[Released January 22, 1962. Dated January 20, 1962]
To the Congress o f the United States:
I report to you under the provisions
of the Employment Act of 1946 at a time when
- the economy has regained its
momentum;
- the economy is responding
to the Federal Government's efforts, under the Act, "to promote maximum
employment, production, and purchasing power;"
- the economy is again moving
toward the central objective of the Act - to afford "useful employment
opportunities, including self-employment, for those able, willing, and
seeking to work."
My first Economic Report is
an appropriate occasion to re-emphasize my dedication to the principles
of the Employment Act. As a declaration of national purpose and as a recognition
of Federal responsibility, the Act has few parallels in the Nation's history.
In passing the Act by heavy bipartisan majorities, the Congress registered
the consensus of the American people that this Nation will not countenance
the suffering, frustration, and injustice of unemployment, or let the vast
potential of the world's leading economy run to waste in idle manpower,
silent machinery, and empty plants.
The framers of the Employment
Act were wise to choose the promotion of "maximum employment, production,
and purchasing power" as the keystone of national economic policy. They
were confident that these objectives can be effectively promoted "in a
manner calculated to foster and promote free competitive enterprise and
the general welfare." They knew that our pursuit of maximum employment
and production would be tempered with compassion, with justice, and with
a concern for the future. But they knew also that the other standards we
set for our economy are easier to meet when it is operating at capacity.
A full employment economy provides opportunities for useful and satisfying
work. It rewards enterprise with profit. It generates saving for the future
and transforms it into productive investment. It opens doors for the unskilled
and underprivileged and closes them against want and frustration. The conquest
of unemployment is not the sole end of economic policy, but it is surely
an indispensable beginning.
The record of the economy since
1946 is a vast improvement over the prolonged mass unemployment of the
1930's. The Employment Act itself deserves no small part of the credit.
Under the mandate and procedures of the Act, both Congress and the Executive
have kept the health of the national economy and the economic policies
of the Government under constant review. And the national commitment to
high employment has enabled business firms and consumers to act and to
plan without fear of another great depression.
Though the postwar record is
free of major depression, it is marred by four recessions. In the past
fifteen years, the economy has spent a total of seven years regaining previous
peaks of industrial production. In two months out of three, 4 percent or
more of those able, willing, and seeking to work have been unable to find
jobs. We must do better in the 1960's.
To combat future recessions
- to keep them short and shallow if they occur - I urge adoption of a three-part
program for sustained prosperity, which will (1) provide stand-by power,
subject to congressional veto, for temporary income tax reductions, (2)
set up a stand-by program of public capital improvements, and (3) strengthen
the unemployment insurance system.
These three measures will enable
the Government to counter swings in business activity more promptly and
more powerfully than ever before. They will give new and concrete meaning
to the declaration of policy made in the Employment Act. They will constitute
the greatest step forward in public policy for economic stability since
the Act itself.
As the Employment Act prescribes,
I shall in this Report review "economic conditions" in the United States
in 1961 and "current and foreseeable economic trends in the levels of employment,
production, and purchasing power;" set forth "the levels of employment,
production, and purchasing power obtaining in the United States and such
levels needed to carry out the policy" of the Act; and present my economic
program and legislative recommendations for 1962.
PROGRESS IN 1961
Last January the economy was
in the grip of recession. Nearly 7 percent of the labor force was unemployed.
Almost one-fifth of manufacturing capacity lay idle. Actual output was
running $50 billion (annual rate) short of the economy's great potential.
These figures reflected not only the setback of 1960-61 but the incomplete
recovery from the recession of 1957-58. The task before us was to recover
not from one but from two recessions.
At the same time, gold was leaving
the country at a rate of more than $300 million a month. In the three previous
years, the Nation had run a total deficit of $10 billion in its basic international
accounts. These large and persistent deficits had weakened confidence in
the dollar.
In my message to the Congress
on February 2, 1 stated that this Administration's "realistic aims for
1961 are to reverse the downtrend in our economy, to narrow the gap of
unused potential, to abate the waste and misery of unemployment, and at
the same time to maintain reasonable stability of the price level." In
a message on the balance of payments on February 6, I added a fifth aim,
to restore confidence in the dollar and to reduce the deficit in international
payments.
These five aims for 1961 have
been achieved:
(1) The downtrend was reversed.
Gross national product (GNP) grew from $501 billion (annual rate) in the
first quarter to a record rate of $542 billion in the last quarter. In
July, industrial production regained its previous peak, and by the end
of the year it showed a total rise of 13 percent.
(2) These gains brought into
productive use nearly half the plant capacity which was idle at the beginning
of the year. The growth of GNP narrowed the over-all gap of unused potential
from an estimated 10 percent to 5 percent.
(3) Unemployment dropped from
6.8 to 6.1 percent of the labor force. The number of areas of substantial
labor surplus declined from 101 in March to 60 in December.
(4) Price stability has been
maintained during the recovery. Since February, wholesale prices have fallen
slightly, and consumer prices have risen only one-half of 1 percent.
(5) Confidence in the dollar
has been restored. Our gold losses were cut from $1.7 billion in 1960 to
less than $0.9 billion in 1961. The deficit in 1961 in our basic international
transactions was about one-third as large as in 1960.
The "Program To Restore Momentum
to the American Economy" which I proposed to the Congress on February 2
resulted in prompt legislation to
- extend unemployment insurance
benefits on a temporary basis;
- make Federal aid available,
through the States, to dependent children of the unemployed;
- liberalize social security
benefits;
- promote homebuilding under
the Housing Act of 1961;
- raise the minimum wage and
extend it to more workers;
- provide Federal aid under
the Area Redevelopment Act, to revitalize the economies of areas with large
and persistent unemployment.
Prompt executive action was
taken to accelerate Federal purchases and procurement, highway fund distributions,
tax refunds, and veterans' life insurance dividends. The Administration
raised farm price supports, expanded the food distribution program, and
established eight pilot food stamp programs.
