[ As delivered in person ]
Mr. Speaker, Mr. Vice President, Members of the Congress:
It is a pleasure to return from
whence I came. You are among my oldest friends in Washington - and this
House is my oldest home. It was here, more than 14 years ago, that I first
took the oath of Federal office. It was here, for 14 years, that I gained
both knowledge and inspiration from members of both parties in both Houses
- from your wise and generous leaders - and from the pronouncements which
I can vividly recall, sitting where you now sit - including the programs
of two great Presidents, the undimmed eloquence of Churchill, the soaring
idealism of Nehru, the steadfast words of General de Gaulle. To speak from
this same historic rostrum is a sobering experience. To be back among so
many friends is a happy one.
I am confident that that friendship
will continue. Our Constitution wisely assigns both joint and separate
roles to each branch of the government; and a President and a Congress
who hold each other in mutual respect will neither permit nor attempt any
trespass. For my part, I shall withhold from neither the Congress nor the
people any fact or report, past, present, or future, which is necessary
for an informed judgment of our conduct and hazards. I shall neither shift
the burden of executive decisions to the Congress, nor avoid responsibility
for the outcome of those decisions.
I speak today in an hour of national
peril and national opportunity. Before my term has ended, we shall have
to test anew whether a nation organized and governed such as ours can endure.
The outcome is by no means certain. The answers are by no means clear.
All of us together - this Administration, this Congress, this nation -
must forge those answers.
But today, were I to offer -
after little more than a week in office - detailed legislation to remedy
every national ill, the Congress would rightly wonder whether the
desire for speed had replaced the duty of responsibility.
My remarks, therefore, will
be limited. But they will also be candid. To state the facts frankly is
not to despair the future nor indict the past. The prudent heir takes careful
inventory of his legacies, and gives a faithful accounting to those whom
he owes an obligation of trust. And, while the occasion does not call for
another recital of our blessings and assets, we do have no greater asset
than the willingness of a free and determined people, through its elected
officials, to face all problems frankly and meet all dangers free from
panic or fear.
I.
The present state of our economy
is disturbing. We take office in the wake of seven months of recession,
three and one-half years of slack, seven years of diminished economic growth,
and nine years of falling farm income.
Business bankruptcies have reached
their highest level since the Great Depression. Since 1951 farm income
has been squeezed down by 25 percent. Save for a brief period in 1958,
insured unemployment is at the highest peak in our history. Of some five
and one-half million Americans who are without jobs, more than one million
have been searching for work for more than four months. And during each
month some 150,000 workers are exhausting their already meager jobless
benefit rights.
Nearly one-eighth of those who
are without jobs live almost without hope in nearly one hundred especially
depressed and troubled areas. The rest include new school graduates unable
to use their talents, farmers forced to give up their part-time jobs which
helped balance their family budgets, skilled and unskilled workers laid
off in such important industries as metals, machinery, automobiles and
apparel.
Our recovery from the 1958 recession,
moreover, was anemic and incomplete. Our Gross National Product never regained
its full potential. Unemployment never returned to normal levels. Maximum
use of our national industrial capacity was never restored.
In short, the American economy
is in trouble. The most resourceful industrialized country on earth ranks
among the last in the rate of economic growth. Since last spring our economic
growth rate has actually receded. Business investment is in a decline.
Profits have fallen below predicted levels. Construction is off. A million
unsold automobiles are in inventory. Fewer people are working - and the
average work week has shrunk well below 40 hours. Yet prices have continued
to rise - so that now too many Americans have less to spend
for items that cost more to buy.
Economic prophecy is at best
an uncertain art - as demonstrated by the prediction one year ago from
this same podium that 1960 would be, and I quote, "the most prosperous
year in our history." Nevertheless, forecasts of continued slack and only
slightly reduced unemployment through 1961 and 1962 have been made with
alarming unanimity - and this Administration does not intend to stand helplessly
by.
We cannot afford to waste idle
hours and empty plants while awaiting the end of the recession. We must
show the world what a free economy can do - to reduce unemployment, to
put unused capacity to work, to spur new productivity, and to foster higher
economic growth within a range of sound fiscal policies and relative price
stability.
