Roger Babson on Ending the Depression |
[Reprinted from Land and Freedom,
May-June 1937]
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| Joseph Dana Miller was
during this period Editor of Land and Freedom. Many of the
editorials published were unsigned. It is therefore possible that
Miller was not the author of this article, although the content is
thought to be consistent with his own perspectives as Editor.
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Roger Babson is a curious type of thinker. Not
that he is much different from the usual run. He
is as wordy as most of them. He speaks of those who
put their trust in economic laws, among whom by inference he includes himself. But he does not say what
these laws are. He sees the nature of a "boom" and
warns against its coming. He seems to think that a
spiritual awakening might avert it.
It appears from Mr. Babson that we hold in our hands
the power to direct us to or away from the depression which he thinks might be possible, and which would
be "deeper by five fold any depression that we ever knew."
Listen to him:
"Ours is the decision, not as a preacher or as a prophet,
but as an ice-cold statistician, I give you my formal report
that essentially the so-called business cycle is a revolution of character. Its pulse is our human heartbeats.
Its rotation are the wheels in our own hands."
Now let that percolate for a moment. To say nothing
of the loose English, what under the sun does it
mean? And this is accompanied by some more observations, a development out of the old copy book maxims.
"The rich should not evade their obligations." "Employers and labor leaders should see each their point of
view and cooperate in an unselfish way." And more
of the same sort. Not the faintest intimation of any
economic laws which he speaks of in the beginning.
It will probably surprise Mr. Babson to be told that the
rich have no obligations no more than those who
are not rich. If their wealth is unearned then the obligation of both rich and poor is to see that the maldistribution of wealth is remedied. It is no special obligation
of the rich it is an obligation of society, rich and poor
alike. The very mention of economic laws suggests
that if these laws are regarded at all they must be considered without reference to who is rich and who is poor,
but only the -why of such disparity as exists.
We are rather attracted to Mr. Babson's statement
that a spiritual awakening is needed as a remedy
for the economic ills that afflict us. If a spiritual awakening will arouse a knowledge in the minds of man that God
has provided abundance for the needs of all, and that
the only thing that stands in the way to prevent this
is our disobedience to God's law that is something.
But this is not, we suspect, Mr. Babson's meaning. Just
what he does mean it is impossible to say. So many
of the writers of today have a rush of words to the head
that is is difficult to attach to them any definite meaning.
Nevertheless, we do not summarily dismiss
this idea of the need of a spiritual awakening in
man, but we ask Mr. Babson to consider that the first
thing man needs is a job. No matter how spiritually
awake he is he must first find food for his body, clothes
for his back, and shelter for himself and his family. With
his spiritual awakening must also go an understanding.
Unless he understands, his faith will not long sustain him.
Mr. Babson fears another "boom." He does not
quite know why. But he is apprehensive. It
is a queer whirligig world in which some people fear depressions and others fear booms. That is because people
sense booms as the cause of depressions. But why should
booms cause depressions? Evidently it is because speculation leads to continuous demands upon labor and capital
more than these two productive factors can give and
continue to produce. Now observe that speculation in
commodities has a way of curing itself, but speculation
in land is different, for that takes from both labor and
capital, halts the industrial process and leads to collapse.
This is what happened in 1929 and it is what Mr. Babson
fears, though he does not understand much if anything
about it.
He thinks that all our industrial troubles are due to
a law of action and reaction -- whatever that means.
Laws of action and reaction are not something in themselves. They must have causes that set them in motion.
What these causes are in his present state of confusion
Mr. Babson does not see. Illustrations of the muddled
state of his mind may be cited. As the following:
"It is easy to understand why it is hard to guard against
a boom. The seeds of recklessness and greed that breed
booms are not streams from without. They germinate
within the human mind. Only as the hearts of our people
are cleansed of evil can we hope to avoid falling into evil.
A permanent economic revival depends upon a spiritual
renewal. Furthermore let me add that I believe this
may be in the cards."