Monetary and credit policies
responded to the dual demands of economic recovery and the balance of payments.
On the one hand, the Federal Reserve System maintained general monetary
ease; Federal Reserve open market operations, complemented by Treasury
management of the public debt and of government investment accounts, assured
an ample supply of credit which served to counter upward pressures on long-term
interest rates; reduction of FHA ceiling rates, supported by FNMA mortgage
purchases, eased mortgage credit and stimulated homebuilding; and the Small
Business Administration made its credit more widely available at lower
cost. On the other hand, both monetary and debt management policies countered
downward pressures on shortterm rates, with a view to checking the outflow
of funds to money markets abroad.
The Federal Budget played its
proper role as a powerful instrument for promoting economic recovery. The
measures to relieve distress and restore economic momentum expanded purchasing
power early in the year. Subsequently, major increases in expenditure for
national security and space programs became necessary. In a fully employed
economy, these increases would have required new tax revenues to match.
But I did not recommend tax increases at this point because they would
have cut into private purchasing power and retarded recovery.
The increase of GNP - $41 billion
(annual rate) from the first to the fourth quarter - reflected increased
purchases of goods and services by consumers, business, and governments:
- Consumers accounted for nearly
half. As household incomes rose, consumer expenditure expanded by $18 billion.
- Residential construction and
business expenditures for fixed investment responded promptly to the recovery
and to favorable credit conditions. By the end of the year, they had risen
by $8 billion.
- Business stopped liquidating
inventories and started rebuilding them. This shift, which occurred early
in the year and helped get recovery off to a flying start, added $8 billion
to the demand for goods and services by the fourth quarter.
- Federal, State, and local
government purchases rose by $8 billion.
- Although exports were somewhat
higher in the fourth quarter than in the first, the rise in imports in
response to recovery lowered net exports by $1 billion.
Labor, business, and farm incomes
rose as the economy recovered. Wages and salaries increased by $19 billion
(annual rate) from the first quarter to the fourth. Corporate profits after
taxes recovered sharply, receiving about 15 percent of the gains in GNP.
With the help of new programs, farm operators' net income from farming
increased from $12 billion in 1960 to $13 billion in 1961, and net income
per farm rose by $350. The after-tax incomes of American consumers increased
by $21 billion, or $92 per capita, during the year. Since consumer prices
rose by only one-half of 1 percent, these gains in income were almost entirely
gains in real purchasing power.
One million jobs were added
by nonagricultural establishments during the expansion. But employment
did not keep pace with production and income. Productivity rose rapidly
as capacity was more fully and efficiently utilized. And more workers on
part-time jobs were able to work full time.
The record of 1961 demonstrated
again the resiliency of the U.S. economy with well-timed support from government
policy. Business responded to the expansion of purchasing power by producing
more goods and services, not by raising prices. Indeed, the record of price
stability in three quarters of expansion was better than in the three preceding
quarters of recession. The rates of advance of production and income compared
favorably with the two preceding periods of expansion. Production grew
rapidly without straining capacity or encountering bottlenecks.
As 1961 ended, actual output
was still $25 to $30 billion short of potential, and unemployment was far
too high. But much of the industrial manpower, machinery, and plant that
lay idle a year ago had been drawn back into productive use. And the momentum
of the 1961 recovery should carry the economy further toward full employment
and full production in 1962.
GOALS OF ECONOMIC POLICY
Though we may take satisfaction with our progress to date, we dare not rest content. The unfinished business of economic policy includes (1) the achievement of full employment and sustained prosperity without inflation, (2) the acceleration of economic growth, (3) the extension of equality of opportunity, and (4) the restoration of balance of payments equilibrium. Economic policy thus confronts a demanding assignment, but one which can and will be met within the framework of a free economy.
Our Goal of Full and Sustained Prosperity Without Inflation
Recovery has carried the economy
only part of the way to the goal of "maximum production, employment, and
purchasing power." The standing challenge of the Employment Act is not
merely to do better, but to do our best - the "maximum." Attainment of
that maximum in 1963 would mean a GNP of approximately $600 billion, wages
and salaries of over $320 billion, and corporate profits of as much as
$60 billion, all in 1961 prices. The material gains are themselves staggering,
but they are less important than the new sense of purpose and the new opportunities
for improvement of American life that could be realized by "maximum" use
of the productive capacity now lying idle and the capacity yet to be created.
Involuntary unemployment is
the most dramatic sign and disheartening consequence of underutilization
of productive capacity. It translates into human terms what may otherwise
seem merely an abstract statistic. We cannot afford to settle for any prescribed
level of unemployment. But for working purposes we view a 4 percent unemployment
rate as a temporary target. It can be achieved in 1963, if appropriate
fiscal, monetary, and other policies are used. The achievable rate can
be lowered still further by effective policies to help the labor force
acquire the skills and mobility appropriate to a changing economy. We must
also continue the cooperative effort, begun with the Area Redevelopment
Act of 1961, to bring industry to depressed areas and jobs to displaced
workers. Ultimately, we must reduce unemployment to the minimum compatible
with the functioning of a free economy.
We must seek full recovery without
endangering the price stability of the last 4 years. The experience of
the past year has shown that expansion without inflation is possible. With
cooperation from labor and management, I am confident that we can go on
to write a record of full employment without inflation.
The task of economic stabilization
does not end with the achievement of full recovery. There remains the problem
of keeping the economy from straying too far above or below the path of
steady high employment. One way lies inflation, and the other way lies
recession. Flexible and vigilant fiscal and monetary policies will allow
us to hold the narrow middle course.
Our Goal of Economic Growth
While we move toward full and
sustained use of today's productive capacity, we must expand our potential
for tomorrow. Our postwar economic growth - though a step ahead of our
record for the last half-century - has been slowing down. We have not in
recent years maintained the 4 to 4½ percent growth rate which characterized
the early postwar period. We should not settle for less than the achievement
of a long-term growth rate matching the early postwar record. Increasing
our growth rate to 4½ percent a year lies within the range of our
capabilities during the 1960's. It will lay the groundwork for meeting
both our domestic needs and our world responsibilities.
