How This Happened
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
For
years, many of us puzzled about how something so stupid and destructive
as the New Deal could have happened. The stock market crashed because
it was over-inflated. That's nothing new. History is filled with
credit-filled bubbles that pop. Resources are reallocated to reflect
economic reality and we move on.
The New Deal
was different. It actually began under Hoover, who initiated new
spending programs and jobs programs, and tried to inflate the money
supply and bail out the banks. He was blasted by FDR for his big
government policies, and FDR won the election. Once in power, FDR
went nuts, instituting a program of central planning that combined
features of the Soviet and Fascist models.
It was one
idiotic program after another. They tried to raise wages when they
should have fallen. They tried to save banks that should have collapsed.
They destroyed resources when they were most needed. They encouraged
spending when people should have been saving. They smashed the dollar
at a time when it needed to be shored up. They cartelized business
when competition was most necessary.
What were the
results? Economic growth went nowhere between 1933 and 1939, with
real gross domestic product per adult still 27 percent below trend
at the end. Per capita GDP was lower in 1939 than in 1929. Unemployment
was at 17.2 percent in 1939. This was actually higher than it was
in 1931. This is despite 100 percent increases in monetary expansion.
Taxes had tripled. Employing people became ever more expensive due
to unions and national income guarantees.
Every time
the economy would bottom out and genuine recovery would begin, policy
would knock it back down again. Other seeming upturns were entirely
artificial: make work instead of real work, for example. Regimentation
was everywhere, so that business couldn't compete, farmers were
destroying livestock and crops on command, and dissidents were being
ferreted out through police-state tactics.
In other words,
the whole project was a massive dud. It turned what might have been
a short downturn into a decade-long national calamity, the biggest
cost of which was freedom itself. And then as a cover-up for the
calamity, there was war. At last FDR found some use for those unemployed
workers: send them to kill and be killed at taxpayer expense. As
for wartime price controls and nationalization, it was the New Deal
by other means.
(For a full
account, with all the detail, in scintillating prose, see Flynn's
Roosevelt
Myth.)
Was it some
sort of national insanity?
No, it was
a power grab, and the current political moment shows precisely how
this happens. A small group of elites, cut off from the broader
reality, decide to finagle the system to serve themselves and their
friends in the short term while forgetting the big picture and the
long term. Sensible people try to point out obvious facts but their
voices are drowned out.
But none of
this happens without some philosophical rationale. Even before J.M.
Keynes came along to give bad economic ideas a scientific gloss,
the notion that government could gin up the economy with spending
and inflation was pervasive. Laissez-faire economic theories had
fallen out of favor with the elites who controlled the universities,
print houses, and government agencies.
Many nutty
ideas were in the air. It's remarkable to see how many pro-fascist
books, for example, were in print in the 1920s and 30s. It was widely
assumed that the future of the good society was bound up with the
idea of "economic planning." This was an interesting phrase. It
covered all forms of socialism plus the interventionist state. Planning
was the intellectual fashion, and there were very few dissidents.
Once the crisis
hit, the intellectual reality became the political reality. (Higgs
describes the process in Crisis
and Leviathan.)
Now that we
are living amidst this, it is easier to come to terms with how the
New Deal came about. It makes those in the know feel completely
helpless. We look at what is happening to bank reserves and we know
what is coming. When the economy recovers even if only cosmetically and
lending starts again, the internal dynamic of the fractional-reserve
system will come into operation. We could be facing inflation at
10 percent or 20 percent or even much higher, depending on how spending
psychology plays itself out.
Then we listen
to speeches by the president-elect, who is going on about the great
stimulus package he is going to push through Congress. It's like
listening to one quack doctor propose bleeding the patient even
as the last quack doctor who bled the patient is packing his bags
to leave. You want to shout: is there a real doctor in the house?
But it seems like no one is listening.
What's
striking here is how the historians are the ones with power right
now. Bush has gone nuts with inflation and intervention as a way
of avoiding Hoover's fate, even though the actual historical record
(as versus the historian's fantasies) shows that Herbert was the
first New Dealer. Meanwhile, the Obama clique hopes to recreate
the FDR disaster by following his plan detail by detail, even though
the plan was stupid and didn't work.
To watch all
this happening is like watching a slow-moving train headed over
a cliff. The problem is that the engineers have earplugs in and
blinders on.
Will this go
on for ten years like the last time? Will it end in World War III,
as if following some historical script? Is it possible that we will
go the way of Germany in the 1920s, straight into the abyss
of hyperinflation and into the hands of a ghastly dictator?
It is unwise to rule it out.
And
yet, I'm not that pessimistic. It is extremely crucial to realize
that there is a difference this time. In the 1930s, technological
limits put severe restrictions on information delivery. Government
propaganda easily dominated the culture. All of that has changed.
Despite everything, people simply do not trust the government as
they once did. Obama will enjoy a short honeymoon but it will be
over by summer.
What is missing
today so far is the critical thing: a culture-wide love of liberty
that is capable of intimidating and beating back the rogue regime.
The conditions are right for this to actually happen, and to reverse
the direction of politics today. But it will require all our efforts.
Fortunately everyone has the opportunity today to make a difference.
I hope my
own book will help make a difference.
The last words
in Ludwig von Mises's book Socialism
bear repeating.
"Everyone carries
a part of society on his shoulders," wrote Mises, "no one is relieved
of his share of responsibility by others. And no one can find a
safe way for himself if society is sweeping towards destruction.
Therefore everyone, in his own interest, must thrust himself vigorously
into the intellectual battle."
January
10, 2009
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, most recently, of The Left, The Right, and The State.
Copyright
© 2009 LewRockwell.com
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