I will propose to the Congress
within the next 14 days measures to improve unemployment compensation through
temporary increases in duration on a self-supporting basis - to provide
more food for the families of the unemployed, and to aid their needy children
- to redevelop our areas of chronic labor surplus - to expand the services
of the U.S. Employment Offices - to stimulate housing and construction
- to secure more purchasing power for our lowest paid workers by raising
and expanding the minimum wage - to offer tax incentives for sound plant
investment - to increase the development of our natural resources - to
encourage price stability - and to take other steps aimed at insuring a
prompt recovery and paving the way for increased long-range growth. This
is not a partisan program concentrating on our weaknesses - it is, I hope,
a national program to realize our national strength.
II.
Efficient expansion at home,
stimulating the new plant and technology that can make our goods more competitive,
is also the key to the international balance of payments problem. Laying
aside all alarmist talk and panicky solutions, let us put that knotty problem
in its proper perspective.
It is true that, since 1958,
the gap between the dollars we spend or invest abroad and the dollars returned
to us has substantially widened. This overall deficit in our balance of
payments increased by nearly $11 billion in the 3 years - and holders of
dollars abroad converted them to gold in such a quantity as to cause a
total outflow of nearly $5 billion of gold from our reserve. The 1959 deficit
was caused in large part by the failure of our exports to penetrate foreign
marketsthe result both of restrictions on our goods and our own uncompetitive
prices. The 1960 deficit, on the other hand, was more the result of an
increase in private capital outflow seeking new opportunity, higher return
or speculative advantage abroad.
Meanwhile this country has continued
to bear more than its share of the West's military and foreign aid obligations.
Under existing policies, another deficit of $2 billion is predicted for
1961 - and individuals in those countries whose dollar position once depended
on these deficits for improvement now wonder aloud whether our gold reserves
will remain sufficient to meet our own obligations.
All this is cause for concern
- but it is not cause for panic. For our monetary and financial position
remains exceedingly strong. Including our drawing rights in the International
Monetary Fund and the gold reserve held as backing for our currency and
Federal Reserve deposits, we have some $22 billion in total gold stocks
and other international monetary reserves available - and I now pledge
that their full strength stands behind the value of the dollar for use
if needed.
Moreover, we hold large assets
abroad - the total owed this nation far exceeds the claims upon our reserves
- and our exports once again substantially exceed our imports.
In short, we need not - and
we shall not-take any action to increase the dollar price of gold from
$35 an ounce - to impose exchange controls - to reduce our anti-recession
efforts - to fall back on restrictive trade policies - or to weaken our
commitments around the world.
This Administration will not
distort the value of the dollar in any fashion. And this is a commitment.
Prudence and good sense do require,
however, that new steps be taken to ease the payments deficit and prevent
any gold crisis. Our success in world affairs has long depended in part
upon foreign confidence in our ability to pay. A series of executive orders,
legislative remedies and cooperative efforts with our allies will get underway
immediately - aimed at attracting foreign investment and travel to this
country - promoting American exports, at stable prices and with more liberal
government guarantees and financing - curbing tax and customs loopholes
that encourage undue spending of private dollars abroad - and (through
OECD, NATO and otherwise) sharing with our allies all efforts to provide
for the common defense of the free world and the hopes for growth of the
less developed lands. While the current deficit lasts, ways will be found
to ease our dollar outlays abroad without placing the full burden on the
families of men whom we have asked to serve our Flag overseas.
In short, whatever is required
will be done to back up all our efforts abroad, and to make certain that,
in the future as in the past, the dollar is as "sound as a dollar."
III.
But more than our exchange of
international payments is out of balance. The current Federal budget for
fiscal 1961 is almost certain to show a net deficit. The budget already
submitted for fiscal 1962 will remain in balance only if the Congress enacts
all the revenue measures requested -and only if an earlier and sharper
up-turn in the economy than my economic advisers now think likely produces
the tax revenues estimated. Nevertheless, a new Administration must of
necessity build on the spending and revenue estimates already submitted.
