Taking the Profit Out of War A ———— By BERNARD M. BARUCH Reprinted from The Atlantic Monthly. The February issue of the Atlantic for 1925 carried a paper by Mr. Bisley Hedin dealing with the general subject of “taking the profit out of war,” which Mr. Huddleston called “An American Plan for Peace.” The first-quoted Phrase was put into the language by the War Industries Board toward the close of the World War through its efforts to eliminate all war profits. Mr. y, ame to the attention of Mr. Bernard M. Baruch, chair- BO Board and administrator of the non-profit plan, and (as he writes us), since it seemed to indicate a growing interest in the {dea, induced him to invoke practical means to bring about a full compre: Rension of taking the profit out of war in the various great countries of the world. To this end he responded to a suggestion of Mr. Owen D. Young, of the Page School of International Relations at Johns Hopkins University, that he estadlish a course of lectures there to expound the War Industries Board plan in detail. Later he will proceed to make similar arrangements at leading universities in Great Britain, France, Germany, Italy, and Japan. Agreeing with Mr. Baruch thqt the subject calls for public knowledge and discussion, 11 was natural for the Atlantic to turn to him for the following paper. —THE Ebprrors or THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY.) 1 War was once described as Pru sia’s most profitable industry. history to learn that other countrie were open to the same indictment The methods of the Robber Baron did not pass with the end of feudal ism. Annexation by conquest did no cease. But when America entered th World War President Wilson fatherei & doctrine that shall always goven us—that never a foot of territor; would be added te our boundaries b) force. So, as America has taken toward making impossible profit through war, it too may I America’s privilege to point the wa; toward making impossible individua profit through war. To take the profi out of war is to take a long step to ward creating an economic detesta tion of war. The experience of thi United States in the World War af fords a basis for the belief that the plan herein discussed is practical. Ir fact, it 1s more than a beliet—it is 3 certainty, although not widely known The world is such a busy place, an¢ the radius of human activity has beer 80 greatly enlarged because of modern inventions, that it is not strange tha there are but few people who are con versant with what was quietly buf effectively taking place in this coun try in the mobilization and use of its material resources in the World Wai —a process that would have eventual ly eliminated all improper profits. Strength is given to the public ad vocacy of industrial mobilization made by both President Harding and Presi dent Coolidge—Mr. Coolidge as re cently as last October in his Omaha speech to the American Legion—by the fact that the plan they advocated as a part of the regular national war agencies had once been set up and successfully operated under the War Industries Board. Preceding the President’s reeent clear exposition of this subject, some degree of public interest had been en- gendered by an exchange of letters be tween Owen D. Young (of Dawes plan fame), in behalf of the Waller Hines Page School of International Rela: tions, and the writer. The corre spondence resulted in the establish: ment of lectures at the Page School (of Johns Hopkins University) on this theme. Previously the Atlantic Month. ly printed an article by Sisley Huddle- ston, who pointed out that Europe saw great strides toward peace in the American idea of “taking the profit out of war” in a systematic way. His basic reference was to the plan of the War Industries Board. The resources of a country might be referred to as the five M's: (1) man power; (2) money; (8) main- tenance or food: (4) material re- sources (including raw materials, manufacturing facilities, transporta- tion, fuel and power); and (5) morale. The intelligence with which the first four are directed and co-ordinated as & whole will determine the fifth, the morale of the community. In the war emergency it early be- eame evident to those who were charged with the responsibility of mobilizing the resources that there was a just sentiment among the peo- ple against profiteering. Profiteering might be willful and profit making might be involumtary; but, whatever dts form, there was a just determina- tion it should cease. So it became necessary to fix prices where the sup- ply was limited. Wherever the government created a shortage by its demands, prices were fixed, not only for the Army, Navy and the lea¢ nationa the Alles, but for the civilian popula | ition as well. And in addition to price fixing on war essentials (such as steel, wool, copper, and so forth), the bal- | ance, after the war program had been {fillled, was rationed or distributed ac- | cording to the priority needs of the (various civilian demands. In other words, where the price of the product jot an industry