Warren Harding and the Forgotten Depression of 1920
by Thomas E. Woods, Jr.
by Thomas E. Woods, Jr.
Recently by Thomas E. Woods, Jr.: The
Federal Reserve's Death Rattle?
It is a cliché
that if we do not study the past we are condemned to repeat it.
Almost equally certain, however, is that if there are lessons to
be learned from an historical episode, the political class will
draw all the wrong ones and often deliberately so. Far from
viewing the past as a potential source of wisdom and insight, political
regimes have a habit of employing history as an ideological weapon,
to be distorted and manipulated in the service of present-day ambitions.
Thats what Winston Churchill meant when he described the history
of the Soviet Union as unpredictable.
For this reason,
we should not be surprised that our political leaders have made
such transparently ideological use of the past in the wake of the
financial crisis that hit the United States in late 2007. According
to the endlessly repeated conventional wisdom, the Great Depression
of the 1930s was the result of capitalism run riot, and only the
wise interventions of progressive politicians restored prosperity.
Many of those who concede that the New Deal programs alone did not
succeed in lifting the country out of depression nevertheless go
on to suggest that the massive government spending during World
War II is what did it.1 (Even some
nominal free-marketeers make the latter claim, which hands the entire
theoretical argument to supporters of fiscal stimulus.)
The connection
between this version of history and the events of today is obvious
enough: once again, it is claimed, wildcat capitalism has created
a terrific mess, and once again, only a combination of fiscal and
monetary stimulus can save us.
In order to
make sure that this version of events sticks, little, if any, public
mention is ever made of the depression of 192021. And no wonder:
that historical experience deflates the ambitions of those who promise
us political solutions to the real imbalances at the heart of economic
busts. The conventional wisdom holds that in the absence of government
countercyclical policy, whether fiscal or monetary (or both), we
cannot expect economic recovery at least, not without an
intolerably long delay. Yet the very opposite policies were followed
during the depression of 192021, and recovery was in fact
not long in coming.
The economic
situation in 1920 was grim. By that year unemployment had jumped
from 4 percent to nearly 12 percent, and GNP declined 17 percent.
No wonder, then, that Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover
falsely characterized as a supporter of laissez-faire economics
urged President Harding to consider an array of interventions
to turn the economy around. Hoover was ignored.
Instead of
fiscal stimulus, Harding cut the governments budget
nearly in half between 1920 and 1922. The rest of Hardings
approach was equally laissez-faire. Tax rates were slashed for all
income groups. The national debt was reduced by one-third. The Federal
Reserves activity, moreover, was hardly noticeable. As one
economic historian puts it, Despite the severity of the contraction,
the Fed did not move to use its powers to turn the money supply
around and fight the contraction.2
By the late summer of 1921, signs of recovery were already visible.
The following year, unemployment was back down to 6.7 percent and
was only 2.4 percent by 1923.
It is instructive
to compare the American response in this period to that of Japan.
In 1920, the Japanese government introduced the fundamentals of
a planned economy, with the aim of keeping prices artificially high.
According to economist Benjamin Anderson, The great banks,
the concentrated industries, and the government got together, destroyed
the freedom of the markets, arrested the decline in commodity prices,
and held the Japanese price level high above the receding world
level for seven years. During these years Japan endured chronic
industrial stagnation and at the end, in 1927, she had a banking
crisis of such severity that many great branch bank systems went
down, as well as many industries. It was a stupid policy. In the
effort to avert losses on inventory representing one years
production, Japan lost seven years.3
The U.S., by
contrast, allowed its economy to readjust. In 192021,
writes Anderson, we took our losses, we readjusted our financial
structure, we endured our depression, and in August 1921 we started
up again. . . . The rally in business production and employment
that started in August 1921 was soundly based on a drastic cleaning
up of credit weakness, a drastic reduction in the costs of production,
and on the free play of private enterprise. It was not based on
governmental policy designed to make business good. The federal
government did not do what Keynesian economists ever since have
urged it to do: run unbalanced budgets and prime the pump through
increased expenditures. Rather, there prevailed the old-fashioned
view that government should keep spending and taxation low and reduce
the public debt.4
Those were
the economic themes of Warren Hardings presidency. Few presidents
have been subjected to the degree of outright ridicule that Warren
Harding endured during his lifetime and continues to receive long
after his death. But the conventional wisdom about Harding is wrong
to the point of absurdity: even the alleged corruption
of his administration was laughably minor compared to the presidential
transgressions we have since come to take for granted.