In November of last year we
joined with our 19 fellow members of the Organization for Economic Cooperation
and Development in setting a common target for economic growth. Together
we pledged ourselves to adopt national and international policies aimed
at increasing the combined output of the Atlantic Community by 50 percent
between 1960 and 1970. The nations of the West are encouraged and enlivened
by America's determination to make its full contribution to this joint
effort.
We can do our share. In the
mid-1960's, the children born in 1943 and after will be arriving at working
age. The resulting rapid growth in our labor force offers us an opportunity,
not a burden - provided that we deliver not only the jobs but also the
research, the training, and the capital investment to endow our new workers
with high and rising productivity as they enter economic life.
Our Goal of Equal Opportunity
Increasingly in our lifetime,
American prosperity has been widely shared and it must continue so. The
spread of primary, secondary, and higher education, the wider availability
of medical services, and the improved postwar performance of our economy
have bettered the economic status of the poorest families and individuals.
But prosperity has not wiped
out poverty. In 1960, 7 million families and individuals had personal incomes
lower than $2,000. In part, our failure to overcome poverty is a consequence
of our failure to operate the economy at potential. The incidence of unemployment
is always uneven, and increases in unemployment tend to inflict the greatest
income loss on those least able to afford it. But there is a claim on our
conscience from others, whose poverty is barely touched by cyclical improvements
in general economic activity. To an increasing extent, the poorest families
in America are those headed by women, the elderly, nonwhites, migratory
workers, and the physically or mentally handicapped - people who are shortchanged
even in time of prosperity.
Last year's increase in the
minimum wage is evidence of our concern for the welfare of our low-income
fellow citizens. Other legislative proposals now pending will be particularly
effective in improving the lot of the least fortunate. These include (1)
health insurance for the aged, financed through the social security system,
(2) Federal aid for training and retraining our unemployed and underemployed
workers, (3) the permanent strengthening of our unemployment compensation
system, and (4) substantial revision in our public welfare and assistance
program, stressing rehabilitation services which help to restore families
to independence.
Public education has been the
great bulwark of equality of opportunity in our democracy for more than
a century. Our schools have been a major means of preventing early handicaps
from hardening into permanent ignorance and poverty. There can be no better
investment in equity and democracy - and no better instrument for economic
growth. For this reason, I urge action by the Congress to provide Federal
aid for more adequate public school facilities, higher teachers' salaries,
and better quality in education. I urge early completion of congressional
action on the bill to authorize loans for construction of college academic
facilities and to provide scholarships for able students who need help.
The talent of our youth is a resource which must not be wasted.
Finally, I shall soon propose
to the Congress an intensive program to reduce adult illiteracy, a handicap
which too many of our fellow citizens suffer because of inadequate educational
opportunities in the past.
Our Goal of Basic Balance in International Payments
Persistent international payments deficits and gold outflows have made the balance of payments a critical problem of economic policy. We must attain a balance in our international transactions which permits us to meet heavy obligations abroad for the security and development of the free world, without continued depletion of our gold reserves or excessive accumulation of short-term dollar liabilities to foreigners. Simultaneously, we must continue to reduce barriers to international trade and to increase the flow of resources from developed to developing countries. To increase our exports is a task of highest priority, and one which gives heightened significance to the maintenance of price stability and the rapid increase of productivity at home.
POLICIES FOR 1962
Prospects for 1962
The Nation will make further
economic progress in 1962. Broad advances are in prospect for the private
economy. The gains already achieved have set the stage for further new
records in output, employment, personal income, and profits. Rising household
incomes brighten the outlook for further increases in consumer buying,
particularly of durable goods. Business firms will need larger inventories
to support higher sales, and improved profits and expanded markets will
lead to rising capital outlays. The outlays of Federal, State, and local
governments will continue to increase as we work for peace and progress.
In the first half of 1962, we
may therefore expect vigorous expansion in production and incomes, with
GNP increasing to a range of $565-570 billion in the second quarter, employment
continuing to rise, and the unemployment rate falling further.
In the second half of 1962,
business investment in plant and equipment should pick up speed and help
maintain the momentum of progress toward full employment - and toward future
economic growth. Rising output should push factory operating rates closer
to capacity and raise profits still further above previous records. To
these incentives for capital expenditures will be added Treasury liberalization
of depreciation guidelines and, if the Congress acts favorably, the 8 percent
tax credit for machinery and equipment outlays.
For 1962 as a whole, GNP is
expected to rise approximately $50 billion above the $521 billion level
of 1961. This would be another giant stride toward a fully employed economy.
The record of past recoveries and of the U.S. economy's enormous and growing
potential indicates that this is a gain we can achieve. In the perspective
of our commitments both to our own expanding population and to the world,
it is a gain we need to achieve.
Budgetary Policy
Prosperity shrinks budgetary
deficits, as recessions create them. Budget revenues are expected to rise
13 percent between the fiscal years 1962 and 1963; revenues rose 14½
percent between 1959 and 1960 in the previous upswing. Such sensitivity
of budget revenues to business activity is desirable because it moderates
swings in private purchasing power.
I have submitted to the Congress
a Budget which will balance in fiscal 1963 as prosperity generates sharply
rising tax revenues. The Budget is appropriately paced to the expected
rate of economic expansion. It will give less stimulus to business activity
ass private demand for goods and services grows stronger and shoulders
more of the responsibility for continued gains. But the shift will be moderate
and gradual. We have learned from the disappointing 1959-60 experience
that an abrupt and excessively large swing in the Budget can drain the
vigor from the private economy and halt its progress, especially if a restrictive
monetary policy is followed simultaneously. This will not be repeated.
