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National Life Advertisers Association, Washington, DC, September 26, 1973
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National Life Advertisers Association, Washington, DC, September 26, 1973
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The original documents are located in Box D35, folder "National Life Advertisers Association, Washington, DC, September 26, 1973" of the Ford Congressional Papers: Press Secretary and Speech File at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. Copyright Notice The copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. The Council donated to the United States of America his copyrights in all of his unpublished writings in National Archives collections. Works prepared by U.S. Government employees as part of their official duties are in the public domain. The copyrights to materials written by other individuals or organizations are presumed to remain with them. If you think any of the information displayed in the PDF is subject to a valid copyright claim, please contact the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. Digitized from Box D35 of The Ford Congressional Papers: Press Secretary and Speech File at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library NATIONAL LIFE ADVERTISERS ASSOCIATION AT 10:30 A.M. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1973, IN THE REGENCY BALLROOM OF THE SHOREHAM AMERICANA HOTEL, WASHINGTON, D.C. 1) VPs decision NOT Reguts - r) why - teachs 3) Whene IT IS DIFFICULT TO PERCEIVE IT the AMIDST ALL THE MOANING AND THE GROANING BUT WE ARE RIDING THE CREST OF AN ECONOMIC BOOM. THERE IS MOANING AND GROANING FOR A NUMBER OF REASONS -- ONE BEING THAT has been THE STOCK MARKET IS BEING CLAWED AND went for the last 5 days. PAWED BY THE BEARS. BUT THE CHIEF REASON IS INFLATION. OF ALL THE PROBLEMS THE UNITED STATES HAS BEEN FACED WITH OVER THE LAST DECADE OR so, THE ONE THAT HAS BEEN THE MOST PERSISTENT, THE MOST PERVASIVE AND FORD LIBRARY THE MOST PERVERSE HAS BEEN INFLATION. It mustures your understry, 210 million americans, 4 which people world. will. -2- THE CONTROL OF INFLATION UNDER CONDITIONS OF PROSPERITY IN PEACETIME IS THE DOMINANT DOMESTIC CHALLENGE OF THE SEVENTIES AS THE UNITED STATES STRUGGLES WITH THE PROBLEM OF REBUILDING ITS COMPETITIVE POSITION IN WORLD MARKETS. YOU KNOW THAT INFLATION IMPOSES AN UNJUST BURDEN ON EVERYONE BUT THAT RETIRED AMERICANS AND PERSONS ON FIXED INCOME SUFFER THE MOST. IN RECENT MONTHS, GALLOPING FOOD PRICE INFLATION HAS BROUGHT CRIES OF ANGUISH FROM ALL OF US. IN THE FINAL ANALYSIS, INFLATION IS JUST PLAIN CONFISCATION OF INCOME FOR EVERYONE. FURTHERMORE, THE RISING COSTS OF DOING BUSINESS THREATEN JOBS. THIS MEANS THAT THE ECONOMIC STRENGTH OF THE NATION AT HOME AND IN WORLD MARKETS IS CLEARLY THREATENED. -3- IT IS AGAINST THIS BACKDROP THAT I TALK WITH YOU TODAY ABOUT GENERAL ECONOMIC CONDITIONS IN THE UNITED STATES -- AND THE CONTINUING CHALLENGE THAT FACES US. WE HAVE ALL BECOME ECONOMY-WATCHERS IN THE SEVENTIES, AND OUR EXPERIENCE IN THAT REGARD IS MUCH LIKE PARENTS WHOSE CHILD IS SLOW IN LEARNING TO TALK. WHEN THE CHILD FINALLY DOES TALK, THE FLOOD OF WORDS IS A BIT TOO MUCH FOR US. SO IT HAS BEEN WITH THE ECONOMY. WE WERE IMPATIENT THROUGHOUT 1970 AND 1971 -- AND ON INTO THE SPRING OF 1972 -- AS THE BUSINESS RECOVERY APPEARED SLUGGISH. THEN BUSINESS ACTIVITY SPURTED AND IN RECENT MONTHS A VERY DIFFERENT PROBLEM GERALD R.FORD LIBRARY -4- HAS EMERGED -- A RAPID ACCELERATION OF GENERAL PRICE INFLATION, premarly in food y petrolem IN THE FIRST QUARTER OF 1972, OUR UNUSED RESOURCES SEEMED ADEQUATE TO ACCOMMODATE A LONG AND SIZABLE UPTREND IN SALES AND OUTPUT. THE NATIONAL UNEMPLOYMENT RATE REMAINED STUCK AT NEARLY 6 PER CENT. ONLY 75 PER CENT OF THE NATION'S MANUFACTURING FACILITIES WERE