was fixed that industry {had to deliver the part whieh the gov- ernment did not need to the civilian population, not in the way the indus- | (try chose, but as the government di- | rected. It must be remembered that when |’ the war came there was no adequate \preparation. Indeed, it is doubted by the best authorities whether any ef- Jetive form of preparation then | own would have been of much avail in view of the widespread and engulf- |{ng results of the war and the lack of wledge of the varions instruments 0t destruction which were being de- (Yised and which it became necessary to combat. Our own Army had several divisions eompeting one with another for mate- | rials, transportation, housing, and forth. On top of that there prevailes the demands of the Shipping Board | with the slogan that ships would wi It needs only a scant examination o the war, and of the Food Administra tion, with the slogan that food would win the war. Further, there was th Railroad Administration with its need for material and labor, and finally there was the feverish quest for labor and supplies on the part of the muni tion makers—all competing for labor, money, materials, transportation, fuel, power, and each insisting on the greater importance of its activity. All this while the labor supply was being lessened by the flow of men into the Army. While an endeavor was being made to bring order out of chaos, the great undertaking had to go on. Men, ships, munitions, food, material, had to be provided. Old organizations, bureaus and traditions had to be met and changed, but not destroyed until the hew was set up. The wonder of it all is, not that there were so many mis. takes, but that =o much was accom plished. At the time we entered the war prices were at their peak, and tending higher because of the war's insatiable demands. The problem was not alone to secure the materials and labor and to stop the confusion, but to do it in such a way that the morale of the peo- ple would be maintained. The prices of some things, like steel and copper, were fixed far below prevailing rates, and the wages of labor in those indus- tries were standardized. The more highly organized an industry, the easier it was to arrange. Order did not commence to appear until the Army funneled its needs through one man sitting with a section of the War Industries Beard and-until the Navy, Shipping Board, Allies and Railroad Administration did likewise. Each de- partment satisfied its requirements through a central authoritative body. This was called the War Industries Board, controlling and directing all materials and co-ordinating through fts chairman the whole system of gov- ernmental and civilian supply and de- mand. It was created by executive order in March of the year 1918. Briefly, this board endeavored to mobilize the industries of America so that the fighting forces of the Allied and associated nations could draw from the United States—the last res- ervoir of men, materials and money— the things needed for the winning of the war at the time the things were needed and with the least dislocation of industry and the least disturbance of the civilian population. II The War Industries Board was or- | 1 : FaRlsed Ko a on supervisory | would be placed a government diree committee, with a chairman, vice One of them provided that manufass turers, jobbers and retailers of shoes could make and sell shoes only of a specified quality at a fixed price, ef- fective July, 1919. No one who did not have a card of the War Industries Board in his window could sell shoes, and only the standardized shoes could be sold. No jobber or manufacturer would sell shoes to anybody who did not have this card. The shoes were to be stamped Class A, B or C and had to be of the quality prescribed and sold at the price fixed. The country was so organized in every district that there could be immediately reported to Washington the name of any shoe retailer who did not carry out the reg- ulations of the War Industries Board as to price and quality. Through re- strictions on his labor, money, raw materigls and trausportation no man- ufacturer would have been permitted to sell to any dealer violating the reg- ulations. The Armistice stopped the execution of this plan. Another plan of this nature: The manufacturers of men’s and women’s wearing apparel had in 1918 been call- .ed to Washington, together with the retailers of various goods, and notified that regulations would have to be ‘made in regard to retail prices and standardization of clothing. The rulings by the board were made known through the issuance of official bulletins at {irregular intervals and {were widely distributed by the press, |which co-operated in this most neces- sary. work with a whole-hearted pur- {pose that gave to the orders of the {War Industries Board the instant an? ‘broad circulation they required Mr. Hoover already was doing much ito perfect his control of food products and prices. There was also talk of fixing rents, and in some cities thir was done. If we were to start, in