Budget outlays will rise by $3½ billion from fiscal 1962 to fiscal
1963, whereas they fell by more than that amount from fiscal 1959 to fiscal
1960. The 1963 Budget starts from a much smaller deficit and will move
to a moderate surplus as the recovery strengthens.
With support from increased
government expenditures and other government policies, the momentum of
the recovery is expected to raise GNP to $570 billion for 1962 as a whole.
Prompt enactment of the proposed tax credit for investment would give the
economy further strength. Economic expansion at the expected pace will
yield $93.0 billion in Budget revenues in fiscal 1963 to cover $92.5 billion
in Budget expenditures. If private demands for goods and services should
prove to be weaker in 1962 than now anticipated, less private purchasing
power will flow into taxes, and Budget revenues will fall short of the
$93.0 billion figure. If private demands are stronger, tax receipts will
rise further and Budget revenues will exceed expectations.
A surplus of $4.4 billion in
fiscal 1963 is expected in the national income accounts budget - a budget
constructed to measure the direct impact of Federal expenditures and receipts
on the flow of total spending. The surplus would be several billion dollars
higher if the economy were operating steadily at a level high enough to
hold unemployment to 4 percent.
Either surplus - prospective
or potential - is both a challenge and an opportunity. A government surplus
is a form of saving - an excess of income over expenditure. Like any other
form of saving, it releases labor and other productive resources which
can be used to create new investment goods - plant, equipment, or houses.
If investment demand is not strong enough to use the resources and labor,
they will be wasted in unemployment and idle capacity, and the surplus
itself will not be realized. But if the necessary investment demand is
present, the surplus will make possible the acceleration of economic growth
by enlarging the future productive power of the economy. The Government
is seeking to help American industry to meet this challenge and seize this
opportunity, through such measures as the 8 percent investment tax credit
and revisions of depreciation guidelines.
We face 1962 with optimism but
not complacency. If private demand shows unexpected strength, public policy
must and will act to avert the dangers of rising prices. If demand falls
short of current expectations, more expansionary policies will be pursued.
In 1962, vigilance and flexibility must be the guardians of economic optimism.
Monetary and Credit Policies
Monetary, credit, and debt management
policies can also help to assure that productive outlets exist for the
funds that the American people save from prosperity incomes. The balance
foreseen in the Budget for fiscal year 1963, and the surplus which would
arise at full employment, both indicate that fiscal policy is assuming
a large share of the burden of forestalling inflationary excesses of demand.
With monetary and related policies relieved of a substantial part of this
burden, they can more effectively be used to assure a flow of investment
funds which will transform the economy's present capacity to save into
future capacity to produce.
At the same time, monetary and
debt management policies must continue to protect the balance of international
payments against outflows of short-term capital. As in 1961, domestic expansion
and the balance of payments confront these policies with a dual task, requiring
continued ingenuity in technique and flexibility in emphasis.
Balance of Payments
The program launched last year
to reduce our payments deficit and maintain confidence in the dollar will,
I am sure, show further results in 1962. I am hopeful that the target of
reasonable equilibrium in our international payments can be achieved within
the next two years; but this will require a determined effort on the part
of all of us - government, business and labor. This effort must proceed
on a number of fronts.
Export expansion. An
increase in the U.S. trade surplus is of the first importance. If we are
to meet our international responsibilities, we must increase exports more
rapidly than the increase in imports which accompanies our economic growth.
Our efforts to raise exports
urgently require that we negotiate a reduction in the tariff of the European
Common Market. I shall shortly transmit to the Congress a special message
elaborating the details of the proposed Trade Expansion Act of 1962 and
explaining why I believe that a new trade policy initiative is imperative
this year.
To encourage American businessmen
to become more export-minded, we have inaugurated a new export insurance
program under the leadership of the Export-Import Bank, and we have stepped
up our export promotion drive by improving the commercial services abroad
of the U.S. Government, establishing trade centers abroad, planning trade
fairs, improving the trade mission program, and working with business firms
on export opportunities
through field offices of the Department of Commerce
and the Small Business Administration. Foreign travel to the United States,
which returns dollars to our shores, is now being promoted through the
first Federal agency ever created for this purpose.
Prices and productivity.
Our export drive will founder if we cannot keep our prices competitive
in world markets. Though our recent price performance has been excellent,
the improving economic climate of 1962 will test anew the statesmanship
of our business and labor leaders. I believe that they will pass the test;
our Nation today possesses a new understanding of the vital link between
our level of prices and our balance of payments.
In the long run, the competitive
position of U.S. industry depends on a sustained and rapid advance in productivity.
In this, the interests of economic recovery, long-run growth, and the strength
of the dollar coincide. Modernization and expansion of our industrial plant
will accelerate the advance of productivity.
Foreign investment. To
place controls over the flow of private American capital abroad would be
contrary to our traditions and our economic interests. But neither is there
justification for special tax incentives which stimulate the flow of U.S.
investment to countries now strong and economically developed, and I again
urge the elimination of these special incentives.
The new foreign trade program
which I am proposing to the Congress will help to reduce another artificial
incentive to U.S. firms to invest abroad. The European Common Market has
attracted American capital, partly because American businessmen fear that
they will be unable to compete in the growing European market unless they
build plants behind the common tariff wall. We must negotiate down the
barriers to trade between the two great continental markets, so that the
exports of our industry and agriculture can have full opportunity to compete
in Europe.
Governmental expenditures
abroad. Military expenditures form by far the greater part of our governmental
outlays abroad. We are discussing with certain of our European allies the
extent to which they can increase their own military procurement from the
United States to offset our dollar expenditures there. As a result, the
net cost to our balance of payments is expected to be reduced during the
coming year, in spite of increased deployment of forces abroad because
of the Berlin situation.
To curtail our foreign aid programs
in order to strengthen our balance of payments would be to sacrifice more
than we gain. But we can cut back on the foreign currency costs of our
aid programs, and thus reduce the burden on our balance of payments. A
large percentage of our foreign aid is already spent for procurement in
the United States; this proportion will rise as our tightened procurement
procedures become increasingly effective.