IN USE. PRICE AND WAGE CONTROLS, AIDED BY COMPETITIVE FORCES, APPEARED TO HAVE DAMPENED THE WAGE-PRICE SPIRAL. BEGINNING WITH THE SECOND QUARTER OF 1972, THE UPTREND IN SALES AND OUTPUT GAINED SPEED. SINCE THEN, VIRTUALLY ALL SECTORS OF THE ECONOMY HAVE SHOWN SIGNIFICANT GAINS. LIBRARY -4- HAS EMERGED -- A RAPID ACCELERATION OF GENERAL PRICE INFLATION, primary in food Y petrolem IN THE FIRST QUARTER OF 1972, OUR UNUSED RESOURCES SEEMED ADEQUATE TO ACCOMMODATE A LONG AND SIZABLE UPTREND IN SALES AND OUTPUT. THE NATIONAL UNEMPLOYMENT RATE REMAINED STUCK AT NEARLY 6 PER CENT. ONLY 75 PER CENT OF THE NATION'S MANUFACTURING FACILITIES WERE IN USE. PRICE AND WAGE CONTROLS, AIDED BY COMPETITIVE FORCES, APPEARED TO HAVE DAMPENED THE WAGE-PRICE SPIRAL. BEGINNING WITH THE SECOND QUARTER OF 1972, THE UPTREND IN SALES AND OUTPUT GAINED SPEED. SINCE THEN, VIRTUALLY ALL SECTORS OF THE ECONOMY HAVE SHOWN SIGNIFICANT GAINS. LIBRARY -5- NOW THE UNITED STATES ECONOMY IS RIDING A BOOM. OUR GROSS NATIONAL PRODUCT IS RUNNING AT A RATE OF $1,272 BILLION. THERE ARE 3 MILLION MORE PEOPLE WORKING TODAY THAN A YEAR AGO. UNEMPLOYMENT IS AT A RATE OF 4.8 PER CENT DOWN SHARPLY FROM THE 6 PER CENT FIGURE WHERE THE NEEDLE WAS STUCK FOR SO LONG. THERE ARE 84.4 MILLION JOBS AN ALL-TIME RECORD AND WAGES ARE ALSO AT AN ALL-TIME HIGH. THERE WERE 1.6 MILLION NEW JOBS CREATED IN THE FIRST SIX MONTHS OF 1973 ALONE. IN 1970, WITH A POPULATION OF 204,879,000, WE HAD 79,627,000 PEOPLE EMPLOYED. SINCE THEN, OUR POPULATION IS UP 2.4 PER CENT TO 209,866,000, BUT THE LIBRARY NUMBER OF JOBS HAS GROWN NEARLY 6 MILLION, -6- AN INCREASE OF MORE THAN 7 PER CENT -- TWICE AS MUCH AS THE GROWTH IN POPULATION. DURING THIS SAME PERIOD, PERSONAL INCOME ROSE FROM $542 BILLION TO $681 BILLION, A JUMP OF 25 PER CENT. SALES OF NON-DURABLE GOODS INCREASED 24 PER CENT; DURABLE GOODS, 52 PER CENT. AT THE SAME TIME, PRICES WENT UP 13 PER CENT. SO IT'S CLEAR THAT REAL BUYING POWER KEPT STEADILY AHEAD OF INFLATION. NOW WE MUST FIGHT TO PRESERVE THIS EDGE, AND THAT IS THE JOB OF THE ADMINISTRATION, THE CONGRESS AND THE AMERICAN PEOPLE. IT IS THE PEOPLE, MOVING IN RESPONSE TO SUPPLY AND DEMAND, WHO ARE THE ULTIMATE DECISION MAKERS ON INFLATION. GOOD, GOOD SOUND FEDERAL POLICIES CAN HELP DO THE JOB. -7- INFLATION IS OUR NO. 1 POLITICAL ISSUE. THERE ARE THOSE WHO ARE SEEKING TO MAKE POLITICAL HAY OUT OF THAT ISSUE. AND THE IRONIC FACT IS THAT THEY ARE THE SAME PEOPLE WHO TOUCHED OFF THE INFLATIONARY PRESSURES HAUNTING US TODAY at the outrit Arm BY INSISTING IN THE MID-SIXTIES THAT WE Vertuar COULD FIGHT A COSTLY WAR HALFWAY ACROSS THE WORLD WITHOUT A TAX INCREASE -- THE PEOPLE WHO INSISTED WE COULD HAVE BOTH GUNS AND BUTTER. THESE ARE THE SAME PEOPLE WHO ARE TODAY VOTING FOR BUDGET-BUSTING PROGRAMS AND THUS ARE ADDING TO OUR INFLATIONARY WOES. I SAY IT IS THE ULTIMATE IN IRRESPONSIBILITY TO ATTACK THE ADMINISTRATION ON THE INFLATION ISSUE GREATO R.FORD LIBRARY -8- AND AT THE SAME TIME VOTE FOR BUDGET-BUSTING HARA DEFICIT SPENDING. AND YET MANY MEMBERS OF CONGRESS HAVE BEEN GETTING AWAY WITH SUCH TACTICS FOR YEARS. THERE IS NO HIGHER NATIONAL PRIORITY TODAY THAN TO BALANCE THE FEDERAL BUDGET AS A MEANS OF FIGHTING INFLATION. DEFICIT FEDERAL SPENDING ROBS THE FAMILY BUDGET OF PURCHASING POWER BY BIDDING PRICES UP, UP AND RESULTS IN MORE WASTED TAX DOLLARS IN THE FORM OF INTEREST PAYMENTS ON THE NATIONAL DEBT. WE ARE FIGHTING INFLATION ON FOUR FRONTS. WE ARE SEEKING TO BALANCE THE BUDGET. WE HAVE ADOPTED A STIFF NEW SET OF PRICE CONTROLS. THE FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD IS KEEPING A TIGHT REIN ON -9- THE MONEY SUPPLY. AND THE ADMINISTRATION AND THE CONGRESS HAVE ACTED TO ENCOURAGE GREATLY EXPANDED PRODUCTION OF FOOD SUPPLIES, WITH THE HOPE NOT ONLY OF HALTING THE RISE IN FOOD PRICES BUT no more soil bank 100 EVENTUALLY LOWERING THEM. more