Don't Trust the Depression Brain Trust
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
DIGG THIS
The ghost of
FDR is everywhere, haunting both Washington and New York. The terrible
trouble is that the minds in power have confused an economic wrecker
with an angel of mercy. They are following his confusions and prescriptions
day-to-day in an attempted repeat of the longest economic calamity
in modern American history.
They have looked
at the history of the New Deal and completely misunderstood it,
believing the civics-book claptrap about how FDR saved us from the
depression, whereas the fact is that FDR's theories and policies
lengthened and deepened it to the point that the only way out that
the Roosevelt administration saw was war.
The great theoretical
error of the New Dealers was to confuse the symptom of low prices
with the causes of the economic downturn. The real problem was that
prices were massively inflated before the stock market crash of
1929. The correction had to occur and would have occurred peacefully,
if not wholly painlessly, had the government not intervened.
No government
in all of human history that has waged war on prices has won. The
Great Depression is exhibit A.
First there
was Hoover with his attack on the "bitter-end liquidationists,"
whose advice he summarily rejected. Instead he increased taxes,
regulated against short selling, attempted to expand liquidity and
the money supply, attempted to maintain existing wage rates, extended
loans via government, and bailed out debtors with bankruptcy laws.
For more on Hoover's anti-market program, see Rothbard's America's
Great Depression.
Roosevelt
took office and extended this program, while rhetorically claiming
that it was the free-market policy of the Hoover administration
that failed. Today we see Bush's attack on speculators and the media-wide
attempt to claim that the meltdown is caused by unregulated markets
run amok. No doubt the next president, whoever he may be, will continue
this crusade against markets, pretending as if the Fed and the Bush
administration haven't been trying anti-market means of rescue for
fully two years, with each attempt backfiring.
But now let's
look forward to the next step in the war on falling prices in the
1930s. FDR took office under the promise that he would curb the
big spending of the Hoover administration. The tune changed once
he took office. Like Hoover before him, he denounced the rich and
powerful speculators, bankers, and corporations he blamed for bad
economic times. Even as he was saying these things, he called together
the people he regarded as the most powerful and important corporate,
banking, and labor interests – together with a gaggle of professors
from Columbia – and essentially asked them what they wanted to get
the economy going again.
This was the
Brain Trust that set the pattern for all of Washington's activities
from then to the present day. John T. Flynn, in his masterful book
The
Roosevelt Myth, described the first round of the New Deal
as:
that vast
hippodrome, that hectic, whirling, dizzy three-ring circus with
the NRA in one ring, the AAA in another, the Relief Act in another,
with General Johnson, Henry Wallace and Harry Hopkins popping
the whips, while all around under the vast tent a whole drove
of clowns and dervishes – the Henry Morgenthaus and Huey Longs
and Dr. Townsends and Upton Sinclairs and a host of crackpots
of every variety – leaped and danced and tumbled about and shouted
in a great harlequinade of government, until the tent came tumbling
down upon the heads of the cheering audience and the prancing
buffoons.
What
did the elites gathered around FDR demand? Higher prices (of course),
uniform industrial codes on labor and prices, production controls,
an end to competition from below, security for labor unions, guaranteed
credits, import tariffs – and also the police power they needed
to enforce all this. The model here was Mussolini's Italy, which
was regarded at the time as an ideal system of industrial management.
Of course, anti-trust laws were shelved as the government itself
set out to create as many trusts as possible.
What came out
of these meetings was the all-round industrial planning fiasco called
the National Industrial Recovery Act, which created the National
Recovery Administration. The head was former draft administrator
General Hugh Johnson, who brought to the effort every propaganda
trick he had learned from his kidnapping years. He began with a
central plan of wages, working hours, prices, and production quotas.
He went on the air, to the papers, to billboards, movies, and everything
else to whip up a frenzy.
There was a
symbol of compliance: The Blue Eagle. FDR said on the radio that
"soldiers wear a bright badge to be sure that comrades do not fire
on comrades. Those who cooperate in this program must know each
other at a glance. That bright badge is the Blue Eagle." And, added
Johnson, may "God have mercy on anyone who attempts to trifle with
that bird."
And you know
what? It is a complete disgrace that business supported it all –
for a while.
Flynn tells
of police raids of factories, as workers were lined up and interrogated
to make sure that they weren't working overtime and weren't accepting
less than the government-approved minimum. Consumers were arrested
for paying less than the approved minimum prices. A tailor named
Jack Magid in New Jersey was arrested and jailed for charging 35
cents instead of 40 cents to press a pair of pants. In time, the
NRA became unenforceable, as black markets sprung up in every industry.
The crackdown became worse, with nighttime raids on factories, and
bureaucrats chopping down doors with axes to make sure that no one
was sewing clothes. The NRA staff ballooned from 60 employees to
6,000 at the national level.
The entire
thing became a war on production to benefit a handful of elites,
all in the name of keeping prices up, all on the profound misunderstanding
that boosting prices would boost production, whereas the opposite
was true. Finally the Supreme Court came to the rescue and declared
the whole Soviet-like scheme unconstitutional, but, by that time,
it was clear that it was unworkable and doomed to failure.
At
the very same time, other sectors such as banking and agriculture
were being administered by other destructive schemes, all based
on economic error. The result was fantastic waste, disastrous attacks
on freedom and productivity, a regimentation of the entire country
under a dictator, and a prolongation of the depression, which went
on and on.
No matter how
many disasters FDR created – and it was nonstop – and no matter
how much his ridiculous "rabbits from the hat" were exposed as economically
harebrained, with every new bureau, every new law, every new initiative,
the economy continued to sink. The New Deal is a paradigmatic case
of how to turn a downturn into depression. That U.S. leaders regard
this as a model to follow does not speak very well of their economic
literacy, and it doesn't bode well for our future.
On the other
hand, if you want to see how to handle a crisis, consider the Panic
of 1819. Never heard of it? That's because it came and went,
and that's because the government did nothing about it.
October
7, 2008
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail] is founder and president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, editor of LewRockwell.com,
and author of Speaking
of Liberty.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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