In his 1920
speech accepting the Republican presidential nomination, Harding
declared:
We will
attempt intelligent and courageous deflation, and strike at government
borrowing which enlarges the evil, and we will attack high cost
of government with every energy and facility which attend Republican
capacity. We promise that relief which will attend the halting
of waste and extravagance, and the renewal of the practice of
public economy, not alone because it will relieve tax burdens
but because it will be an example to stimulate thrift and economy
in private life.
Let us call
to all the people for thrift and economy, for denial and sacrifice
if need be, for a nationwide drive against extravagance and luxury,
to a recommittal to simplicity of living, to that prudent and
normal plan of life which is the health of the republic. There
hasnt been a recovery from the waste and abnormalities of
war since the story of mankind was first written, except through
work and saving, through industry and denial, while needless spending
and heedless extravagance have marked every decay in the history
of nations.
It is hardly
necessary to point out that Hardings counsel delivered
in the context of a speech to a political convention, no less
is the opposite of what the alleged experts urge upon us
today. Inflation, increased government spending, and assaults on
private savings combined with calls for consumer profligacy: such
is the program for recovery in the twenty-first century.
Not surprisingly,
many modern economists who have studied the depression of 192021
have been unable to explain how the recovery could have been so
swift and sweeping even though the federal government and the Federal
Reserve refrained from employing any of the macroeconomic tools
public works spending, government deficits, inflationary
monetary policy that conventional wisdom now recommends as
the solution to economic slowdowns. The Keynesian economist Robert
A. Gordon admitted that government policy to moderate the
depression and speed recovery was minimal. The Federal Reserve authorities
were largely passive. . . . Despite the absence of a stimulative
government policy, however, recovery was not long delayed.5
Another economic historian briskly conceded that the economy
rebounded quickly from the 192021 depression and entered a
period of quite vigorous growth but chose not to comment further
on this development.6 This was
1921, writes the condescending Kenneth Weiher, long
before the concept of countercyclical policy was accepted or even
understood.7 They may not have
understood countercyclical policy, but recovery came
anyway and quickly.
One of the
most perverse treatments of the subject comes at the hands of two
historians of the Harding presidency, who urge that without government
confiscation of much of the income of the wealthiest Americans,
the American economy will never be stable:
The tax
cuts, along with the emphasis on repayment of the national debt
and reduced federal expenditures, combined to favor the rich.
Many economists came to agree that one of the chief causes of
the Great Depression of 1929 was the unequal distribution of wealth,
which appeared to accelerate during the 1920s, and which was a
result of the return to normalcy. Five percent of the population
had more than 33 percent of the nations wealth by 1929.
This group failed to use its wealth responsibly. . . . Instead,
they fueled unhealthy speculation on the stock market as well
as uneven economic growth.8
If this absurd
attempt at a theory were correct, the world would be in a constant
state of depression. There was nothing at all unusual about the
pattern of American wealth in the 1920s. Far greater disparities
have existed in countless times and places without any resulting
disruption. In fact, the Great Depression actually came in the midst
of a dramatic upward trend in the share of national income
devoted to wages and salaries in the United States and a
downward trend in the share going to interest, dividends, and entrepreneurial
income.9 We do not in fact need the
violent expropriation of any American in order to achieve prosperity,
thank goodness.
It is not enough,
however, to demonstrate that prosperity happened to follow upon
the absence of fiscal or monetary stimulus. We need to understand
why this outcome is to be expected in other words, why the
restoration of prosperity in the absence of the remedies urged upon
us in more recent times was not an inconsequential curiosity or
the result of mere happenstance.
First, we need
to consider why the market economy is afflicted by the boom-bust
cycle in the first place. The British economist Lionel Robbins asked
in his 1934 book The
Great Depression why there should be a sudden cluster
of error among entrepreneurs. Given that the market, via the
profit-and-loss system, weeds out the least competent entrepreneurs,
why should the relatively more skilled ones that the market has
rewarded with profits and control over additional resources suddenly
commit grave errors and all in the same direction? Could
something outside the market economy, rather than anything that
inheres in it, account for this phenomenon?