arrage set-asides. THE MOST IMPORTANT ACTION THE CONGRESS CAN TAKE NOW TO COPE WITH INFLATION IS TO DEAL RESPONSIBLY WITH THE FISCAL 1974 FEDERAL BUDGET. DURING FISCAL 1973, THE LEVEL OF FEDERAL SPENDING WAS HELD TO $247 BILLION, LARGELY DUE TO THE PRESIDENT'S COURAGEOUS REFUSAL TO SPEND BILLIONS OF DOLLARS APPROPRIATED BY THE CONGRESS. DURING THE FIRST SIX MONTHS OF THIS CALENDAR YEAR, INCOME WAS PRACTICALLY MATCHING FEDERAL EXPENDITURES. GERALD LIBRARY R.FORD -10- IN FISCAL 1974 THE PRESIDENT HAS ANNOUNCED THAT SPENDING SHOULD BE HELD TO THE $269 BILLION LEVEL. IF CONGRESS WILL COOPERATE WE CAN HAVE A BALANCED BUDGET THIS FISCAL YEAR. AND A BUDGET THAT IS BALANCED WILL HELP BLUNT THE EDGE OF INFLATION. 2 request to report - Congress has added about 845 81,6 Whin m appropriations and Presidents budget 4 potentially, by ALL actumo, 5 Lathan. THE ECONOMY IS COOLING OFF AND YET PRICE INFLATION REMAINS ACUTE. BECAUSE INFLATIONARY PRESSURES ARE STILL STRONG AND THERE IS DANGER OF A CREDIT Jack CRUNCH THERE IS TALK OF A TAX INCREASE. Schulty. THE PROBLEM IS HOW TO CONTINUE TO FIGHT INFLATION WITHOUT SQUEEZING SO HARD THAT THE SLOWDOWN TURNS INTO A FULL-FLEDGED RECESSION. I AM OPPOSED TO AN INCREASE LIBRARY -11- IN INCOME TAXES, EVEN IN THE FORM OF A 10 PER CENT SURCHARGE THAT WOULD BE REFUNDABLE AT A LATER DATE. 2 am also complant the President is appoint to such a that increase. I AM OPPOSED TO A TAX INCREASE AT THIS TIME BECAUSE I THINK WITHOUT IT WE CAN MAKE A SOFT LANDING, AS THE ECONOMY COOLS OFF IN THE MONTHS AHEAD. + THINK WE WOULD LAND WITH A THUMP IF THE PROPOSED SURCHARGE WERE TO BE IMPOSED. IRS temperator mestrained THE SLOWDOWN IN ECONOMIC GROWTH IS UNDENIABLE, AND IT IS HAPPENING WITHOUT AN INCREASE IN TAXES. IN THE SECOND QUARTER OF 1973, THE U.S. ECONOMY GREW LESS THAN ONE-THIRD AS FAST AS IN THE PREVIOUS TWO QUARTERS. INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION VIRTUALLY LEVELLED OFF RECENTLY, AS DID RETAIL SALES. FORD LIBRARY -12- There trends do not I DON'T THINK THIS MEANS THAT RECESSION LIES AHEAD. THIS SLOWER GROWTH DOES NOT REFLECT ANY WIDESPREAD WEAKNESS IN BUSINESS. ON THE CONTRARY, THE ECONOMY IS GROWING LESS RAPIDLY PRIMARILY BECAUSE FAST GROWTH IS NO LONGER POSSIBLE IN MANY INDUSTRIES. THERE ARE NO LONGER ENOUGH UNDERUTILIZED MACHINES, ENOUGH SKILLED WORKERS OR ENOUGH BASIC MATERIALS TO SUPPORT THE KIND OF PRODUCTION GAINS THAT WERE MADE EARLIER IN THIS PERIOD OF EXPANSION. THE UNDERLYING FORCES OF EXPANSION ARE STILL DOMINANT, ALONG WITH ACCOMPANYING INFLATIONARY PRESSURES. YET THE ECONOMY IS UNMISTAKABLY COOLING OFF, AND SIGNS OF SLOWER GROWTH WILL INCREASE OVER THE NEXT FEW MONTHS. -13- THIS MEANS THAT THE MONTHS AHEAD WILL BE A MOST DIFFICULT PERIOD FOR THOSE CHARGED WITH DETERMINING U.S. ECONOMIC POLICY. WE MUST NOT YIELD TO THE TEMPTATION TO EASE UP IN OUR FIGHT AGAINST INFLATION. WE MUST NOT PREMATURELY INSTITUTE POLICIES OF FISCAL OR MONETARY EASE. THIS WOULD SURELY SERVE TO PERPETUATE INFLATION. I THINK THE COURSE OF WISDOM IS ONE OF CONTINUED RESTRAINT. AT THE SAME TIME, I BELIEVE THERE IS CAUSE FOR SOME OPTIMISM. REASON TO BELIEVE WE ARE MAKING PROGRESS IN DEALING WITH OUR NO. 1 DOMESTIC PROBLEM -- INFLATION. GLANTO R.FORD LIBRARY THE WORST IS BEHIND US IN TERMS OF FOOD PRICE INFLATION. RECORD WHEAT, The new from will, with emplusion on production, will help. -14- CORN AND SOYBEAN CROPS ARE IN PROSPECT. AND ALTHOUGH THIS DEVELOPMENT WILL BE OFFSET BY CONTINUING STRONG OVERSEAS DEMAND, THE EFFECT ON DOMESTIC PRICES SHOULD BE SALUTARY. I PREDICT THAT THE PRICES OF GOODS, GENERALLY, WILL COME DOWN IN THE SECOND HALF OF 1974. THE BEST WAY TO CONTROL INFLATION IS TO EXPAND PRODUCTION. AND IN THAT RESPECT WE ARE AT A CROSSROADS IN THE EFFORT TO CONTAIN INFLATION. WE MUST AIM AT A CLOSER BALANCE BETWEEN GAINS IN NATIONAL WAGE AND BENEFIT INCREASES