We have sought to induce other
advanced countries to undertake a larger share of the foreign aid effort.
We will continue our efforts through the Development Assistance Committee
of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development to obtain
a higher level of economic assistance by other industrial nations to the
less developed countries.
Short-term capital movements.
Outflows of volatile short-term funds added to the pressures on the dollar
in 1960. Our policies in 1961 have diminished the dangers of disruptive
movements of short-term capital. For the first time in a generation, the
Treasury is helping to stabilize the dollar by operations in the international
exchange markets. The Federal Reserve and the Treasury, in administering
their monetary policy and debt management responsibilities, have sought
to meet the needs of domestic recovery in ways which would not lead to
outflows of short-term capital.
During the past year, we have
consulted periodically with our principal financial partners, both bilaterally
and within the framework of the OECD. These consultations have led to close
cooperation among fiscal and monetary authorities in a common effort to
prevent disruptive currency movements.
Strengthening the international
monetary system. The International Monetary Fund is playing an increasingly
important role in preserving international monetary stability. The reserve
strength behind the dollar includes our drawing rights on the Fund, of
which $1.7 billion is automatically available under current practices of
the Fund. An additional $4.1 billion could become available under Fund
policies, insofar as the Fund has available resources in gold and usable
foreign currencies. Recently, the Fund has diversified its use of currencies
in meeting drawings by member countries, relying less heavily on dollars
and more heavily on the currencies of countries with payments surpluses.
However, the Fund's regular holdings of the currencies of some important
industrial countries are not adequate to meet potential demands for them.
In a message to the Congress
last February, I said: "We must now, in cooperation with other lending
countries, begin to consider ways in which international monetary institutions
- especially the International Monetary Fund - can be strengthened and
more effectively utilized, both in furnishing needed increases in reserves,
and in providing the flexibility required to support a healthy and growing
world economy."
We have now taken an important
step in this direction. Agreement has been reached among ten of the major
industrial countries to lend to the Fund specified amounts of their currencies
when necessary to cope with or forestall pressures which may impair the
international monetary system. These stand-by facilities of $6 billion
will be a major defense against international monetary speculation and
will powerfully reinforce the effectiveness of the Fund. They will provide
resources to make our drawing rights in the Fund effective, should we need
to use them. Moreover, the U.S. stand-by commitment of $2 billion will
augment the resources potentially available through the Fund to other participants
in the agreement, when our balance of payments and reserve positions are
strong. I shall shortly submit a request to Congress for appropriate enabling
legislation.
Prices and Wages
Prices and production need not
travel together. A number of foreign countries have experienced both rapid
growth and stable prices in recent years. We ourselves, in 1961, enjoyed
a stable price level during a brisk economic recovery.
While rising prices will not
necessarily accompany the expansion we expect in 1962, neither can we rely
on chance to keep our price level stable. Creeping inflation in the years
1955-57 weakened our international competitive position. We cannot afford
to allow a repetition of that experience.
We do not foresee in 1962 a
level of demand for goods and services which will strain the economy's
capacity to produce. Neither is it likely that many industries will find
themselves pressing against their capacity ceilings. Inflationary pressures
from these sources should not be a problem.
But in those sectors where both
companies and unions possess substantial market power, the interplay of
price and wage decisions could set off a movement toward a higher price
level. If this were to occur, the whole Nation would be the victim.
I do not believe that American
business or labor will allow this to happen. All of us have learned a great
deal from the economic events of the past 15 years. Among both businessmen
and workers, there is growing recognition that the road to higher real
profits and higher real wages is the road of increased productivity. When
better plant and equipment enable the labor force to produce more in the
same number of hours, there is more to share among all the contributors
to the productive process - and this can happen with no increase in prices.
Gains achieved in this manner endure, while gains achieved in one turn
of the price-wage spiral vanish on the next.
The Nation must rely on the
good sense and public spirit of our business and labor leaders to hold
the line on the price level in 1962. If labor leaders in our major industries
will accept the productivity benchmark as a guide to wage objectives, and
if management in these industries will practice equivalent restraint in
their price decisions, the year ahead will be a brilliant chapter in the
record of the responsible exercise of freedom.
MEASURES FOR A STRONGER ECONOMY
The final section of my Report is a summary of my recommendations for legislative action (1 ) to strengthen our defenses against recession, (2) to strengthen our financial system, (3) to strengthen our manpower base, and (4) to strengthen our tax system.
A Program for Sustained Prosperity
Recurrent recessions have thrown
the postwar American economy off stride at a time when the economies of
other major industrial countries have moved steadily ahead. To improve
our future performance I urge the Congress to join with me in erecting
a defense-in-depth against future recessions. The basic elements of this
defense are (1) Presidential stand-by authority for prompt, temporary income
tax reductions, (2) Presidential stand-by authority for capital improvements
expenditures, and (3) a permanent strengthening of the unemployment compensation
system. These three measures parallel important proposals of the Commission
on Money and Credit, whose further recommendations are treated under the
next heading.
In our free enterprise economy,
fluctuations in business and consumer spending will, of course, always
occur. But this need not doom us to an alternation of lean years and fat.
The business cycle does not have the inevitability of the calendar. The
Government can time its fiscal transactions to offset and to dampen fluctuations
in the private economy. Our fiscal system and budget policy already contribute
to economic stability, to a much greater degree than before the war. But
the time is ripe, and the need apparent, to equip the Government to act
more promptly, more flexibly, and more forcefully to stabilize the economy
- to carry out more effectively its charge under the Employment Act.
Stand-by tax reduction authority.
First, I recommend the enactment of stand-by authority under which the
President, subject to veto by the Congress, could make prompt temporary
reductions in the rates of the individual income tax to combat recessions,
as follows:
(1) Before proposing a temporary
tax reduction, the President must make a finding that such action is required
to meet the objectives of the Employment Act.
