Gov. Luther H. Hodges of North Carolina, honorary
chairman of the National Committee of Business and Professional Men and
Women for Kennedy-Johnson, has reviewed with Senator John F. Kennedy, Democratic
presidential candidate, problems of particular concern to the business
community of the United States. Summarizing the high points of his replies
to specific questions, Senator Kennedy authorized the Governor to issue
the following statement:
The businessman's first concern is that of
every other citizen of the United States: the security, progress, and well-being
of our country. As principal innovator and organizer of economic activity
in our free enterprise system, he has the responsibility of making the
United States the most productive country in the world. The program of
the Democratic Party is dedicated to the achievement of a prosperous and
progressive economy.
The Republican Party has the reputation, among
businessmen in particular, of being the party of business. This is not
justified. We have had two recessions within the past 7 years under a Republican
administration. Many forecasters anticipate still a third recession. Idle
plant capacity is not good for business. The steel mills are now operating
at less than 55 percent of capacity. Automobile production has not been
much higher. Homebuilding is down drastically. Our railroads have never
adequately recovered from the 1957-58 recession. Our textile industry is
facing serious trouble. Corporate profits are declining. During the last
8 years, the number of business failures has been the highest in our history.
It is a matter of record that business had
prospered more under the Democrats. What is good for the country as a whole
is also good for business. The expansion of production and demand is the
best cure for what ails business. Expansion permits greater sales and higher
profits. Senator Kennedy is on record as favoring such a policy of expansion.
Getting down to specific problems of concern
to business, Senator Kennedy feels that the most effective antidote for
inflation is increased productivity and greater production. He advocates
a balanced budget, except during times of emergency affecting the national
security, or high rate of unemployment. Collective bargaining must take
public as well as private interest into account. Federal monetary and credit
policies must be applied equitably and with reasonable foresight as to
timing. The Republican tight-money policy, with the ostensible purpose
to stop inflation, has failed, probably because the inflation was not caused
by excessive demand. Cost of living rose almost 12 percent under
the Republicans. They appear to have pursued a tight-money policy because
they thought the policy sound despite the condition of our economy.
In the 1957 recession, for example, they tightened money when they should
have made it easier to obtain. Unnecessarily tight money has discouraged
housing starts, consumer purchasing, and growth-producing investments.
To forge ahead in the critical international competition which we face,
we require increased production, increased credit, and an improvement of
the financial climate.
With respect to taxes, Senator Kennedy does
not feel that with the economy showing signs of stagnating, this is the
time to increase taxes. With greater production and an improvement in general
business conditions, additional tax revenues can be obtained under existing
rates. He favors a review of our tax system which has not been revised
since 1954. Among proposals deserving consideration in any program of tax
reform, would be an improvement in the laws relating to depreciation allowances
which would permit the financing of capital plant replacement through internal
sources. Business investment in plant and equpiment must be encouraged
as a generator of increased productivity and economic growth, and of new
job opportunities. The high cost of capital plant replacement has acted
as a barrier to investment, particularly when business firms are not able
to obtain adequate financing at reasonable cost.
Senator Kennedy believes strongly that our
monetary policy should be adapted to provide credit at reasonable rates
for small business. He favors the enhancement of competition without favoritism
and the increased channeling of defense contracts to efficient small firms.
Today, 86 percent of our defense contracts, amounting to $19.6 billion,
is negotiated, and only 14 percent is let on a competitive basis. The small-business
share of the competitive contracts is approximately 48 percent; that of
the negotiated contracts 12 percent. This demonstrates that, when given
an opportunity to compete on business that it is capable of handling, small
business can hold its own. In addition, a greater effort must be made to
make available to small business new techniques and ideas of which the
Government, through its widespread financing of research and development,
becomes aware. Certainly, a more positive approach to the use of the Small
Business Administration will do much to relieve current stresses for small
business in this country.
With respect to foreign trade and investment
problems which seriously affect domestic industry, Senator Kennedy points
out that foreign trade is a two-way street, and that if we wish to sell
our goods abroad we must buy from foreign countries. He favors expansion
of our foreign trade and private investments abroad, with the qualification
that we must lessen serious adverse effects on our domestic industry that
can arise from foreign competition. Having long supported programs of assistance
to workers, industries, and communities that have been so affected, he
deems a liberal trade policy to be in our national interest but feels that
adverse domestic consequences of such a policy are the concern of the entire
Nation. Economic displacements due to world trade become lessened as the
opportunities resulting from world trade increase.
In answer to charges made by his opponents
that the policies of the Democratic Party tend to welfare statism, the
Senator points out that the Democratic Party has brought social and economic
progress to our country and that one measure of its success in this respect
is that all its reforms have since been adopted by the Republicans. The
new programs that the Democratic Party now puts forward will not alter
our free enterprise system which has made us the strongest nation in the
world and provided our people with the highest standard of living. The
business community, like all America, is interested in, and will continue
to benefit from the welfare of the American people - their level of education,
their health, the adequacy of their housing, the state of our natural resources,
and our progress in scientific research.
The Democratic Party enjoys labor's support
because it has improved the lot of the laboring people. It is equally interested
in the welfare of business because it believes that both business and labor
are best served by a dynamic, growing economy based upon our free private-enterprise
system. Only through evidencing the workability of our system can
we assure its acceptance and perpetuation.
In answer to frequent reference in the press
to economic advisers whose views are unpopular with businessmen, Senator
Kennedy has this to say:
Anybody who aspires to the Presidency of the United States must have the objectivity and detachment to listen to and evaluate every responsible point of view. I have always endeavored to do this. I consult advisers of both liberal and conservative thought, just as any corporate executive seeks the advice of all of his associates. Then I make up my own mind.