Ludwig von
Mises and F. A. Hayek both pointed to artificial credit expansion,
normally at the hands of a government-established central bank,
as the non-market culprit. (Hayek won the Nobel Prize in 1974 for
his work on what is known as Austrian business cycle theory.) When
the central bank expands the money supply for instance, when
it buys government securities it creates the money to do
so out of thin air. This money either goes directly to commercial
banks or, if the securities were purchased from an investment bank,
very quickly makes its way to the commercial banks when the investment
banks deposit the Feds checks. In the same way that the price
of any good tends to decline with an increase in supply, the influx
of new money leads to lower interest rates, since the banks have
experienced an increase in loanable funds.
The lower interest
rates stimulate investment in long-term projects, which are more
interest-rate sensitive than shorter-term ones. (Compare the monthly
interest paid on a thirty-year mortgage with the interest paid on
a two-year mortgage a tiny drop in interest rates will have
a substantial impact on the former but a negligible impact on the
latter.) Additional investment in, say, research and development
(R&D), which can take many years to bear fruit, will suddenly
seem profitable, whereas it would not have been profitable without
the lower financing costs brought about by the lower interest rates.
We describe
R&D as belonging to a higher-order stage of production
than a retail establishment selling hats, for example, since the
hats are immediately available to consumers while the commercial
results of R&D will not be available for a relatively long time.
The closer a stage of production is to the finished consumer good
to which it contributes, the lower a stage we describe it as occupying.
On the free
market, interest rates coordinate production across time. They ensure
that the production structure is configured in a way that conforms
to consumer preferences. If consumers want more of existing goods
right now, the lower-order stages of production expand. If, on the
other hand, they are willing to postpone consumption in the present,
interest rates encourage entrepreneurs to use this opportunity to
devote factors of production to projects not geared toward satisfying
immediate consumer wants, but which, once they come to fruition,
will yield a greater supply of consumer goods in the future.
Had the lower
interest rates in our example been the result of voluntary saving
by the public instead of central-bank intervention, the relative
decrease in consumption spending that is a correlate of such saving
would have released resources for use in the higher-order stages
of production. In other words, in the case of genuine saving, demand
for consumer goods undergoes a relative decline; people are saving
more and spending less than they used to. Consumer-goods industries,
in turn, undergo a relative contraction in response to the decrease
in demand for consumer goods. Factors of production that these industries
once used trucking services, for instance are now
released for use in more remote stages of the structure of production.
Likewise for labor, steel, and other nonspecific inputs.
When the markets
freely established structure of interest rates is tampered with,
this coordinating function is disrupted. Increased investment in
higher order stages of production is undertaken at a time when demand
for consumer goods has not slackened. The time structure of production
is distorted such that it no longer corresponds to the time pattern
of consumer demand. Consumers are demanding goods in the present
at a time when investment in future production is being disproportionately
undertaken.
Thus, when
lower interest rates are the result of central bank policy rather
than genuine saving, no letup in consumer demand has taken place.
(If anything, the lower rates make people even more likely to spend
than before.) In this case, resources have not been released for
use in the higher-order stages. The economy instead finds itself
in a tug-of-war over resources between the higher- and lower-order
stages of production. With resources unexpectedly scarce, the resulting
rise in costs threatens the profitability of the higher-order projects.
The central bank can artificially expand credit still further in
order to bolster the higher-order stages position in the tug
of war, but it merely postpones the inevitable. If the publics
freely expressed pattern of saving and consumption will not support
the diversion of resources to the higher-order stages, but, in fact,
pulls those resources back to those firms dealing directly in finished
consumer goods, then the central bank is in a war against reality.
It will eventually have to decide whether, in order to validate
all the higher-order expansion, it is prepared to expand credit
at a galloping rate and risk destroying the currency altogether,
or whether instead it must slow or abandon its expansion and let
the economy adjust itself to real conditions.
