DEAR LARRY: I am delighted that you have accepted
my invitation to become a member of our National Committee of Business
and Professional Men for the campaign. I am confident that you and others
in your industry, as participants in the committee, can aid greatly in
the election of a Democratic administration and Congress next November.
You may rest assured that it is my desire
in the forthcoming campaign and in our new administration to place great
emphasis upon the necessity for and the benefits to be gained from a high
annual volume of general construction and homebuilding in the years ahead.
In dollar volume and in the employment of materials and manpower the construction
industry should be one of the strongest forces in the Nation's economy.
Moreover, the homebuilding industry, the largest
single segment of construction, will need added strength and special attention
if we are to be successful in housing our rapidly expanding population
and accelerating growth in private home ownership.
Six years ago the National Association of
home Builders estimated we needed an average of 2 million new or new-conditioned
homes each year. Yet our present rate of production is still far below
this figure. A recent Senate report concludes that during the sixties we
must produce a minimum of 16 million new homes just to keep pace with our
growing housing needs.
It is already clear this year that we will
fall far short of meeting the housing production records of 10 years
ago when we produced about 1.4 million new homes. Indeed, not once during
the past 8 years of the present administration have we reached this 1950
figure, and today it is obvious that we are falling substantially behind
our minimum housing requirements.
I believe that a healthy, expanding economy
will enable us to build 2 million homes a year, in wholesome neighborhoods,
for people of all incomes. This can and should be accomplished as completely
as possible through private enterprise, using both private financing and
private construction. At this rate, within a single decade we could clear
away most of our slums and assure every American family a decent place
to live.
All builders and businessmen in the construction
industry join me, I know, in seeking "a decent home and a suitable living
environment for every American family." But to reach this goal it seems
clear to me that we must first reverse the tight-money, high-interest-rate
policy which has largely governed the supply of mortgage funds in the past
8 years.
Under this policy families in moderate circumstances
are being priced out of the market for decent homes. Because of high money
costs both builders and buyers are losing the benefit of new advances in
housing techniques and construction methods. As quickly as possible, we
should bring home-financing costs back again within reach of the millions
of American working families desiring to buy homes they can afford.
I wholeheartedly endorse the statement in
the Democratic platform: "Free competitive enterprise is the most creative
and productive form of economic order that the world has seen. The recent
slow pace of American growth is due not to the failure of our free economy
but to the failure of our national leadership." Certainly a Democratic
administration will provide leadership and direction toward this end at
the Cabinet level, so that there may be a coordinated approach toward all
decisions affecting the urban and metropolitan problems which so greatly
involve homebuilding and general construction.
I look forward to working with you, Larry,
and with the others in the industry helping in our campaign. I know that
the assistance of builders and businessmen in the construction industry
and their advice and counsel will be most helpful during the campaign and
in the years ahead.
With every good wish, I am,
Sincerely,