Music Trade Review

Issue: 1951 Vol. 110 N. 9

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
Inflation
Chart Shows New Causes
(Continued from Page 9)
The accompanying chart throws a
revealing light on this new cause of in-
flation. The statistics from which this
chart was prepared are all from Federal
government sources. There is nothing
new on this chart except that related
facts are brought together so that any
one can see not only that they are re-
lated, but also how closely they are
related.
There are on this chart three major
significant graphs showing the trends,
respectively, from 1939 down to the
early part of this year, of "Average
Hourly Factory Wage Rates"; "Con-
2. Our government's deficit spendings
over a long period of years has not
merely increased the public debt, the
payments of interest and of principal,
but has also had the effect, to some ex-
tent, of shaking the confidence of the
people in the government's securities. A
firm policy of a balanced budget, a pay-
as-you-go fiscal plan, would promptly
correct this lack of confidence in the
government's obligations.
3. Credit, particularly bank credit, has
been over-extended for speculative rather
than for productive purposes. This has
also added greatly to the money supply
of the country. The U. S. Treasury De-
partment's policy of forcing the Federal
Reserve System and its member banks
to purchase bonds, which are, in turn,
used as legal reserves against which bank
credits may be extended on the average
of five or six times, is, of course, highly
inflationary. The government's method
of getting funds by unloading its bonds
on the banks has made the banks, even
against their better judgment, advocates
and agencies of further inflation. The
sale of government bonds to banks
should be sharply restricted and the
extension of credits by banks except for
purposes of defense production and for
purposes of increasing civilian produc-
tivity should be checked.
4. The farm parity price system con-
tributes to inflation. Farmers can not be
blamed for seeking parity prices if the
outlook is for more inflation. Parity
prices assure farmers increasing dollar
revenues as the prices of the goods they
buy rise. In the meantime, the costs and
the prices of the products that farmers
sell continue to rise. This is inflation and
needs to be stopped.
5. Wage increases unaccompanied by
increases in productivity constitute a
very substantial cause of inflation.
Most students of inflation have con-
sidered only modifications of govern-
mental fiscal and monetary policies, as
remedies, just as if these corrections
would be all that is needed. Sound fiscal
and monetary policies are certainly es-
sential, but in this inflation they will not
prove sufficient. There is a new factor in
the present inflation that was not a part
of former inflations, namely, excessive
increases in money wages unaccom-
panied by increases in productivity.
Monetary and fiscal policies have little
or nothing to do with this cause of infla-
tion. Other specific remedies must be
found and applied to stop this overflow
of money in the form of unearned, un-
economic and unsound wage rates.
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW, SEPTEMBER, 1951
sumers' Prices"; and "Actual Factory
Output per Man-Hour".
The information presented in the
graphs showing the trends of "Average
Hourly Factory Wage", and of "Con-
sumers' Prices", come directly from the
statistics compiled and published by the
Bureau of Labor Statistics. The graph
showing the trends of "Actual Factory
Output Per Man-Hour" is computed
from the Index of Factory Production
compiled by the Federal Reserve Board.
In the preparation of these graphs all
figures have been computed to begin
with the average of 1939—100. All three
graphs are considered as starting to-
gether at the same level in 1939. By this
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11
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
means it is possible to see just what
changes have occurred since 1939.
You will note that increases in each
of these three important indexes, ex-
pressed as percentages, have been as
follows: Average Hourly Factory Wages
have increased 146%. Consumers' Prices
have increased 86%. Factory Output per
Man-Hour, up to the end of 1950, had
increased but 18%.
Your attention is directed again to the
fact that average factory wages in the
past eleven years have increased at the
rate of about 13% a year. Factory wages
have increased eight times faster than
the actual factory output per man-hour.
These facts speak for themselves more
clearly than anything that can be said
in words.
There are some other matters pre-
sented on this chart that may interest
you. For example, in the graph showing
"Actual Factory Output per Man-Hour",