AND GAINS IN NATIONAL PRODUCTIVITY. A CLOSER BALANCE BETWEEN COMPENSATION AND PRODUCTIVITY -15- DOES NOT IMPLY SLOWER GROWTH IN LIVING STANDARDS. RATHER, IT PROMISES MORE RAPID ECONOMIC GROWTH, LARGER INCREASES IN EMPLOYMENT AND INCOME, A MORE PROFITABLE BUSINESS SECTOR, HIGHER CAPITAL INVESTMENT AND A DIMINISHED EROSION IN REAL INCOMES. CLEARLY, THIS WOULD COMBINE THE BEST OF ALL WORLDS -- AND IT IS THE GOAL ON WHICH WE MUST SET OUR SIGHTS. In the meantine The Compress of The Present must cooperate by paing END needed -- Ligalation Energy Trade - emphasis almhar on conservation Papoline but de-regulation of will heal priors for gas. research TORD M OFFICE COPY Rexmarks by Rep. Gerald R. Ford before the National Life Advertisers Association at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday, Sept. 26, 1973, in the Regency Balllroom of the Shoreham Americana Hotel, Washington, D.C. It is difficult to perceive it amidst all the moaning and the groaning but we are riding the crest of an economic boom. There is moaning and groaning for a number of reasons--one being that the stock pawed market tm is being clawed and by the bears. But the chief reason is inflation. Of all the problems the United States has been faced with over the last decade or so, the one that hæ been the most persistent, the most pervasive and the most perverse has been inflation. The control of inflation under conditions of prosperity in peacetime is the dominant domestic challenge of the Seventies as the United State S struggle S with the problem of rebuilding its competitive position in world markets. americans You know that inflation imposes an unjust burden on everyone but that retired and persons on fixed income suffer the most. In recent months, galloping food price inflation has brought cries of anguish from all of USE. In the final analysis, inflation is just plain confiscation of income for everyone. Furthermore, the rising costs of doing bu sine SS threaten jobs. This means that the economic strength of the nation at home and in world markets is clearly threatened. It is against this backgrop that I talk with you today about general ecomomic conditions in the United States--and the continuing challenge that faces us. in the Seventies, We have all become economy-watchers and our experience in that regard is much like parents whose child is slow in learning to talk. When the child finally doest t ak, the flood of words is manizine a bit too much for us. So it has been with the economy. We were impatient throughout 1970 and 1971--and on into the spring of 1972--as the busine BE recovery appeared sluggish. Then business activity spurted, and in recent months a very different problem has emerged--a rapid acceleration of general price inflation. In the first quarter of 1972, our unused re sources seemed adequate to accommodate a long and sizable uptrend in sales and output. The national unemployment rate remained stuck at nearly 6 per cent. Only 75 per cent of the nation's manufacturing facilities were in use. Price and wage controls, aided by competitive forces, appeared to have dampened the wage-price spiral. Beginning with the second quarter of 1972, the uptrend in sales and output gained speed. Since then, virioually all sectors of the economy have shown significant g ains. Now the United Statemeconomy is riding a boom. Our gross national product is LIBRARY running at a rate of $1,272 billion. There are 3 million more people working today th a n a year ago. UnempToyment is at a rate of 4.8 per cent, down sharply from the 6 per cent figure where the needle was stuck for SO long. There are 84.4 million jobs, an all-time -2- record, and wages are also at an all-time high. There were 1.6 million new jobs created in the first six months of 1973, alone. In 1970, with a population of 204,879,000, we had 79,627,000 