Franklin D. Roosevelt
Fireside Chat 3 (July 24, 1933)
On the First Hundred Days
After the adjournment of the historical special session of the Congress five
weeks ago I purposely refrained from addressing you for two very good reasons.
First, I think that we all wanted the opportunity of a little quiet thought
to examine and assimilate in a mental picture the crowding events of the
hundred days which had been devoted to the starting of the wheels of the New
Deal.
Secondly, I wanted a few weeks in which to set up the new administrative
organization and to see the first fruits of our careful planning.
I think it will interest you if I set forth the fundamentals of this
planning for national recovery; and this I am very certain will make it
abundantly clear to you that all of the proposals and all of the legislation
since the fourth day of March have not been just a collection of haphazard
schemes but rather the orderly component parts of a connected and logical
whole.
Long before Inauguration Day I became convinced that individual effort and
local effort and even disjointed Federal effort had failed and of necessity
would fail and, therefore, that a rounded leadership by the Federal Government
had become a necessity both of theory and of fact. Such leadership, however,
had its beginning in preserving and strengthening the credit of the United
States Government, because without that no leadership was a possibility. For
years the Government had not lived within its income. The immediate task was to
bring our regular expenses within our revenues. That has been done.
It may seem inconsistent for a government to cut down its regular expenses
and at the same time to borrow and to spend billions for an emergency. But it
is not inconsistent because a large portion of the emergency money has been
paid out in the form of sound loans which will be repaid to the Treasury over a
period of years; and to cover the rest of the emergency money we have imposed
taxes to pay the interest and the installments on that part of the debt.
So you will see that we have kept our credit good. We have built a granite
foundation in a period of confusion. That foundation of the
Federal credit stands there broad and sure. It is the base of the whole
recovery plan.
Then came the part of the problem that concerned the
credit of the individual citizens themselves. You and I know of the
banking crisis and of the great danger to the savings of our people. On March
sixth every national bank was closed. One month later 90 per cent of the
deposits in the national banks had been made available to the depositors. Today
only about 5 per cent of the deposits in national banks are still tied up. The
condition relating to state banks, while not quite so good on a percentage
basis, is shoving a steady reduction in the total of frozen deposits -- a
result much better than we had expected three months ago.
The problem of the credit of the individual was made more difficult because
of another fact. The dollar was a different dollar from the one with which the
average debt had been incurred. For this reason large numbers of people were
actually losing possession of and title to their farms and homes. All of you
know the financial steps which have been taken to correct this inequality. In
addition the Home Loan Act, the Farm Loan Act and the Bankruptcy Act were
passed.
It was a vital necessity to restore purchasing power by reducing the debt
and interest charges upon our people, but while we were helping people to save
their credit it was at the same time absolutely essential to do something about
the physical needs of hundreds of thousands who were in dire straits at that
very moment. Municipal and State aid were being stretched to the limit. We
appropriated half a billion dollars to supplement their efforts and in addition,
as you know, we have put 300,000 young men into practical and useful work in
our forests and to prevent flood and soil erosion. The wages they earn are
going in greater part to the support of the nearly one million people who
constitute their families.
In this same classification we can properly place the great public works
program running to a total of over Three Billion Dollars -- to be used for
highways and ships and flood prevention and inland navigation and thousands of
self-sustaining state and municipal improvements. Two points should be made
clear in the allotting and administration of these projects -- first, we are
using the utmost care to choose labor creating quick-acting, useful projects,
avoiding the smell of the pork barrel; and secondly, we are hoping that at
least half of the money will come back to the government from projects which
will pay for themselves over a period of years.
Thus far I have spoken primarily of the foundation stones -- the measures
that were necessary to re-establish credit and to head people in the opposite
direction by preventing distress and providing as much work as possible through
governmental agencies. Now I come to the links which will build us a more
lasting prosperity. I have said that we cannot attain that in a nation half
boom and half broke. If all of our people have work and fair wages and fair
profits, they can buy the products of their neighbors and business is good. But
if you take away the wages and the profits of half of them, business is only half
as good. It doesn't help much if the fortunate half is very prosperous -- the
best way is for everybody to be reasonably prosperous.
For many years the two great barriers to a normal prosperity have been low
farm prices and the creeping paralysis of unemployment. These factors have cut
the purchasing power of the country in half. I promised action. Congress did
its part when it passed the farm and the industrial recovery acts. Today we are
putting these two acts to work and they will work if people understand their
plain objectives.
First, the Farm Act: It is based on the fact that the purchasing power of
nearly half our population depends on adequate prices for farm products. We
have been producing more of some crops than we consume or can sell in a depressed
world market. The cure is not to produce so much. Without our help the farmers
cannot get together and cut production, and the Farm Bill gives them a method
of bringing their production down to a reasonable level and of obtaining
reasonable prices for their crops. I have clearly stated that this method is in
a sense experimental, but so far as we have gone we have reason to believe that
it will produce good results.
It is obvious that if we can greatly increase the purchasing power of the
tens of millions of our people who make a living from farming and the
distribution of farm crops, we will greatly increase the consumption of those
goods which are turned out by industry.
That brings me to the final step -- bringing back industry along sound lines.
Last Autumn, on several occasions, I expressed my
faith that we can make possible by democratic self-discipline in industry
general increases in wages and shortening of hours sufficient to enable
industry to pay its own workers enough to let those workers buy and use the
things that their labor produces. This can be done only if we permit and
encourage cooperative action in industry because it is obvious that without
united action a few selfish men in each competitive group will pay starvation
wages and insist on long hours of work. Others in that group must either follow
suit or close up shop. We have seen the result of action of that kind in the
continuing descent into the economic Hell of the past four years.
