Reader Ad Slot
Reader Ad Slot placeholder
If you would like to support SpookStack without paying out of pocket, please consider allowing advertising cookies. It helps cover hosting costs and keeps the archive free to browse. You can change this choice at any time.
Peace And Disarmament Literature — Part 5
Page 41
41 / 171
” eS ee ee ae er ae vane ee
3. How Can Military Suppliers Change to Civilian Work?
To look at the large-scale picture first—what about such industries as
aireraft and electronics, which are largely built on military orders? And
what of the communities in which armament activity is concentrated? Some
large plants are now occupied 100 per cent with military contracts, especially
in such states as California, Washington, Kansas and Texas. In a number
of communities across the nation more than a third of local payrolls are
Hed to military spending.
Let us suppose that all these people have been planning—we know that
some of them have—on the possibility of successful world disarmament.
Planning, in @ transition of such great importance, is a key with which to
unlock the future. And as a sound beginning, managers, workers and gov-
ernment must soberly face this fact: With disarmament, some industries
will either become unnecessary or will have a smaller market for their prod-
ucts. They must find new products, new markets, or new fields.
Most business men recognize the fact of constant change and they
expect some risks. Many communities enjoy a wide range of industries and
so find it easy to meet change. Such flexibility is the ideal, but increasing
mechanization and specialization have made it very difficult for some indus-
tries and some communities to remain Hexible, Government pressures on
industry to tool up for military production make the dilemma serious. Changes
in the market are taking place sll the time—whether we disarm or not—
because of changes jn technology and in public tastes and needs.
For instance, while the total military budget has been increasing, some
kinds of military orders have been sharply curtailed due to new weapons
and new ideas of strategy. The Defense Department has cancelled or modi-
fied contracts without warning, presumably because of the need felt for
secrecy in military matters. Disarmament, by contrast, would be a public
matter, arranged by international agreement, publicly debated. Cutbacks
planned for and announced in advance can make the transition easier.
Planning by industries and by organized labor calls for full and clear
information on which to base practical plans. Much vital information must
be collected locally and regionally, then st/ted and put together in the national
or even international perspective, to provide a dependable guide for the local
people who must make decisions for their own businesses and families. Then
various types of government aid or backing can come into play.
-~@.
ame
woe
a
Reveal the original PDF page, then click a word to highlight the OCR text.
Community corrections
No user corrections yet.
Comments
No comments on this document yet.
Bottom Reader Ad Slot
Bottom Reader Ad Slot placeholder
If you would like to support SpookStack without paying out of pocket, please consider allowing advertising cookies. It helps cover hosting costs and keeps the archive free to browse. You can change this choice at any time.
Continue Exploring
Agency Collection
Explore This Archive Cluster
Broad Topic Hub
Topic Hub
federal bureau
letter
Related subtopics
Subtopic
Subtopic
Subtopic
Subtopic
Subtopic