note should be taken that from the be-
ginning of 1941 to 1946, there were two
sets of figures that are represented by
two trend lines. The one at the top repre-
sents factory output per man-hour in all
factories, including those working on
war goods, as computed by the Federal
Reserve Board. The lower line represents
the trend of factory output per man-hour
in a selected list of civilian industries
not directly concerned with war produc-
tion as compiled by the National Indus-
trial Conference Board. It should be
noted that general factory output, in-
cluding the output from war industries
per man-hour, during the war years
never reached an annual average of as
much as 10% above the output per man-
hour in 1939. After 1943 and down to
1946 the average factory output per
man-hour declined steadily to a scant
4% in 1946.
Another trend line on the chart "Nor-
mal Factory Output per Man-Hour",
represents what the factory output per
man-hour would have been year by year
throughout the 11-year period if the
trend of average factory output per
man-hour that had prevailed for 25 or
more years before 1939 had continued
throughout the 1940's. Average increases
in factory output per man-hour in the
preceding quarter century had amounted
to about 2y 2 % a year. If this rate of
increase had continued down to the end
of 1950, the factory output per man-
hour in that year would have been 25%
higher than it was in 1939. The actual
factory output per man-hour, not only
did not keep up with the increases in
average hourly factory wages, but even
fell far short of achieving the normal
factory output per man-hour that had
prevailed in preceding years.
Further evidence on the retarded rate
of man-hour productivity during the
past 11 years, as compared with the pre-
ceding 25 years, has recently come from
Solomon Fabricant of the National Bu-
reau of Economic Research, probably
the best informed student on man-hour
rates of physical productivity in this
country at the present time. In an inter-
view with "Business Week", May 5,
1951, he estimated that productivity
since 1939 had increased only about 1%
per year. The computations presented on
this chart show about 1.6% per year,
per man-hour. The lag in man-hour out-
put during the last 11 years, as com-
pared with the previous 25 years, chal-
lenges the most serious consideration.
It may be of interest to note the ex-
planation for the apparent break in
factory wage rates that occurred at the
end of 1945. Within that year, at the
end of World War II, there was an ap-
parent drop of between 5% und 6%.
This decline in the index was due almost
entirely to the cessation of overtime
pay which reduced the average hourly
rate. However, the average hourly wage
rate soon recovered the peak paid in the
early part of 1945 and, even without
overtime rates, has continued to rise
with startling regularity ever since.
Consumers Prices Leveled Off
The Index of Consumers' Prices
tended to level off during the years from
1943 to the middle of 1946. This oc-
curred in spite of the rapid increases in
average hourly factory wages during
those same years. Advocates of price
control may point to this period as an
evidence of the effectiveness of price
control. Such an explanation would,
however, overlook two important facts.
First, the Consumers' Price Index took
no account of black or grey market
prices that widely prevailed throughout
this period, and, second, prices of still
other commodities were kept down by
the payment of subsidies by the govern-
ment. Such subsidies were generally
used when roll-backs were authorized.
The effect on the price index is highly
illusory. Officially, prices were kept
down, but the government paid the dif-
ference. So while prices during those
years were officially low, the official in-
dex does not actually record what the
trends in consumers' prices were.
A question may be raised as to
whether factory wage rates as shown on
this chart are typical of wage rates gen-
erally throughout the country. This
question can be answered by calling at-
tention to the fact that farm wages, for
example, during the same years showed
an even higher percentage of increase
than factory wages. Retail wage rates
have more than doubled since 1939. The
wages of miners have likewise shown a
considerably higher rate of increase than
those of factory workers. It is difficult to
find any branch of industry in which
wage rates have not gone up as fast as
factory wages. In other words, the index
of hourly factory wages as presented
here seems to be conservatively typical
of wage rate trends within the American
economy during the past 11 years.
(Turn to Pagft 14)
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THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW, SEPTEMBER, 1951

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