose
cannot be attained in a day. Our policies are wholly
within purposes for which our American Constitutional
Government was established 150 years ago.
I know that the people of this
country will understand this and will also understand
the spirit in which we are undertaking this policy.
I do not deny that we may make mistakes of procedure
as we carry out the policy. I have no expectation
of making a hit every time I come to bat. What I seek
is the highest possible batting average, not only
for myself but for the team. Theodore Roosevelt once
said to me: "If I can be right 75 per cent of
the time I shall come up to the fullest measure of
my hopes."
Much has been said of late
about Federal finances and inflation, the gold standard,
etc. Let me make the facts very simple and my policy
very clear. In the first place, government credit
and government currency are really one and the same
thing. Behind government bonds there is only a promise
to pay. Behind government currency we have, in addition
to the promise to pay, a reserve of gold and a small
reserve of silver. In this connection it is worth
while remembering that in the past the government
has agreed to redeem nearly thirty billions of its
debts and its currency in gold, and private corporations
in this country have agreed to redeem another sixty
or seventy billions of securities and mortgages in
gold. The government and private corporations were
making these agreements when they knew full well that
all of the gold in the United States amounted to only
between three and four billions and that all of the
gold in all of the world amounted to only about eleven
billions.
If the holders of these promises
to pay started in to demand gold the first comers
would get gold for a few days and they would amount
to about one twenty-fifth of the holders of the securities
and the currency. The other twenty-four people out
of twenty-five, who did not happen to be at the top
of the line, would be told politely that there was
no more gold left. We have decided to treat all twenty-five
in the same way in the interest of justice and the
exercise of the constitutional powers of this government.
We have placed every one on the same basis in order
that the general good may be preserved.
Nevertheless, gold, and to
a partial extent silver, are perfectly good bases
for currency and that is why I decided not to let
any of the gold now in the country go out of it.
A series of conditions arose
three weeks ago which very readily might have meant,
first,a drain on our gold by foreign countries, and
secondly, as a result of that, a flight of American
capital, in the form of gold, out of our country.
It is not exaggerating the
possibility to tell you that such an occurrence might
well have taken from us the major part of our gold
reserve and resulted in such a further weakening of
our government and private credit as to bring on actual
panic conditions and the complete stoppage of the
wheels of industry.
The Administration has the
definite objective of raising commodity prices to
such an extent that those who have borrowed money
will, on the average, be able to repay that money
in the same kind of dollar which they borrowed. We
do not seek to let them get such a cheap dollar that
they will be able to pay bock a great deal less than
they borrowed. In other words, we seek to correct
a wrong and not to create another wrong in the opposite
direction. That is why powers are being given to the
Administration to provide, if necessary, for an enlargement
of credit, in order to correct the existing wrong.
These powers will be used when, as, and if it may
be necessary to accomplish the purpose.
Hand in hand with the domestic
situation which, of course, is our first concern,
is the world situation, and I want to emphasize to
you that the domestic situation is inevitably and
deeply tied in with the conditions in all of the other
nations of the world. In other words, we can get,
in all probability, a fair measure of prosperity return
in the United States, but it will not be permanent
unless we get a return to prosperity all over the
world.
In the conferences which we
have held and are holding with the leaders of other
nations, we are seeking four great objectives. First,
a general reduction of armaments and through this
the removal of the fear of invasion and armed attack,
and, at the same time, a reduction in armament costs,
in order to help in the balancing ofgovernment budgets
and the reduction of taxation. Secondly, a cutting
down of the trade barriers, in order to re-start the
flow of exchange of crops and goods between nations.
Third, the setting up of a stabilization of currencies,
in order that trade can make contracts ahead. Fourth,
the reestablishment of friendly relations and greater
confidence between all nations.
Our foreign visitors these
past three weeks have responded to these purposes
in a very helpful way. All of the Nations have suffered
alike in this great depression. They have all reached
the conclusion that each can best be helped by the
common action of all. It is in this spirit that our
visitors have met with us and discussed our common
problems. The international conference that lies before
us must succeed. The future of the world demands it
and we have each of us pledged ourselves to the best
Joint efforts to this end.
To you, the people of this
country, all of us, the Members of the Congress and
the members of this Administration owe a profound
debt of gratitude. Throughout the depression you have
been patient. You have granted us wide powers, you
have encouraged us with a wide-spread approval of
our purposes. Every ounce of strength and every resource
at our command we have devoted to the end of justifying
your confidence. We are encouraged to believe that
a wise and sensible beginning has been made. In the
present spirit of mutual confidence and mutual encouragement
we go forward.