people employed. Since then, our population is up 2.4 per cent to 209,866,000, but the number of jobs has grown nearly 6 million, an increase of more than 7 per cent--twice as much as the growth in population. During thi same period, personal income rose from $542 billion to $681 billion, a jump of 25 per cent. Sales of non-durable goods increased 24 per cent; durable goods, 52 per cent. At the same time, prices went up 13 per cent. So it's clear that real buying power kept steadily ahead of inflation. Now we must fight to pre serve this edge, and that is the job of the Admini tration, the Congress and the American people. It is the people, moving in response to supply and demand, who are the ultimate decision makers on inflation. Good, sound Federal polities can help do the job, Inflation is our No. 1 political issue. There are those who are seeking to make political hay out of that issue. And the ironic fact is that they are the same people who touched off the inflationary pre ssures haunting us today by insisted in the mid-Sixties that we could fight a costly war halfway across the world without a tax increase the people who insisted we could have both guns and butter. These are the same people who are today voting for budget-busting programs and thus are adding to our inflationary woes. I say it is the ultimate in irresponsibility to attack the Administration on the inflation issue and at the same time vote for budget-busting inflationary deficit spending. And yet many members of Congre 8 have been getting away with such tactics for years. There is no higher national priority today than to balance the Federal budget as a means of fighting inflation. Deficit Federal spending robs the family budget of purchasing power by bidding prices up, and results in more wasted tax dollars in the form of interest payments on the national debt. We are fighting inflation on four fronts. We are seeking to balance the budget. have adopted a stiff new set of price controls. The Federal Reserve Board is keeping a tight rein on the money supply. And the Administration and the Congress have acted to encourage greatly expanded production of food supplies, with the hope not only of halting the rise in food prices but eventhally lowering them. The most important a ction the Congres can take now to cope with inflation is to deal responsibly with the fiscal 1974 Federal budget. During fiscal 1973, the level of Federal spending was held to $247 billion, largely -3- due to the President's courageous refusal to spend billions of dollars appropriated by the Congress. During the first six months of this calendar year, income was practically matching Federal expenditures. In fiscal 1974, the President has announced that spending should be held to the $269 billion level. If Congre 86 will cooperate, we can have a balance budget this fiscal year. And a budget that is balanced will help blunt the edge of inflation. The economy is cooling off, and yet price inflation remains acute. Because inflationary pressures are still strong and there is danger of a credit crunch, there is talk of a tax increase. The problem is how to continue to fight inflation without squeezing SO hard that the slowdown turns into a full-fledged recession. I am opposed to an increase in income taxes, even in the form of a 10 per cent surcharge that would be refundable at a later date. without it I am opposed to a tax increase at this time because I think WB can make a soft landing as the economy cools off in the months ahead, I think we would land with a thump if the proposed surcharge were to be imposed. The slowdown in economic growth is undeniable, and it is happening without an increase in# taxes. In the second quarter of 1973, the U.S. economy grew than one-third as fast as in the previous two quarters. Industrial production virtually levelled off