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Industrial Progress and Human Economics

Chapter 10: WHAT IS NOT AN INDUSTRY.
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About This Book

A practical outline for advancing industry by prioritizing human welfare, presenting policies and methods for creating and managing productive enterprises. It argues for higher value per unit of labor through improved tools, specialization, efficient organization, and cooperative management, offering guidance for investors, managers, and workers to assess prospects and reduce investment risk. Emphasizing unified public purpose after wartime disruption, it promotes steady policy, team work, and personal development as keys to state and individual economic progress, and is framed as both a textbook and a reference for those involved in industrial development.

WHAT IS NOT AN INDUSTRY.

Perhaps it will be well to state first what does not constitute an industry. Power, transportation facilities, fine buildings, fine machinery and a group of skilled workmen, a complete office staff and an elaborate system of fad management do not constitute an industry. Such an aggregation might be likened to a cargo ship all ready for service excepting that it lacks a captain and navigating officer and some one to determine what kind of a cargo to take, where to go and how to get there.

The greatest value of an industrial plant that has everything but a work to do and a leader to determine its major policies, lies in the skilled workers and able executives in work and office. The buildings and machinery come next in value, but the whole thing is worthless without the idea and the vision.