OCTOBER 20, 1947
HYDE PARK, Sunday— According to the papers this morning, Congressmen
returning to Washington are reporting that in many parts of the country people
feel high prices are due primarily to the fact that this country is exporting
too much to other countries. Yet I recall seeing a table recently which gave
the comparison in percentages of the amounts exported of every product, and
these were small indeed when compared with the increase in the percentages
of what we are using at home. We are consuming far more than we did before
the war. The scarcity of goods, in other words, arises not so much from export
as from increased consumption at home.
More production is the obvious answer. Foreign purchasing over here is bound
to decrease because of the shortage of dollars. But even then I doubt if prices
will come down much, and it seems to me that we should face squarely what it
will mean to us if chaos overtakes Europe. I am not thinking primarily about
the effect it will have on people's political thinking — though that
should be of some concern if we believe that our form of democracy is in the
long run the best form of government for the good of the greatest number of
people.
I am thinking, however, of the friends we will lose in the world if we do
not help people to pull themselves up by their bootstraps and to live through
this present period. How will they feel about us when we offer them our surplus
products in the future? Somehow I feel that our Congressmen should go back
to their home districts and stimulate some new lines of thought.
In our U. N. Committee Number Three, we are still talking about trade-union
rights, and now we have a sub-committee to try to gather together all the various
resolutions and amendments in the hope that we can formulate one — or,
at most, two — alternatives! The basic question, of course, is: Where
is the proper place to discuss trade-union rights? There is no doubt in any
of our minds that these rights should be thoroughly discussed, but some of
us seem to differ on whether Committee Number Three is the place where this
can be done most satisfactorily.
The next two days will resolve this difference, I hope, and in the meantime
we have been asked to take up the Children's Emergency Fund as the next point
on our agenda. I feel sure that on this item there will be general agreement,
and I shall not be much surprised if every one of us feels we have to state
our warm approval. In that case there will be many speeches. Perhaps the chairman
will work out some ingenious kind of roll call in which we can all be registered
without too many words being used!
E. R.
Source:
Anna Eleanor Roosevelt Papers, Franklin D. Roosevelt Library, Hyde Park, NY.