(2) Upon such finding, the President
would submit to Congress a proposed temporary uniform reduction in all
individual income tax rates. The proposed temporary rates may not be more
than 5 percentage points lower than the rates permanently established by
the Congress.
(3) This change would take effect
30 days after submission, unless rejected by a joint resolution of the
Congress.
(4) It would remain in effect
for 6 months, subject to revision or renewal by the same process or extension
by a joint resolution of the Congress.
(5) If the Congress were not
in session, a Presidentially proposed tax adjustment would automatically
take effect but would terminate 30 days after the Congress reconvened.
Extension would require a new proposal by the President, which would be
subject to congressional veto.
A temporary reduction of individual
income tax rates across the board can be a powerful safeguard against recession.
It would reduce the annual rate of tax collections by $2 billion per percentage
point, or a maximum of $10 billion - $1 billion per point, or a $5-billion
maximum, for six months - at present levels of income. These figures should
be measured against the costs they are designed to forestall:
- the tens of billions of potential
output that run to waste in recession;
- the pain and frustration of
the millions whom recessions throw out of work;
- the Budget deficits of $12.4
billion in fiscal 1959 or $7.0 billion this year.
The proposed partial tax suspension
would launch a prompt counterattack on the cumulative forces of recession.
It would be reflected immediately in lower withholding deductions and higher
take-home pay for millions of Americans. Markets for consumer goods and
services would promptly feel the stimulative influence of the tax suspension.
It would offer strong support
to the economy for a timely interval, while preserving the revenue-raising
powers of our tax system in prosperity and the wise traditional procedures
of the Congress for making permanent revisions and reforms in the system.
I am not asking the Congress to delegate its power to levy taxes, but to
authorize a temporary and emergency suspension of taxes by the President
- subject to the checkrein of Congressional veto - in situations where
time is of the essence.
Stand-by capital improvements
authority. Second, I recommend that the Congress provide stand-by
authority to the President to accelerate and initiate up to $2 billion
of appropriately timed capital improvements when unemployment is rising,
as follows:
(1) The President would be authorized
to initiate the program within two months after the seasonally adjusted
unemployment rate
(a)
had risen in at least three out of four months (or in four out of six months)
and
(b)
had risen to a level at least one percentage point higher than its level
four months (or six months) earlier.
(2) Before invoking this authority,
the President must make a finding that current and prospective economic
developments require such action to achieve the objectives of the Employment
Act.
(3) Upon such finding, the President
would be authorized to commit
(a)
up to $750 million in the acceleration of direct Federal expenditures previously
authorized by the Congress,
(b)
up to $750 million for grants-in-aid to State and local governments,
(c)
up to $250 million in loans to States and localities which would otherwise
be unable to meet their share of project costs, and
(d)
up to $250 million additional to be distributed among the above three categories
as he might deem appropriate.
(4) The authority to initiate
new projects under the capital improvements program would terminate automatically
within 12 months unless extended by the Congress - but the program could
be terminated at any time by the President.
(5) Grants-in-aid would be made
under rules prescribed by the President to assure that assisted projects
(a) were of high priority, (b) represented a net addition to existing State
and local expenditures, and (c) could be started and completed quickly.
(6) Expenditures on Federal
projects previously authorized by the Congress would include resource conservation
and various Federal public works, including construction, repair, and modernization
of public buildings.
(7) After the program had terminated,
the authority would not again be available to the President for six months.
The above criteria would have
permitted Presidential authority to be invoked in the early stages of each
of the four postwar recessions - within four months after the decline had
begun. Furthermore, no false signals would have been given. Were a false
signal to occur - for example, because of a strike - the authority, which
is discretionary, need not be invoked.
The first impact of the accelerated
orders, contracts, and outlays under the program would be felt within one
to two months after the authority was invoked. The major force of the program
would be spent well before private demand again pressed hard on the economy's
capacity to produce. With the indicated safeguards, this program would
make a major contribution to business activity, consumer purchasing power,
and employment in a recession by utilizing for sound public investment
resources that would otherwise have gone to waste.
Unemployment compensation.
Third, I again urge the Congress to strengthen permanently our Federal-State
system of unemployment insurance. My specific recommendations include
(1) Extension of the benefit
period by as much as 13 weeks for workers with at least three years of
experience in covered employment;
(2) Similar extension of the
benefit period when unemployment is widespread for workers with less than
three years of experience in covered employment. This provision could be
put into effect by Presidential proclamation when insured unemployment
reaches 5 percent, and the number of benefit exhaustions over a three-month
period reaches 1 percent of covered employment;
(3) Incentives for the States
to provide increased benefits, so that the great majority of covered workers
will be eligible for weekly benefits equal to at least half of their average
weekly wage;
(4) Extension of coverage to
more than three million additional workers;
(5) Improved financing of the
program by an increase in the wage base for the payroll tax from $3,000
to $4,800;
(6) Reinsurance grants to States
experiencing high unemployment insurance costs;
(7) Provisions which permit
claimants to attend approved training or retraining courses without adverse
effect on eligibility for benefits.
Wider coverage, extended benefit
periods, and increased benefit amounts will help society discharge its
obligation to individual unemployed workers. And by maintaining more adequately
their incomes and purchasing power, these measures will also buttress the
economy's built-in defenses against recession. Temporary extensions of
unemployment compensation benefits have been voted by the Congress during
the last two recessions. It is time now for permanent legislation to bring
this well-tested stabilizer more smoothly into operation when economic
activity declines.
In combination, these three
measures will enable Federal fiscal policy to respond firmly, flexibly,
and swiftly to oncoming recessions. Working together on this bold program,
the Congress and the Executive can make an unprecedented contribution to
economic stability, one that will richly reward us in fuller employment
and more sustained growth, and thus, in greater human well-being and greater
national strength.