How to properly characterize this and continue to
be polite is a problem. So we shall fall back on
Charles Lamb who asked us to extend the same measure
of commiseration to an apparently maimed comprehension that we extend to the physically disabled. But
perhaps this would not be polite either.
Mayor La Guardia said in a recent talk: "An
economic background with some college degrees
are certainly a big help to a fellow. If I had said the
economic system was screwy everybody would call me
a radical." The Mayor need not fear. No man who
knows the meaning of the word radical will ever accuse
him of being one.
When this very well meaning political opportunist
was floundering around for some avenue for political
preferment we landed him in the office of Borough President. Mr. LaGuardia was elected by nine hundred
plurality. Running on the Single Tax ticket the editor
of LAND AND FREEDOM got several thousand votes drawn
for the most part from the Democratic nominee. In
this way Mr. LaGuardia was elected and his political
career begun. And for a time Mr. LaGuardia, opportunist always, flirted with the Single Taxers and acted as
if he might know what it was all about. But of course
he didn't. However, the accident that started him on
his political career is not forgotten. In the steady trend
of economic thinking in our direction now so plainly
obvious the incident is not important.
Dorothy Thompson, for whom we have an
unstinted admiration, speeds around on her flashing
skates on very thin ice at times. When she says with
an air of finality, "I have decided that public ownership
of property is a complete mirage if unaccompanied by
political freedom," we want to add that before property
is defined, public ownership must always be a mirage.
For the public ownership of property, unless we first
agree on what is property, is wholly destructive of political freedom. Economic freedom is the basis of all liberty.
If Miss Thompson will sit down and read Progress and
Poverty she will add to her repertoire of significant
truths a new foundation for her often interesting and
occasionally brilliant speculations. Remember, Miss
Thompson, Progress and Poverty is THE BOOK OF
A THOUSAND YEARS. No one in the days to come
will influence civilization in any way comparable to this
humble printer who blazed for us a new world. No
one can afford to be ignorant of these slowly gathering
forces which are remaking for a happier civilization all
the nations of the earth in which his teachings have found
a lodgement.
Perhaps it is a mistake to emphasize too strongly
the benefits that will go to capital as a result of the
taking of economic rent for public purposes and the abolition of all taxes. What capital per se will gain is purely
incidental, though it will gain much. When Henry George
wrote "Progress and Poverty" he was not thinking of
capital he was thinking of labor, of labor underpaid,
of labor robbed of its inheritance in the natural resources
of the earth, of the unemployed, of the steady pressure
of poverty upon all those who work for a living.
Of capital he was not thinking, particularly. He knew,
as all of us know, of the power possessed by so-called
capital where and when it bargains with labor for employment, which is due of course to the helplessness of labor
divorced from the land. Karl Marx saw it too, but belatedly too late to revise his earlier conclusion We refer our
readers to the last chapter of Das Kapital in which he
declared that the divorcement of labor from the land was
the basis of exploitation.
That "capital" will benefit by a free world economy
is conceded, but it will be deprived of certain powers
it now possesses, which are the vantage grounds of all
contracts it makes with labor for employment. Such
advantages are but temporary, it is true, since capital
sells its products and cannot afford to lower the general
level of wages which is its market. But temporarily it
is a very real power, and this deceives the mind that does
not look below the surface. It does not see that the
causes that determine and make inevitable the inequalities in any bargain for employment finally react to the
disadvantage of capital in restricting its market.
CAPITAL merely assist labor in the work of production. It has no other function. It neither determines wages nor pays them. Causes independent of
both capital and labor determine wages. It is not to
the advantage of Capital that wages should be lowered.
Nearly always the true interests of Capital is to conserve wages of superintendence and the return to the
entrepreneur, about which so much fuss is made by certain
economists who do not clearly apprehend the relation.
For there are only two returns outside of rent, and no
other return is conceivable wages to labor and interest
to capital.
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