recently, as did retail sales. This I don't think this means that recession lies ahead. Slower growth does not reflect any widespread weakness in business. On the contrary, the economy is growing le rapidly primarily because fast growth is no longer possible in many industries. There are no longer enough underutilized machines, enough skilled workers or enough basic materials to support the kind of production gains that were made earlier in this period of expansion. The underlying forces of expansion are still dominant, along with accompanying ind inflationary pre sures. Yet the economy is unmista kably cooling off, and signs of slower growth will increase over the next fe W months. This means that the months ahead will be a most difficult period for those charged with determining U.S. economic policy. We must not yield to the temptation to ease up in our fight against inflation. We must not prematurely institute policies of fiscal or monetary ease. This would surely serve to perpetuate inflation. I think the course of wisdom is one of continued restraint. LIBRARY we are At the same time, I believe there is cause for some optimism, reason to believe -4- making progress in dealing with our No. 1 domestic problem--inflation. The worst is behind us in terms of food price inflation. Record wheat, corn and soybean crops are in prospect. And although this development will be offset by continuing strong overseas demand, the effect on domestic prices should be salutary. I predict that the prices of goods, generally, will come down in the second half of 1974. The best way to control inflation is to expand production. And in that respect we are at a crossroads in the effort to contain inflation. We must aim at a closer balance between gains in national wage and benefit increases and gains in national productivity. A closer balance between compensation and productivity does not imply slower growth in living standards. Rather, it promises more ræid economic growth, larger increases in employment and income, a more profitable busine 8 sector, higher capital investment, and a diminished erosion in real incomes. Clearly, this would combine the best of all worlds--and it is the goal on which we must set our sights. ###### FORD LIBRARK OFFICE COPY Rexmarks by Rep. Gerald R. Ford before the National Life Advertisers Association at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday, Sept. 26, 1973, in the Regency Balllroom of the Shoreham Ams icana Hotel, washin ton, D.C. It is difficult to perceive it amidst all the moaning and the groaning but we are riding the crest of an economic boom. There is moaning and groaning for a number of reasons--one being that the stock pawed market *n is being clawed and by tho bears. But the chief reason is inflation. Of all the problems the United States has been faced with over the last decade or so, the one that has been the most persistent, the most pervasive and the most perverse has been inflation. The control of inflation under conditions of prosperity in peacetime is the dominant domestic challenge of the Seventies as the United State struggle S with the problem of rebuilding its competitive position in world markets. americans You know that i flation imposes an unjust burden on everyone but that retired and persons on fixed income suffer the most. In recent months, galloping food price inflation has brought cries of anguish from all of US. In the final analysis, inflation is justa plain confiscation of income for everyone. Furthermore, the rising costs of doing busine SE threaten jobs. This means that the economic strength of the nation at home and in world markets is clearly threatened. It is against this backgrop that I talk with you today about general economic conditions in the United States--and the continuing challenge that faces us. in the Seventies, We