Strengthening the Financial System
Proposals of the Commission
on Money and Credit. The Report of the Commission on Money and Credit,
published last year, raises important issues of public policy relating
to (1) the objectives and machinery of Government for economic stabilization
and growth, (2) Federal direct lending and credit guarantee programs, and
(3) the structure and regulation of private financial institutions and
markets. The Commission's Report represents the results of thorough analysis
and deliberation by a private group of leading citizens representative
of business, labor, finance, agriculture, and the professions. The Commission's
findings and recommendations deserve careful consideration by the Congress,
the Executive, and the public - consideration which should result in legislative
and executive actions to strengthen government policy under the Employment
Act and to improve the financial system of the United States. The subjects
covered by the Commission can - for the purposes of discussion and action
in the Government - usefully be divided into four categories.
(1) To strengthen the instruments
of policy for economic stabilization, the Commission recommends permanent
improvement of unemployment compensation, flexibility in, government capital
expenditures, and flexibility in adjusting the basic Federal individual
income tax rate. These key proposals are reflected in the three-part anti-recession
program just described.
(2) In its comprehensive new
look at existing financial legislation, the Commission concludes that the
following financial restrictions no longer serve the purposes originally
intended and unnecessarily complicate or obstruct other government policies:
the ceiling on the public debt, the ceiling on permissible interest rates
on U.S. Treasury bonds, and the required gold reserve against Federal Reserve
notes and deposits. I am sure that the Congress will wish to examine carefully
the Commission's recommendations on these points.
(3) The Commission re-examines
the structure of the Federal Reserve System and its relationship to other
arms of the Federal Government. The desirability of proposed changes in
the structure which has evolved over the years can be determined only after
extensive consideration by the Congress and by the public.
There are two reforms of clear
merit on which there appears to be sufficiently general agreement to proceed
at once, and which are of direct concern to the President in the exercise
of his responsibility to appoint the members and officers of the Board
of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.
The first is to give adequate
recognition in the simple matter of salaries to the important responsibilities
of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. The United States
is behind other countries in the status accorded, by this concrete symbol,
to the leadership of its "central bank," and I urge that the Congress take
corrective action.
The second is to revise the
terms of the officers and members of the Board so that a new President
will be able to nominate a Chairman of his choice for a term of four years
coterminous with his own. This change has the concurrence of the present
Chairman of the Board of Governors. The current situation - under which
the four-year term of the Chairman is not synchronized with the Presidential
term - appears to be accidental and inadvertent.
Provision should be made now
for smooth transition to new arrangements to take effect in 1965. I suggest
that, on the expiration of the present term of the Chairman in April 1963,
the next term expire on January 31, 1965. In order that, starting in 1965,
the President may have a free choice when he begins his own term, it is
also necessary to provide that the terms of members of the Board - which
now begin and end on January 31 of even years - begin and end in odd years.
This change can be accomplished very easily by extending the terms of present
members by one year.
(4) Several of the Commission's
recommendations require careful appraisal by the affected agencies in the
Executive Branch as a basis for future legislative recommendations:
(a)
Banks and other private financial institutions: The Commission proposes
significant changes in the scope and nature of government regulations concerning
reserves, portfolios, interest rates, and competition. I shall ask an interagency
working group in the Executive Branch to examine the complex issues raised
by these proposals. This interagency group will keep in close touch with
the relevant committees of the Congress, which will no doubt wish to study
these issues simultaneously.
(b)
Federal lending and loan guarantee programs: It is clearly time
for a thorough review of both their general impact on the economy and their
effectiveness for the special purposes for which they were established.
Again the Commission's Report has performed a valuable service in illuminating
basic problems. One important question is the appropriate role - with account
taken of both effectiveness and budgetary cost - of direct Federal lending,
loan guarantees, and interest sharing. I shall ask a second interagency
group in the Executive Branch to examine these programs.
(c)
Corporate pension funds and other private retirement programs: It
is time for a reappraisal of legislation governing these programs. They
have become, in recent years, a major custodian of individual savings and
an important source of funds for capital markets. The amendment to the
Welfare and Pension Plans Disclosure Act which I recommend below will be
an important step toward insuring fidelity in the administration of these
Plans. But there is also need for a review of rules governing the investment
policies of these funds and the effects on equity and efficiency of the
tax privileges accorded them. I shall ask a third working group of relevant
Departments and agencies to recommend needed actions in this field, taking
into account the findings of the Commission as well as other studies and
proposals.
A revision of silver policy.
Silver - a sick metal in the 1930's - is today an important raw material
for which industrial demand is expanding steadily. It is uneconomic for
the U.S. Government to lock up large quantities of useful silver in the
sterile form of currency reserves. Neither is any constructive purpose
served by requiring that the Treasury maintain a floor under the price
of silver. Silver should eventually be demonetized, except for its use
in coins.
(1) As a first step in freeing
silver from government control, the Secretary of the Treasury at my direction
suspended sales of silver on November 29. This order amounted to the withdrawal
of a price ceiling on silver which had been maintained by Treasury sales
at a fixed price.
(2) The next step should be
the withdrawal of the Treasury's price floor under domestically produced
silver. Accordingly, I recommend repeal of the Acts relating to silver
of June 19, 1934, July 6 1939, and July 31, 1946; this step will free the
Treasury from any future obligation to support the price of silver.
(3) I also recommend the repeal
of the special 50 percent tax on transfers of interest in silver; this
step will foster orderly price movements by encouraging the development
of a futures market in silver.
(4) Finally, I recommend that
the Federal Reserve System be authorized to issue Federal Reserve notes
in denominations of $1; this will make possible the gradual withdrawal
from circulation of $1 and $2 silver certificates, and the use of the silver
thus released for coinage purposes.
Strengthening Our Manpower Base
The labor force of the United
States is its most valuable productive resource. Measures which enhance
the skills and adaptability of the working population contribute to the
over-all productivity of the economy. Several legislative proposals to
serve these ends have already been put before the Congress.
