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THE PRESIDENT

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For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office
Washington, D.C., 20402 Price 70 cents

DIVISION

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CONTENTS

STATEMENTS

Nathan, Robert R., of Robert R. Nathan Associates, Inc..
Fackler, Walter D., professor of business economics and associate dean,
Graduate School of Business, University of Chicago---

EXHIBITS AND OTHER ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

Bowman, Raymond T., Assistant Director for Statistical Standards, Bureau

of the Budget: "Principal Federal Statistical Programs in the 1965

Budget".

Curtis, Representative Thomas B.:

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Questions submitted to the Council of Economic Advisers and the

answers thereto ___

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JANUARY 1964 ECONOMIC REPORT OF THE

PRESIDENT

THURSDAY, JANUARY 23, 1964

CONGRESS OF THE UNITED STATES,
JOINT ECONOMIC COMMITTEE,
Washington, D.C.

The joint committee met, pursuant to notice, at 10 a.m., in room 1114, New Senate Office Building, Hon. Paul H. Douglas (chairman) presiding.

Present: Senators Douglas, Sparkman, Proxmire, Pell, Javits, Miller, and Jordan; and Representatives Reuss, Griffiths, Curtis, and Kilburn.

Also present: James W. Knowles, executive director; Hamilton D. Gewehr, administrative clerk; and Donald A. Webster, minority economist.

Chairman DOUGLAS. It is now 10 o'clock. The committee will come to order.

We begin this morning the committee's consideration of the Economic Report of the President which was transmitted to the Congress on the 20th of January, by hearing from the Council of Economic Advisers, Walter W. Heller, Chairman, accompanied by Gardner Ackley and John P. Lewis, members of the Council.

Members of the Joint Economic Committee who are always concerned with, and by law must consider the Economic Report, are particularly interested in the report this year since it contains two chapters which emphasize matters that have long been of interest to the Joint Economic Committee.

One of these relates to the chapter entitled "The Problem of Poverty in America," and, second, the chapter entitled "The Promise and Problems of Technological Change."

In order that the committee may have before it a reminder of its previous deliberations and reports, I want to include in the record at this point a list of the relevant past committee publications on these two subjects.

(The exhibits referred to follow :)

LOW-INCOME FAMILIES

The following studies, hearings, etc., have been conducted by the Joint Economic Committee:

"Selected Government Programs Which Aid the Unemployed and Low-Income Families" (materials assembled by the staffs of the Subcommittee on Unem

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