Within that framework, barring the development of urgent national defense
needs or a worsening of the economy, it is my current intention to advocate
a program of expenditures which, including revenues from a stimulation
of the economy, will not of and by themselves unbalance the earlier Budget.
However, we will do what must
be done. For our national household is cluttered with unfinished and neglected
tasks. Our cities are being engulfed in squalor. Twelve long years after
Congress declared our goal to be "a decent home and a suitable environment
for every American family," we still have 25 million Americans living in
substandard homes. A new housing program under a new Housing and Urban
Affairs Department will be needed this year.
Our classrooms contain 2 million
more children than they can properly have room for, taught by 90,000 teachers
not properly qualified to teach. One third of our most promising high school
graduates are financially unable to continue the development of their talents.
The war babies of the 1940's, who overcrowded our schools in the 1950's,
are now descending in 1960 upon our colleges - with two college students
for every one, ten years from now - and our colleges are ill prepared.
We lack the scientists, the engineers and the teachers our world obligations
require. We have neglected oceanography, saline water conversion, and the
basic research that lies at the root of all progress. Federal grants for
both higher and public school education can no longer be delayed.
Medical research has achieved
new wonders - but these wonders are too often beyond the reach of too many
people, owing to a lack of income (particularly among the aged), a lack
of hospital beds, a lack of nursing homes and a lack of doctors and dentists.
Measures to provide health care for the aged under Social Security, and
to increase the supply of both facilities and personnel, must be undertaken
this year.
Our supply of clean water is
dwindling. Organized and juvenile crimes cost the taxpayers millions of
dollars each year, making it essential that we have improved enforcement
and new legislative safeguards. The denial of constitutional rights to
some of our fellow Americans on account of race - at the ballot box and
elsewhere - disturbs the national conscience, and subjects us to the charge
of world opinion that our democracy is not equal to the high promise of
our heritage. Morality in private business has not been sufficiently spurred
by morality in public business. A host of problems and projects in all
50 States, though not possible to include in this Message, deserves - and
will receive - the attention of both the Congress and the Executive Branch.
On most of these matters, Messages will be sent to the Congress within
the next two weeks.
IV.
But all these problems pale when
placed beside those which confront us around the world. No man entering
upon this office, regardless of his party, regardless of his previous service
in Washington, could fail to be staggered upon learning - even in this
brief 10 day period - the harsh enormity of the trials through which we
must pass in the next four years. Each day the crises multiply. Each day
their solution grows more difficult. Each day we draw nearer the hour of
maximum danger, as weapons spread and hostile forces grow stronger. I feel
I must inform the Congress that our analyses over the last ten days make
it clear that - in each of the principal areas of crisis - the tide of
events has been running out and time has not been our friend.
In Asia, the relentless pressures
of the Chinese Communists menace the security of the entire area - from
the borders of India and South Viet Nam to the jungles of Laos, struggling
to protect its newly-won independence. We seek in Laos what we seek in
all Asia, and, indeed, in all of the world - freedom for the people and
independence for the government. And this Nation shall persevere in our
pursuit of these objectives.
In Africa, the Congo has been
brutally torn by civil strife, political unrest and public disorder. We
shall continue to support the heroic efforts of the United Nations to restore
peace and order - efforts which are now endangered by mounting tensions,
unsolved problems, and decreasing support from many member states.
In Latin America, Communist
agents seeking to exploit that region's peaceful revolution of hope have
established a base on Cuba, only go miles from our shores. Our objection
with Cuba is not over the people's drive for a better life. Our objection
is to their domination by foreign and domestic tyrannies. Cuban social
and economic reform should be encouraged. Questions of economic and trade
policy can always be negotiated. But Communist domination in this Hemisphere
can never be negotiated.
We are pledged to work with
our sister republics to free the Americas of all such foreign domination
and all tyranny, working toward the goal of a free hemisphere of free governments,
extending from Cape Horn to the Arctic Circle.
In Europe our alliances are
unfulfilled and in some disarray. The unity of NATO has been weakened by
economic rivalry and partially eroded by national interest. It has not
yet fully mobilized its resources nor fully achieved a common outlook.
