This portion of Judge Grosscup’s talk brings in an
assumption with which we disagree: that the process of capital formation in an
advanced economy necessarily means that enterprises must be big, bigger, and
biggest just to survive. On the
contrary, given the use of future savings to finance new capital formation and
the operation of a truly free market, enterprises should be the optimal size
for efficiency, not big or small to fit preconceived ideas. This does not, however, invalidate the point
Grosscup was making. As he continued,
People Have No Means
of Securing an Interest in Combinations
No means of securing ownership. |
There is still another fact that must not be overlooked, and
that is, that competition will never be effectually restored until the capital
of the country, springing, as it does, from every quarter of the country, and
from the energy and frugality of all her people, is at the call, not of those
who would suppress competition, but of those who would encourage it; and that
this will never be the case until the corporation, the only medium through
which capital can effectively be wielded, becomes, in the eyes of the people, a
trustworthy medium for the wielding of the people’s wealth and energy.
What, then, is the work that confronts us? Should we, for
the sake of election tactics, be content to merely denounce or hawk at this
industrial institution? Should we follow those so-called leaders who think that
what it took the human race all its lifetime to build up can be taken down in a
day and without a jar? They have had the center of the stage for a good while
back and nothing practical has yet been accomplished.
Should we, on the other hand, go over to those who would
leave the whole problem to time to work out — who would do nothing for fear
that conditions might be disturbed? It is out of this do-nothing policy — this
unrestricted license that has prevailed — that the problem has risen. But for that
license the corporation scandals that confront us would not have been. Had the
corporations been known trustworthy institutions the wealth of the country,
instead of being poured into Wall Street, would have been expended elsewhere in
the development of the country’s industries — each community depending much
more largely upon itself for the means of working out its own development. And
had our development proceeded on such lines, the bank failures that have been
startling us for the last few days would not have occurred, for in nearly every
instance such failure has been due to some overleaping personal ambition having
too easy access to great money deposits. No, no. The work to be done is not to
tear down, nor yet again to let alone. The work to be done is to reform — if
need be, to rebuild — this intermediary between the country’s wealth and the
country’s industries; to readjust it to the American instinct for fair play and
for every man having a fair part in the affairs of life.
(Tomorrow: “National Commission on Corporation Reform”)