the event of another war, at the place where we were industrially when the World War ended, the President, acting through an agency similar to the War Indus- tries Board, would have the right to fix prices of all things as of a date previous to the declaration of war when there was a fair peace time rela- tionship among the various activities of the nation. It would be illegal to buy, sell, serve or reat at any other than these prices. Brakes would be ' applied to every agency of inflation «chairman, members in: charge of va- | rious activities, burean chiefs and sub- ordinate workers. It surveyed and sought to arrange the whole industrial war fleld under the plenary powers conferred by the President and the Congress. How well it did this is a story for others to tell. What it did is the basis of the plan I am here drawing. It was comparatively easy to fix ‘#rices and to distribute materials, and indeed to stabilise the wages of labor In those industries in which prices were fixed. The labor situation, how- ever, became increasingly difficult, particularly when General Crowder found it necessary to withdraw men for the proposed campaign of 1919 after 4,000,000 soldiers had already been taken. Much has been said about the profi | veering of labor. It is an unjust accu- , sation. It is only fair to say that this ; condition was primarily brought about , through the inexperience of the organ- {zation within our own governmental | departments and by the furious bid- | ding of munitions makers and ship { builders for services. That situation, | together with the increased prices of the things that labor bad to buy with | the results of its work, made it inevi- | table that labor must get higher | wages. | Bo it became evident that the price | Axing program had to go even fur | ther, and the War Industries Board, when the Armistice came, was pro- | ceeding with a campaign to fix the | prices of all the basic things that la- | ‘bor had to buy. Some had previously ' been fixed. I speak of labor in a much ‘broader sense than manual labor, for the unorganized so-called “white col- Jar” part of our community—clerks, teachers, government employees, pro- fessional men—were less able to mee the situation tham labor in the nar Trower sense. For the protection and relief of such groups certain plans were devised. To {llustrate— before the hurtful process started. An intelligent control of the flow of men, money and materials would be im- posed, instead of having the blind pan- ic heretofore ensuing on the first ap- pearance of the frantic demands o° war. The Draft Board would have be- fore it the rulings of the priority com- mittee, together with the estimated needs of every business and profes- sion in its relationship to the conduct of the war, and men would be select- ed accordingly. The Draft Board could more intelligently decide, with the advice of the priority committee many of the problems with which it would be faced. There would be no sending of men to the trenches who were needed for expert industrial wa: work and then bringing them back again. Businesses not necessary to the winning of the war would be cur tailed. The Draft Board would hav- that information before it. The prices of all things being fixed. the price fixing committee would make any necessary adjustments, as was done during the war. Under the sys- tem used in 191% these prices were made public and adjusted every three months, so that any consumer or pro- ducer had his day in court when he considered prices unfair. Those who complained that during the war prices were too high had this ready recourss ‘0 hand. In the meantime all the industries of the country would have been mobilized by the formation of committees repre- sentative of each industry as was done in the World War. Over them tor or commeodity chief. The various government departments would ap- point committees representing their requirements, so that on one -commit- tee the resources of the nation would be represented and on the other the demands of the government. The gov- ernment director would stand between to decide, in conjunction with the pri. ority committee, to what department supplies should go. Money would be controlled and di rected like any other resource. “Tak. ing the profit out of war” is not synonymous with ‘“conseription of wealth,” as it is sometimes regarded. The latter is a theoretical project, pro- hibited by our Constitution, contrary to the spirit of our social and political institutions, and impossible in prac. tice. Taking the profit out of war is an orderly and scientifie development of the economics and eonduct of mod. ern war, necessary to the effective mobilization of national resources and indispensadle to equalizing the bur. dens of war among the armed and civiian population. Born of expe- rience and proved by practice, it re- moves some of the most destructive coneomitants of modern war—the eon. fusion and waste Incident to war time inflation. This term “conscription of wealth,” ased by so many, has created a hope among