Yet no Atlantic power can meet on its own the mutual problems now facing
us in defense, foreign aid, monetary reserves, and a host of other areas;
and our close ties with those whose hopes and interests we share are among
this Nation's most powerful assets.
Our greatest challenge is still
the world that lies beyond the Cold War - but the first great obstacle
is still our relations with the Soviet Union and Communist China. We must
never be lulled into believing that either power has yielded its ambitions
for world domination - ambitions which they forcefully restated only a
short time ago. On the contrary, our task is to convince them that aggression
and subversion will not be profitable routes to pursue these ends. Open
and peaceful competition - for prestige, for markets, for scientific achievement,
even for men's minds - is something else again. For if Freedom and Communism
were to compete for man's allegiance in a world at peace, I would look
to the future with ever increasing confidence.
To meet this array of challenges
- to fulfill the role we cannot avoid on the world scene - we must reexamine
and revise our whole arsenal of tools: military, economic and political.
One must not overshadow the
other. On the Presidential Coat of Arms, the American eagle holds in his
right talon the olive branch, while in his left he holds a bundle of arrows.
We intend to give equal attention to both.
First, we must strengthen
our military tools. We are moving into a period of uncertain risk and
great commitment in which both the military and diplomatic possibilities
require a Free World force so powerful as to make any aggression clearly
futile. Yet in the past, lack of a consistent, coherent military strategy,
the absence of basic assumptions about our national requirements and the
faulty estimates and duplication arising from inter-service rivalries have
all made it difficult to assess accurately how adequate - or inadequate
- our defenses really are.
I have, therefore, instructed
the Secretary of Defense to reappraise our entire defense strategy - our
ability to fulfill our commitments - the effectiveness, vulnerability,
and dispersal of our strategic bases, forces and warning systems - the
efficiency and economy of our operation and organizationthe elimination
of obsolete bases and installations - and the adequacy, modernization and
mobility of our present conventional and nuclear forces and weapons systems
in the light of present and future dangers. I have asked for preliminary
conclusions by the end of February - and I then shall recommend whatever
legislative, budgetary or executive action is needed in the light of these
conclusions.
In the meantime, I have asked
the Defense Secretary to initiate immediately three new steps most clearly
needed now:
First, I have directed prompt
attention to increase our air-lift capacity. Obtaining additional air
transport mobility - and obtaining it now - will better assure the ability
of our conventional forces to respond, with discrimination and speed, to
any problem at any spot on the globe at any moment's notice. In particular
it will enable us to meet any deliberate effort to avoid or divert our
forces by starting limited wars in widely scattered parts of the globe.
(b) I have directed prompt action
to step up our Polaris submarine program. Using unobligated ship-building
funds now (to let contracts originally scheduled for the next fiscal year)
will build and place on station -at least nine months earlier than planned
- substantially more units of a crucial deterrent - a fleet that will never
attack first, but possess sufficient powers of retaliation, concealed beneath
the seas, to discourage any aggressor from launching an attack upon our
security.
(c) I have directed prompt action
to accelerate our entire missile program. Until the Secretary of Defense's
reappraisal is completed, the emphasis here will be largely on improved
organization and decision-making - on cutting down the wasteful duplications
and the time-lag that have handicapped our whole family of missiles. If
we are to keep the peace, we need an invulnerable missile force powerful
enough to deter any aggressor from even threatening an attack that he would
know could not destroy enough of our force to prevent his own destruction.
For as I said upon taking the oath of office: "Only when our arms are sufficient
beyond doubt can we be certain beyond doubt that they will never be employed."
Secondly, we must improve
our economic tools. Our role is essential and unavoidable in the construction
of a sound and expanding economy for the entire non-communist world, helping
other nations build the strength to meet their own problems, to satisfy
their own aspirations - to surmount their own dangers. The problems in
achieving this goal are towering and unprecedented - the response must
be towering and unprecedented as well, much as Lend-Lease and the Marshall
Plan were in earlier years, which brought such fruitful results.
