The New Competition An Examination of the Conditions Underlying the Radical Cha
The New Competition An Examination of the Conditions Underlying the Radical Cha
Eddy Arthur Jerome
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For the present it may be assumed that panics, hard times, dull times, good times, and "booms" will follow one another periodically the circular insanity of the com- mercial world. That being so, the practical question is: What can be done to mitigate the evils of these extreme fluctuations? By legislation very little can be done, by cooperation a great deal may be done, and without cooperation nothing can be done. For instance, an industry equipped with plants and labor to meet a given peak lo...ad may do one of three things to bridge the time when its maximum output is not in demand. If the character of its output permits, 1. It may do as the gas company does, continue to manufacture steadily and store its product until the de- mand comes. This can be done, and only in a measure, by comparatively few industries. 2. It can seek new markets, as the electric light com- pany seeks to create a demand for electric power during the day. This is done by quite a number of industries, notably some of the steel companies and a few other large produc- ers who systematically endeavor to develop their foreign trade, even going so far as to sell abroad lower than at home to get rid of the surplus that inevitably accumulates if plants are operated full and labor kept employed in dull times.
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