(1) I urge speedy passage of
the proposed Manpower Development and Training Act. A growing and changing
economy demands a labor force whose skills adapt readily to the requirements
of new technology. When adaptation is slow and occupational lines rigid,
individuals and society alike are the losers. Individuals take their loss
in the form of prolonged unemployment or sharply reduced earning power.
Society's loss is measured in foregone output. These are losses we need
not suffer. A few hundred dollars invested in training or retraining an
unemployed or underemployed worker can increase his productivity to society
by a multiple of that investment - quite apart from the immeasurable return
to the worker in regaining a sense of purpose and hope. Both compassion
and dollars-and-cents reasoning speak for this legislation.
(2) For the same reasons, I
urge enactment of the Youth Employment Opportunities Act. This bill provides
three types of pilot programs to give young people employment opportunities
which would enable them to acquire much-needed skills. These programs include
training, employment in public service jobs with public and private nonprofit
agencies, and the establishment of Youth Corps Conservation Camps. In the
current decade, young men and women will be entering the labor force in
rapidly growing numbers. They will expect, and they deserve, opportunities
to acquire skills and to do useful work. The price of failure is frustration
and disillusion among our youth. This price we are resolved not to pay.
(3) I have already made my recommendations
for improvement of the Federal-State unemployment compensation system.
(4) I am asking the Congress
for more funds to increase the effectiveness of the U.S. Employment Service.
This important agency has already strengthened its operations, improving
its staff and placement services particularly in the largest urban centers,
and concentrating on labor market problems of nationwide significance -
especially those connected with technological displacement of adult workers
and the employment of youth. But the matching of jobs and workers is especially
difficult and especially important in a rapidly changing economy, and more
can be done. When unfilled jobs and qualified unemployed workers coexist
- but do not make contact because the flow of job information is not sufficiently
free - the employer, the worker, and the country lose. I urge the Congress
to reduce that loss in the most effective way - by revitalizing further
the agency charged with disseminating information about job opportunities
and willing workers.
(5) I ask for enactment of the
pending proposal to amend the Welfare and Pension Plans Disclosure Act
so as (a) to provide adequate penalties for embezzlement and (b) to vest
authority in a responsible Federal agency to enforce the statute by issuing
binding regulations, prescribing uniform reporting forms, and investigating
violations. Almost 90 million people rely on some welfare and pension plan
for part or all of present or future income. These plans are a major support
of the economic security of the American people. We are derelict if we
do not provide adequate administrative and enforcement provisions to protect
the tremendous financial interest of participants in these funds.
Strengthening Our Tax System
The tax system of the United
States has consequences far beyond the simple raising of revenue. The tax
laws are a vital part of the economic environment; their effects may be
equitable or inequitable; they create incentives which may help or handicap
the national interest. We cannot safely ignore these important effects
in the comforting illusion that what already exists is perfect. We must
scrutinize our tax system carefully to insure that its provisions contribute
to the broad goals of full employment, growth, and equity.
My legislative proposals in
the tax field are directly related to these goals and the corollary need
for improvement in the balance of payments. In particular, I urge the earliest
possible enactment of the tax proposals now before the House Committee
on Ways and Means. The centerpiece of these proposals is the 8 percent
tax credit against tax for gross investment in depreciable machinery and
equipment. The credit should be retroactive to January 1, 1962. The tax
credit increases the profitability of productive investment by reducing
the net cost of acquiring new equipment. It will stimulate investment in
capacity expansion and modernization, contribute to the growth of our productivity
and output, and increase the competitiveness of American exports in world
markets.
The tax credit for investment
is in part self-financing. The stimulus it provides to new investment will
have favorable effects on the level of economic activity during the year,
and this will in turn add to Federal revenues. My other proposals for tax
reform are designed to improve the equity and efficiency of the tax system
and will offset the remaining net revenue loss:
(1) Extension of the withholding
principle to dividend and interest income;
(2) Repeal of the $50 dividend
exclusion and the 4 percent dividend credit;
(3) Revision of the tax treatment
of business deductions for entertainment, gifts, and other expenses, to
stop abuses of "expense-account living";
(4) Elimination of the special
tax preference for capital gains from the sale of depreciable property,
real and personal;
(5) Removal of unwarranted preferences
(a) to cooperatives, (b) to mutual fire and casualty insurance companies,
and (c) to mutual savings banks and savings and loan associations; and
(6) Revision of the tax treatment
of foreign income, to remove defects and inequities in the law. Removal
of the unwarranted incentive to the export of capital will be consistent
with the efficient distribution of capital resources in the world and will
aid our balance of payments position. Tax deferral privileges should be
limited to profits earned in less developed countries, and opportunities
for "tax haven" operations should be eliminated.
In addition, I recommend that
the corporate income tax and certain excise taxes again be extended at
present levels for another year beyond June 30, 1962, except that the structure
of taxes and user charges in the transportation field be altered as proposed
in my Budget Message.
In considering tax revision
in the United States, we must not limit ourselves simply to Federal taxation.
Our States, counties, and municipalities collect nearly half as much tax
revenue as the Federal Government. There is great potential for equity
or inequity, for incentive or disincentive, in their highly diverse tax
systems. In addition, the effectiveness of Federal tax policies can be
enhanced by harmonious coordination with State and local fiscal systems.
There is wide latitude for improvements in the coordination of tax systems
and in operations with intergovernmental implications. In this effort,
the Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations is performing a
valuable service. I urge careful study of its recommendations at all levels
of government.
Later this year, I shall present
to the Congress a major program of tax reform. This broad program will
re-examine tax rates and the definition of the income tax base. It will
be aimed at the simplification of our tax structure, the equal treatment
of equally situated persons, and the strengthening of incentives for individual
effort and for productive investment.
The momentum of our economy
has been restored. This momentum must be maintained, if the full potential
of our free economy is to be released in the service of the Nation and
the world. In this Report I have proposed a program to sustain our prosperity
and accelerate our growth - in short, to realize our economic potential.
In this undertaking, I ask the support of the Congress and the American
people.
JOHN F. KENNEDY