(a) I intend to ask the Congress
for authority to establish a new and more effective program for assisting
the economic, educational and social development of other countries and
continents. That program must stimulate and take' more effectively into
account the contributions of our allies, and provide central policy direction
for all our own programs that now so often overlap, conflict or diffuse
our energies and resources. Such a program, compared to past programs,
will require
- more flexibility for short
run emergencies
- more commitment to long term
development
- new attention to education
at all levels
- greater emphasis on the recipient
nation's role, their effort, their purpose, with greater social justice
for their people, broader distribution and participation by their people
and more efficient public administration and more efficient tax systems
of their own
- and orderly planning for national
and regional development instead of a piecemeal approach.
I hope the Senate will take
early action approving the Convention establishing the Organization for
Economic Cooperation and Development. This will be an important instrument
in sharing with our allies this development effort - working toward the
time when each nation will contribute in proportion to its ability to pay.
For, while we are prepared to assume our full share of these huge burdens,
we cannot and must not be expected to bear them alone.
To our sister republics to the
south, we have pledged a new alliance for progress - alianza para progreso.
Our goal is a free and prosperous Latin America, realizing for all its
states and all its citizens a degree of economic and social progress that
matches their historic contributions of culture, intellect and liberty.
To start this nation's role at this time in that alliance of neighbors,
I am recommending the following:
- That the Congress appropriate
in full the $500 million fund pledged by the Act of Bogota, to be used
not as an instrument
of the Cold War, but as a first step in the sound development
of the Americas.
- That a new Inter-Departmental
Task Force be established under the leadership of the Department of State,
to coordinate at the highest level all policies and programs of concern
to the Americas.
- That our delegates to the
OAS, working with those of other members, strengthen that body as an instrument
to preserve the peace and to prevent foreign domination anywhere in the
Hemisphere.
- That, in cooperation with
other nations, we launch a new hemispheric attack on illiteracy and inadequate
educational opportunities to all levels; and, finally,
- That a Food-for-Peace mission
be sent immediately to Latin America to explore ways in which our vast
food abundance can be used to help end hunger and malnutrition in certain
areas of suffering in our own hemisphere.
This Administration is expanding
its Food-for-Peace Program in every possible way. The product of our abundance
must be used more effectively to relieve hunger and help economic growth
in all corners of the globe. And I have asked the Director of this Program
to recommend additional ways in which these surpluses can advance the interests
of world peace - including the establishment of world food reserves.
An even more valuable national
asset is our reservoir of dedicated men and women - not only on our college
campuses but in every age group - who have indicated their desire to contribute
their skills, their efforts, and a part of their lives to the fight for
world order. We can mobilize this talent through the formation of a National
Peace Corps, enlisting the services of all those with the desire and capacity
to help foreign lands meet their urgent needs for trained personnel.
Finally, while our attention
is centered on the development of the noncommunist world, we must never
forget our hopes for the ultimate freedom and welfare of the Eastern European
peoples. In order to be prepared to help re-establish historic ties of
friendship, I am asking the Congress for increased discretion to use economic
tools in this area whenever this is found to be clearly in the national
interest. This will require amendment of the Mutual Defense Assistance
Control Act along the lines I proposed as a member of the Senate, and upon
which the Senate voted last summer. Meanwhile, I hope to explore with the
Polish government the possibility of using our frozen Polish funds on projects
of peace that will demonstrate our abiding friendship for and interest
in the people of Poland.
Third, we must sharpen our political
and diplomatic tools - the means of cooperation and agreement on which
an enforceable world order must ultimately rest.
I have already taken steps to
coordinate and expand our disarmament effort - to increase our programs
of research and studyand to make arms control a central goal of our national
policy under my direction. The deadly arms race, and the huge resources
it absorbs, have too long overshadowed all else we must do. We must prevent
that arms race from spreading to new nations, to new nuclear powers and
to the reaches of outer space. We must make certain that our negotiators
are better informed and better prepared - to formulate workable proposals
of our own and to make sound judgments about the proposals of others.
I have asked the other governments
concerned to agree to a reasonable delay in the talks on a nuclear test
ban - and it is our intention to resume negotiations prepared to reach
a final agreement with any nation that is equally willing to agree to an
effective and enforceable treaty.
We must increase our support
of the United Nations as an instrument to end the Cold War instead of an
arena in which to fight it. In recognition of its increasing importance
and the doubling of its membership
- we are enlarging and strengthening
our own mission to the U.N.