It is important
to notice that the problem is not a deficiency of consumption spending,
as the popular view would have it. If anything, the trouble comes
from too much consumption spending, and as a result too little channeling
of funds to other kinds of spending namely, the expansion
of higher-order stages of production that cannot be profitably completed
because the necessary resources are being pulled away precisely
by the relatively (and unexpectedly) stronger demand for consumer
goods. Stimulating consumption spending can only make things worse,
by intensifying the strain on the already collapsing profitability
of investment in higher-order stages.
Note also that
the precipitating factor of the business cycle is not some phenomenon
inherent in the free market. It is intervention into the
market that brings about the cycle of unsustainable boom and inevitable
bust.10 As business-cycle theorist
Roger Garrison succinctly puts it, Savings gets us genuine
growth; credit expansion gets us boom and bust.11
This phenomenon
has preceded all of the major booms and busts in American history,
including the 2007 bust and the contraction in 192021. The
years preceding 1920 were characterized by a massive increase in
the supply of money via the banking system, with reserve requirements
having been halved by the Federal Reserve Act of 1913 and then with
considerable credit expansion by the banks themselves. Total bank
deposits more than doubled between January 1914, when the Fed opened
its doors, and January 1920. Such artificial credit creation sets
the boom-bust cycle in motion. The Fed also kept its discount rate
(the rate at which it lends directly to banks) low throughout the
First World War (191418) and for a brief period thereafter.
The Fed began to tighten its stance in late 1919. Economist Gene
Smiley, author of The
American Economy in the Twentieth Century, observes that
the most common view is that the Feds monetary policy
was the main determinant of the end of the expansion and inflation
and the beginning of the subsequent contraction and severe deflation.12
Once credit began to tighten, market actors suddenly began to realize
that the structure of production had to be rearranged and that lines
of production dependent on easy credit had been erroneously begun
and needed to be liquidated.
We are now
in a position to evaluate such perennially fashionable proposals
as fiscal stimulus and its various cousins. Think about
the condition of the economy following an artificial boom. It is
saddled with imbalances. Too many resources have been employed
in higher order stages of production and too few in lower-order
stages. These imbalances must be corrected by entrepreneurs who,
enticed by higher rates of profit in the lower-order stages, bid
resources away from stages that have expanded too much and allocate
them toward lower-order stages where they are more in demand. The
absolute freedom of prices and wages to fluctuate is essential to
the accomplishment of this task, since wages and prices are indispensable
ingredients of entrepreneurial appraisal.
In light of
this description of the post-boom economy, we can see how unhelpful,
even irrelevant, are efforts at fiscal stimulus. The governments
mere act of spending money on arbitrarily chosen projects does nothing
to rectify the imbalances that led to the crisis. It is not a decline
in spending per se that has caused the problem. It is
the mismatch between the kind of production the capital structure
has been misled into undertaking on the one hand, and the pattern
of consumer demand, which cannot sustain the structure of production
as it is, on the other.
And it is not
unfair to refer to the recipients of fiscal stimulus as arbitrary
projects. Since government lacks a profit-and-loss mechanism and
can acquire additional resources through outright expropriation
of the public, it has no way of knowing whether it is actually satisfying
consumer demand (if it is concerned about this at all) or whether
its use of resources is grotesquely wasteful. Popular rhetoric notwithstanding,
government cannot be run like a business.13
Monetary stimulus
is no help either. To the contrary, it only intensifies the problem.
In Human Action, Mises compared an economy under the influence of
artificial credit expansion to a master builder commissioned to
construct a house that (unbeknownst to him) he lacks sufficient
bricks to complete. The sooner he discovers his error the better.
The longer he persists in this unsustainable project, the more resources
and labor time he will irretrievably squander. Monetary stimulus
merely encourages entrepreneurs to continue along their unsustainable
production trajectories; it is as if, instead of alerting the master
builder to his error, we merely intoxicated him in order to delay
his discovery of the truth. But such measures make the eventual
bust no less inevitable merely more painful.
If the Austrian
view is correct and I believe the theoretical and empirical
evidence strongly indicates that it is then the best approach
to recovery would be close to the opposite of these Keynesian strategies.
The government budget should be cut, not increased, thereby releasing
resources that private actors can use to realign the capital structure.
The money supply should not be increased. Bailouts merely freeze
entrepreneurial error in place, instead of allowing the redistribution
of resources into the hands of parties better able to provide for
consumer demands in light of entrepreneurs new understanding
of real conditions. Emergency lending to troubled firms perpetuates
the misallocation of resources and extends favoritism to firms engaged
in unsustainable activities at the expense of sound firms prepared
to put those resources to more appropriate use.