have all become economy-watchers and our experience in that regard is much like parents whose child is slow in learning to talk. When the child finally does tak, the flood of words is watersk a bit too much for us. So it has been with the economy. We were impatient throughout 1970 and 1971--and on into the spring of 1972--as the busine recovery appeared sluggish. Then business activity crurted, and in recent months a very different problem has emerged--a rapid acceleration of general price inflation. In the first quarter of 1972, our unused re sources seemed adequate to accompodate a long and sizable uptrend in sales and output. = The national unemployment rate remained stuck at nearly 6 per cent. Only 75 per cent of the nation's menufacturing facilities were in use. Frice and wage controls, aided by competitive forces, appeared to have dampened the wage-price spiral. Beginning with the second quarter of 1972, the uptrend in sales and output gained speed. Since then, virtually all sectors of the economy have shown significant g ains. Now the United States economy is riding a boom. Our gross national product is FORD running at a rate of $1,272 billion. There are 3 million more people working today tha n LIBRARY a year ago. Unem loyment is at a rate of 4.8 per cent, down sharply from the 6 per cent figure where the needle Was stuck for so long. E : here are 84.4 million jobs, an all-time -2- record, and wages are also at an all-time high. There were 1.6 million new jobs created in the first six months of 1973, alone. In 1970, with a population of 204,879,000, we had 79,627,000 people employed. Since then, our population is up 2.4 per cent to 209,866,000, but the number of jobs has grown nearly 6 million, an increase of more than 7 per cent--twice as much as the growth in population. During thi same period, personal income rose from $542 billion to $681 billion, a jump of 25 per cent. Sales of non-durable goods increased 24 per cent; durable goods, 52 per cent. At the same time, price went up 13 per cent. So it's clear that real buying power kept steadily ahead of inflation. Now we must fight to preserve this edge, and that ic the job of the Admini <tration, the Congress and the American people. It is the people, moving in response to supply and demand, who are the ultimate decision makers on inflation. Good, sound Federal polities can help do the job. Inflation is our No. 1 politic issue. There are those who are seeking to make political hay out of that issue. And the ironic fact is that they are the same people who touched off the inflationary pre sures haunting us today by insiste in the mid-Sixties that we could fight a costly war halfway across the world without a tax increase the people who insisted we could have both guns and butter. These are the same people who are today voting for budget-busting programs and thus are adding to our inflationary woes. I say it is the ultimate in irresponsibility to attack the Administration on the inflation issue and at the same time vote for budget-busting inflationary deficit spending. And yet many members of Congre & have been getting away with such tactics for years. There is no higher national priority today than to balance the Federal budget as a means of fighting inflation. Deficit Federal speniing robs the family budget of purchasing power by bid.ing prices up, and results in more wasted tax dollars in the form of interest payments on the national debt. We are fighting inflation on four front. We are seeking to balance the budget. have adopted a stiff ne set of price controls. The Federal Reserve Board is keeping a tight rein on the money supply. And the Administration and the Congress have acted to encourage greatly expanded production of food supplies, with the hope not only of halting the rise in food prices but eventbally lowering them. The