- we shall help insure that
it is properly financed.
- we shall work to see that
the integrity of the office of the Secretary-General is maintained.
- And I would address a special
plea to the smaller nations of the world - to join with us in strengthening
this organization, which is far more essential to their security than it
is to ours - the only body in the world where no nation need be powerful
to be secure, where every nation has an equal voice, and where any nation
can exert influence not according to the strength of its armies but according
to the strength of its ideas. It deserves the support of all.
Finally, this Administration
intends to explore promptly all possible areas of cooperation with the
Soviet Union and other nations "to invoke the wonders of science instead
of its terrors." Specifically, I now invite all nations - including the
Soviet Union - to join with us in developing a weather prediction program,
in a new communications satellite program and in preparation for probing
the distant planets of Mars and Venus, probes which may someday unlock
the deepest secrets of the universe.
Today this country is ahead
in the science and technology of space, while the Soviet Union is ahead
in the capacity to lift large vehicles into orbit. Both nations would help
themselves as well as other nations by removing these endeavors from the
bitter and wasteful competition of the Cold War. The United States would
be willing to join with the Soviet Union and the scientists of all nations
in a greater effort to make the fruits of this new knowledge available
to all - and, beyond that, in an effort to extend farm technology to hungry
nations - to wipe out disease - to increase the exchanges of scientists
and, their knowledge - and to make our own laboratories available to technicians
of other lands who lack the facilities to pursue their own work. Where
nature makes natural allies of us all, we can demonstrate that beneficial
relations are possible even with those with whom we most deeply disagreeand
this must someday be the basis of world peace and world law.
v.
I have commented on the state
of the domestic economy, our balance of payments, our Federal and social
budget and the state of the world. I would like to conclude with a few
remarks about the state of the Executive branch. We have found it full
of honest and useful public servants - but their capacity to act decisively
at the exact time action is needed has too often been muffled in the morass
of committees, timidities and fictitious theories which have created a
growing gap between decision and execution, between planning and reality.
In a time of rapidly deteriorating situations at home and abroad, this
is bad for the public service and particularly bad for the country; and
we mean to make a change.
I have pledged myself and my
colleagues in the cabinet to a continuous encouragement of initiative,
responsibility and energy in serving the public interest. Let every public
servant know, whether his post is high or low, that a man's rank and reputation
in this Administration will be determined by the size of the job he does,
and not by the size of his staff, his office or his budget. Let it be clear
that this Administration recognizes the value of dissent and daring - that
we greet healthy controversy as the hallmark of healthy change. Let the
public service be a proud and lively career. And let every man and woman
who works in any area of our national government, in any branch, at any
level, be able to say with pride and with honor in future years: "I served
the United States government in that hour of our nation's need."
For only with complete dedication
by us all to the national interest can we bring our country through the
troubled years that lie ahead. Our problems are critical. The tide is unfavorable.
The news will be worse before it is better. And while hoping and working
for the best, we should prepare ourselves now for the worst.
We cannot escape our dangers
- neither must we let them drive us into panic or narrow isolation. In
many areas of the world where the balance of power already rests with our
adversaries, the forces of freedom are sharply divided. It is one of the
ironies of our time that the techniques of a harsh and repressive system
should be, able to instill discipline and ardor in its servants - while
the blessings of liberty have too often stood for privilege, materialism
and a life of ease.
But I have a different view
of liberty.
Life in 1961 will not be easy.
Wishing it, predicting it, even asking for it, will not make it so. There
will be further setbacks before the tide is turned. But turn it we must.
The hopes of all mankind rest upon us - not simply upon those of us in
this chamber, but upon the peasant in Laos, the fisherman in Nigeria, the
exile from Cuba, the spirit that moves every man and Nation who shares
our hopes for freedom and the future. And in the final analysis, they rest
most of all upon the pride and perseverance of our fellow citizens of the
great Republic.
In the words of a great President,
whose birthday we honor today, closing this final of the Union Message
sixteen yers ago, "We pray that we may be worthy of the unlimited opportunities
that God has given us."