those of socialistie tendencies, and a fear among those who, like me, believe in our system based upon per- sonal initiative and reward, of a tak- ing of money, without payment, for the use of Stats. Neither the hope nor the fear is justified by the recom. mendation herein contained or by our experience in the war. The use of money should be controlled and di rected in a national emergency. A ,man should no more be permitted to use his money as he wishes than he should be permitted to use the pro- duction of his mine, mill or factory except through the general supervis. ing ‘agency. This was being’ done to- ward the end of the war, ¢ During the final phase of the World War no man or corporation or institu- tion could raise money without the approval of the Capital Issues Commit- tee of the Treasury Department, which committee in turn would not permit the borrowing of money unless the ‘War Industries Board approved the -use to which it was to be put. Thus ‘the City of New York was not permit- ted to spend $8,000,000 for the build- ing of schools. The City of Philadel- phia was prevented from making im- bProvements that in peace time would have been necessary, but in war time were not. Various states, counties ‘and cities, and a vast number of pri- vate concerns, were denied the use of money and materials for purposes ‘not necessary for the winning of the war. Each part of the community had to adjust its wants to the whole grea’ undertaking, III There have been a great many bills introduced into Congress on the sub- ject of industrial mobilization, some sponsored by great organizations like the American Legion, and others by newspapers and publicists. But it is surprising how little knowledge there was on the part of those who drew up the bills of the practicability and fea- #ibility of so mobilizing our resources that it would be impossible to make a8 much profit in war as in time of peace. Take into consideration the fact that the following things were be ing done in 1918: — . General Crowder, who was in charge of the draft, had asked the chairman of the War Industries Board where he could obtain additional men needed for the Army in France with the least possible dislecation of the war making industrial civilian machinery, and we were in the process of replacing male labor with women. By a system of priorities the Board was allocating to our own Army and Navy, to the Allies and to the essential war industries the things they required. It was making priority rulings as to transportation, and they were being followed out by the Railroad Administrator. The Fuel Administrator distributed fuel only on the rulings of the War Industries Board. The Board was engaged in disentangling and removing the many conflicts and competitive efforts in- volved in labor and buildings that had previously occurred because of lack of any co-ordinating agency. It was allo- cating power and making regulations for the hitching up of scattered units of power. It was changing munitions orders from congested to less congest- ed districts. It had actually carried into effect an order that no building involving $2,500 or more could be un- dertaken without the approval of the War Industries Board. No steel, no cement, no material of any kind could be used for any purpose whatsoever unless the War Industries Board per- mitted it. No steel company could sell over five tons of steel unless ap- proved by the Director of Steel. The ‘Freasury would not permit the raising of money for any industrial or finan- cial operation unless it was approved by the War Industries Board. The President issued an order that no com- mandeering should be done by the Army, Navy, Shipping Board or Food Administration without the approval of the chairman of the War Industries Board. Every raw material industry, and indeed practically every industry in the country, was organized through appointment of committees, and none of these industries would do any busi- ness except under the rulings promul- gated by the Board. Standardisation in every industry was rapidly proceed- ing. These rulings were made known through the issuance of official bulle- tins at irregular intervals and were distributed by the press. We were endeavoring to arrange it so that the fighting forces were to receive those things which they needed and no more, so that whatever was not ac tually required at the front was left to civilian purposes. Industries were curtailed, but never destroyed; skele- tonised, but never killed. Indeed, the use of men, money and materials was rapidly being brought into exactly that condition which I have previously stated to be necessary in case of ap other war. If, in addition to this, the President in the future has the authority to fix prices and distribution of materials and labor, remt, and the use of man power, transportation, fuel and all the things necessary for the conduct of the war, any rise in prices will be pre- (Continued on page 3, Col. 4.) Caldwell & Son Bellefonte, Pa. 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