Offers news briefs on business and political issues in the U.S. as of April 1940. Demolition of the Boulevard Apartments in Washington by the government; Proposal to cut the rate of the Building Trades Employers' Association in New York; Support of the Connecticut Supreme Court for the state Anti-Birth-Control Law.
CONFERENCES & conventions, CHARITIES, ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc., FULL employment policies, BUSINESS, GOVERNMENT spending policy
Abstract
The article focuses on recent issues in the United States. The results of the Dumbarton Oaks, Washington D.C. conference has been laid before the public for judgment. The submission is accompanied by a warning that the proposals in their present form are neither complete nor final. But this apparent frankness is far from disclosing either the extent of their incompleteness or the degree of their finality. Many questions long under discussion have been definitively answered. The general organization will embrace economic and social welfare as well as security. Regional associations will be coordinated with the general organization. Some measure of agreement has been arrived at in the post-war thinking of government, labor, and the more progressive section of the business community in the United States. They are agreed on the necessity for full employment. They are agreed that where business activity falls short of achieving full employment, government spending must close the gap. They are agreed that the federal budget cannot safely be balanced until the full employment level has been reached.
LABOR unions, ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc., SOCIAL problems, SOCIAL reformers, LABOR union members, BUSINESS, INDUSTRIALISTS
Abstract
Focuses on the abortive conference between the Cloak Manufacturers' Association and the union. Emphasis on the union's call for a protocol, agreement or understanding with the employers; Purpose of the agreement in preventing the outbreak in the future of such senseless and futile conflicts; Plans of manufacturers of having an ideal independence in which they could run its shop without consulting unionists, social reformers and journalists.
Published
1916
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