most Experies important a ction the Con tress can take now to cope with inflation is to deal responsibly with the fiscal 1974 Federal budget. During fiscal 1973, the level of Federal spending was held to $247 billion, largely -3- due to the Fresident's couregeous Ammondments refusal to spend billions of dollars appropriated by the Congress. During the first six months of this calendar year, income was practically matching Federal expenditures. In fiscal 1974, the President has announced that spending should be held to the 269 billion level. If Congre g will cooperate, we can have a balance budget this fiscal yeer. And a budget that is balanced will help blunt the edge of inflation. The economy is cooling off, and yet price inflation remains acute. Because inflationary pressures are still strong and there is dan: er of a credit crunch, there is talk of a tax increase. The problem is how to continue to fight inflation without squeezing so hard that the slowdown turns irto a full fledged recession. I am opposed to an increase in income taxes, even in the form of a 10 per cent surcharge that would be refundable at a later date. without it I am opposed to a tax increase at this time because I think we can make a soft landing its as the economy cools off in the months ahead end I think we bould land with a thump if the proposed surcharge were to be imposed. The slowdown in economic grow th is undeniable, and it is happening without an increase in# taxes. In the second quarter of 1973, the U.S. economy grew le than one-third as fast as in the previous two quarters. Industrial production virtually levelled off recently, as did retail sales. This I don't think this ans that recession lies ahead. Slower growth does not reflect any widespread weakness in business. n the contrary, the economy is growing less rapidly primarily because fast growth is no longer possible in many industries. There are no longer enough underutilized machines, enough skilled workers or enough basic materials to support the kind of production gains that were made earlier in this period of expansion. The underlying forces of expansion are still dominant, along with accompanying inflationary pro sures. Yet the economy is unmistalkably cooling off, and signs of slower growth will increase over the next few months. This means that the months ahead will be a most difficult period for those charged with determining E U.S. economic policy. We must not yield to the temptation to ease up in our fight against inflation. We must not turely institute policies of fiscal or monetary ease. This would surely serve to perpetuate inflation. I think the course of wisdom is one of continued restraint. we are At the same time, I believe there is cause for some optimism, reason to believe -4- msking progress in dealing with our No. 1 domestic problem--inflation. The worst is behind us in terms of fo d price inflation. Record wheat, corn and soybean crops are in prospect. And although this development will be offset by continuing strong overseas demand, the effect on domestic prices should be salutary. I predict that the prices # of goods, generally, will come down in the second half of 1974. The best way to control inflation is to expand production. And in that respect to are at a crossroads in the effort to contain inflation. We must aim at a closer balance between gains in national wage and benefit increases and gains in national productivity. A closer balance between compensation and productivity does not imply slower growth in living standards. Rather, it promises more rapid economic growth, larger increases in employment and income, a more profitable busine F sector, higher capital investment, and a diminished erosion in real incomes. Clearly, this would combine the best of all worlds- and it is the goal on which we must set our sights. ######