The decline in unemployment throughout
the country reported last week by the Departments of Labor and Commerce
is good news for America. It must have come as a disappointing surprise
to the opposition camp from which we are hearing so much foreboding talk
about the future these days.
Listening to the opposition, one would never
know that there are almost 68 million Americans at work in our $500 billion
economy and that Americans are earning at a record annual rate of over
$408 billion. One will never learn from my opponent that employment declined
less than seasonally last month and that unemployment went down more than
seasonally. Unemployment dropped not only as to number but also as a percentage
of the labor force.
His pessimistic talk today recalls to my mind
the situation in 1953 when the Eisenhower administration assumed responsibility
for the Nation's affairs. The economy was still in the shackles brought
on by the Korean war, the dollar was badly eroded, the budget was seriously
out of balance and scheduled to be out of balance for several years.
During these past 8 years unprecedented economic
progress has been made by Americans according to virtually every available
measure and all this has been accomplished without the stimulus of war
spending or make-work programs. Controls have been removed to make way
for freedom, fiscal responsibility has been established, erosion in the
value of the dollar has been checked, confidence in the future has been
restored in an environment remarkably free of inflationary psychology,
and America has again come to know prosperity with peace.
But we are not satisfied. There are problems
and challenges that constantly require our close and active attention.
Times of hesitation in our economic growth, such as we have experienced
in recent months, are far from unusual; history shows that they mark a
dynamic, free economy as purely as periods of surging expansion.
But we can always do better and I am determined that we shall do better
in quickening the pace of our economic advance and in minimizing interruptions
to it. I am determined to undertake every sensible measure to that end,
to lift to ever higher levels the number of jobs in America, to reduce
unemployment further, and to utilize more fully our industrial capacity
in steel and other lines
To achieve that goal we must release fully
the greatest creative force in human affairs - the spirit of individual
enterprise in 180 million Americans. That effort calls for a many-sided
program which I have been developing, and will continue to develop, in
this campaign.
My program calls for mobilizing our human
resources to the full by combating racial discrimination, by stimulating
scientific research and development, by forging an adequate national program
in support of State, local, and individual efforts in education.
My program calls for mobilizing our natural
resources by a dynamic teamwork policy of encouraging their conservation
and wise development, by constructively rebuilding our farm program, by
mounting a sound local-Federal attack on the stubborn problems of depressed
areas.
My program calls for keeping our economy fit
by fighting feather-bedding whether in government, labor, or business,
by keeping our money straight through rigorous economy and control of the
Federal budget, by revising our tax system to stimulate job-creating investment,
by sound improvements in our ways of handling national emergency strikes,
by timely and vigorous Government action to forestall both inflation and
recession, and by efforts to foster new and small business.
These are the elements of my program to generate
confidence, not fear, as to the future of the American economy. It is a
program that will spur our economic growth, that will raise living standards
and not merely living costs. It is a program that runs with, not against,
the grain of freedom. It is a program under which the American people themselves
will grow in capacity and character as they are asked to shoulder more,
not less, economic, political, and social responsibility. It will show
that freedom works.
In judging this philosophy and program the
American people are confronted in this campaign with the glowing promises
of my opponent. Remember this when you hear his case: On the record opposition
promises aren't worth a plugged nickel.
Consider their whole 20-year record.
For 6 years in the 1930's the opposition failed
miserably to solve the problem of unemployment. In 1939, when war came
in Europe, unemployment in America, after 6 futile years of their trying
to solve it, stood just under 9½ million. Let's face it: It took
war to solve the unemployment riddle for them.
After the war was over opposition spokesmen
forecast some 6 million unemployed. Why? Because, recalling their prewar
experience, they couldn't see what would keep the economy going and create
jobs when Government war orders were cut back. What saved the opposition
from their own dire predictions were, first, the huge demands to meet the
emergency needs of a war-torn world whose productive facilities had been
destroyed and, second, the accumulated needs of the civilian economy at
home which had been starved by the depression the opposition couldn't bring
us out of and by several years of war.
When these emergency postwar demands were
on the way to being satisfied, the opposition was faced with a recession.
That was the Truman recession of 1949. Unemployment jumped to almost 5
million. What saved the opposition this time from a dragging economy? The
Korean war. Once again the economy surged to levels that they so like to
cite.
So what judgment is to be made of the opposition's
20-year stewardship of the Nation's economic affairs?
1. Its policy was a tragic failure in solving
the problem of unemployment during the peacetime years from 1933 to 1939.
2. During the following 6 years, preparation
for war and war itself solved the unemployment problem for them.
3. Emergency demands, deferred from the decade
of depression and the war period, kept the economy active during the first
4 postwar years.
4. The emergency period over, we had the Truman
recession of 1949 from which the country was bailed out by the Korean war.
5. To cap it all, the American dollar lost
half of its buying power in their two decades of power.
That is the record.
It is a record of spend-and-spend, tax-and-tax,
borrow-and-borrow, inflate-and-inflate.
But more important, the programs that my opponent
offers today to meet the dynamic needs of America in the sixties are but
retreads of the programs that produced this dismal record of failure to
make the American economy work except in time of war, preparation for war,
or aftermath of war. In the light of this record the American people can
have no confidence in opposition claims that they can assure jobs and progress
in the peacetime America we are determined to have. The American people
cannot run the risk of entrusting their prosperity to such hands as these.