There is a clear way to reverse that process: If all employers in each
competitive group agree to pay their workers the same wages -- reasonable wages
-- and require the same hours -- reasonable hours -- then higher wages and
shorter hours will hurt no employer. Moreover, such action is better for the
employer than unemployment and low wages, because it makes more buyers for his
product. That is the simple idea which is the very heart of the Industrial
Recovery Act.
On the basis of this simple principle of everybody doing things together, we
are starting out on this nationwide attack on unemployment. It will succeed if
our people understand it -- in the big industries, in the little shops, in the
great cities and in the small villages. There is nothing complicated about it
and there is nothing particularly new in the principle. It goes back to the
basic idea of society and of the nation itself that people acting in a group
can accomplish things which no individual acting alone could even hope to bring
about.
Here is an example. In the Cotton Textile Code and in other agreements
already signed, child labor has been abolished. That makes me personally
happier than any other one thing with which I have been connected since I came
to
We are not going through another Winter like the
last. I doubt if ever any people so bravely and cheerfully endured a season
half so bitter. We cannot ask
The proposition is simply this:
If all employers will act together to shorten hours and raise wages we can
put people back to work. No employer will suffer, because the relative level of
competitive cost will advance by the same amount for all. But if any
considerable group should lag or shirk, this great opportunity will pass us by
and we will go into another desperate Winter. This
must not happen.
We have sent out to all employers an agreement which is the result of weeks
of consultation. This agreement checks against the voluntary codes of nearly
all the large industries which have already been submitted. This blanket
agreement carries the unanimous approval of the three boards which I have
appointed to advise in this, boards representing the great leaders in labor, in
industry and in social service. The agreement has already brought a flood of
approval from every State, and from so wide a
cross-section of the common calling of industry that I know it is fair for all.
It is a plan --deliberate, reasonable and just -- intended to put into effect
at once the most important of the broad principles which are being established,
industry by industry, through codes. Naturally, it takes a good deal of
organizing and a great many hearings and many months, to get these codes
perfected and signed, and we cannot wait for all of them to go through. The
blanket agreements, however, which I am sending to every employer
will start the wheels turning now, and not six months from now.
There are, of course, men, a few of them who might thwart this great common
purpose by seeking selfish advantage. There are adequate penalties in the law,
but I am now asking the cooperation that comes from opinion and from
conscience. These are the only instruments we shall use in this great summer
offensive against unemployment. But we shall use them to the limit to protect
the willing from the laggard and to make the plan succeed.
In war, in the gloom of night attack, soldiers wear a bright badge on their
shoulders to be sure that comrades do not fire on comrades. On that principle,
those who cooperate in this program must know each other at a glance. That is
why we have provided a badge of honor for this purpose, a simple design with a
legend. "We do our part," and I ask that all those who join with me
shall display that badge prominently. It is essential to our purpose.
Already all the great, basic industries have come forward willingly with
proposed codes, and in these codes they accept the principles leading to mass
reemployment. But, important as is this heartening demonstration, the richest
field for results is among the small employers, those whose contribution will
give new work for from one to ten people. These smaller employers are indeed a
vital part of the backbone of the country, and the success of our plans lies
largely in their hands.
Already the telegrams and letters are pouring into the White House
--messages from employers who ask that their names be placed on this special
Roll of Honor. They represent great corporations and companies, and
partnerships and individuals. I ask that even before the dates set in the
agreements which we have sent out, the employers of the country who have not
already done so -- the big fellows and the little fellows -- shall at once
write or telegraph to me personally at the White House, expressing their
intention of going through with the plan. And it is my purpose to keep posted
in the post office of every town, a Roll of Honor of all those who join with
me.
I want to take this occasion to say to the twenty-four governors who are now
in conference in
To the men and women whose lives have been darkened by the fact or the fear
of unemployment, I am justified in saying a word of encouragement because the
codes and the agreements already approved, or about to be passed upon, prove
that the plan does raise wages, and that it does put people back to work. You
can look on every employer who adopts the plan as one who is doing his part,
and those employers deserve well of everyone who works for a living. It will be
clear to you, as it is to me, that while the shirking employer may undersell
his competitor, the saving he thus makes is made at the expense of his
country's welfare.
While we are making this great common effort there should be no discord and
dispute. This is no time to cavil or to question the standard set by this universal
agreement. It is time for patience and understanding and cooperation. The
workers of this country have rights under this law which cannot be taken from
them, and nobody will be permitted to whittle them away, but, on the other
hand, no aggression is now necessary to attain those rights. The whole country
will be united to get them for you. The principle that applies to the employers
applies to the workers as well, and I ask you workers to cooperate in the same
spirit.
When Andrew Jackson, "Old Hickory," died, someone asked,
"Will he go to Heaven?" and the answer was, "He will if he wants
to." If I am asked whether the American people will pull themselves out of
this depression, I answer, " They will if they
want to." The essence of the plan is a universal limitation of hours of
work per week for any individual by common consent, and a universal payment of
wages above a minimum, also by common consent. I cannot guarantee the success
of this nationwide plan, but the people of this country can guarantee its
success. I have no faith in " cure-alls" but
I believe that we can greatly influence economic forces. I have no sympathy
with the professional economists who insist that things must run their course
and that human agencies can have no influence on economic ills. One reason is
that I happen to know that professional economists have changed their
definition of economic laws every five or ten years for a very long time, but I
do have faith, and retain faith, in the strength of common purpose, and in the strength
of unified action taken by the American people.
That is why I am describing to you the simple purposes and the solid
foundations upon which our program of recovery is built. That is why I am
asking the employers of the Nation to sign this common covenant with me -- to
sign it in the name of patriotism and humanity. That is why I am asking the
workers to go along with us in a spirit of understanding and of helpfulness.