This recipe
of government austerity is precisely what Harding called for in
his 1921 inaugural address:
We must
face the grim necessity, with full knowledge that the task is
to be solved, and we must proceed with a full realization that
no statute enacted by man can repeal the inexorable laws of nature.
Our most dangerous tendency is to expect too much of government,
and at the same time do for it too little. We contemplate the
immediate task of putting our public household in order. We need
a rigid and yet sane economy, combined with fiscal justice, and
it must be attended by individual prudence and thrift, which are
so essential to this trying hour and reassuring for the future.
. . .
The economic
mechanism is intricate and its parts interdependent, and has suffered
the shocks and jars incident to abnormal demands, credit inflations,
and price upheavals. The normal balances have been impaired, the
channels of distribution have been clogged, the relations of labor
and management have been strained. We must seek the readjustment
with care and courage. . . . All the penalties will not be light,
nor evenly distributed. There is no way of making them so. There
is no instant step from disorder to order. We must face a condition
of grim reality, charge off our losses and start afresh. It is
the oldest lesson of civilization. I would like government to
do all it can to mitigate; then, in understanding, in mutuality
of interest, in concern for the common good, our tasks will be
solved. No altered system will work a miracle. Any wild experiment
will only add to the confusion. Our best assurance lies in efficient
administration of our proven system.
Hardings
inchoate understanding of what was happening to the economy and
why grandiose interventionist plans would only delay recovery is
an extreme rarity among twentieth-century American presidents. That
he has been the subject of ceaseless ridicule at the hands of historians,
to the point that anyone speaking a word in his favor would be dismissed
out of hand, speaks volumes about our historians capabilities
outside of their own discipline.
The experience
of 192021 reinforces the contention of genuine free-market
economists that government intervention is a hindrance to economic
recovery. It is not in spite of the absence of fiscal and monetary
stimulus that the economy recovered from the 192021 depression.
It is because those things were avoided that recovery came. The
next time we are solemnly warned to recall the lessons of history
lest our economy deteriorate still further, we ought to refer to
this episode and observe how hastily our interrogators try
to change the subject.
Notes
- On the
fallacy of wartime prosperity during the Second World
War, see Robert Higgs, Depression,
War, and Cold War (New York: Oxford University Press,
2006).
- Kenneth
E. Weiher, Americas
Search for Economic Stability: Monetary and Fiscal Policy Since
1913 (New York: Twayne, 1992), 35.
- On Japan,
see Benjamin M. Anderson, Economics
and the Public Welfare: A Financial and Economic History of the
United States, 19141946 (Indianapolis: Liberty Press,
1979 [1949]), 8889, 90.
- Ibid., 92.
- Robert Aaron
Gordon, Economic
Instability and Growth: The American Record (New York:
Harper and Row, 1974), 2122, cited in Joseph T. Salerno,
An Austrian Taxonomy of Deflation With Applications
to the U. S., Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics
6 (Winter 2003): 89.
- Robert A.
Degen, The
American Monetary System: A Concise Survey of Its Evolution Since
1896 (Lexington, MA: D. C. Heath, 1987), 41.
- Weiher,
Americas
Search for Economic Stability, 36.
- Eugene P.
Trani and David L. Wilson, The
Presidency of Warren G. Harding (Lawrence, KS: University
Press of Kansas, 1977), 72.
- C. A. Phillips,
T. F. McManus, and R. W. Nelson, Banking
and the Business Cycle: A Study of the Great Depression in the
United States (New York: Macmillan, 1937), 76.
- The Austrian
theory also applies to cases in which no central bank was present
and artificial credit expansion took place by other means. Government
intervention is at fault in these cases as well. See Jesús
Huerta de Soto, Money,
Bank Credit, and Economic Cycles, trans. Melinda A. Stroup
(Auburn, AL: Ludwig von Mises Institute, 2006).
- Roger W.
Garrison, The Austrian Theory: A Summary, in The
Austrian Theory of the Trade Cycle and Other Essays, comp.
Richard M. Ebeling (Auburn, AL: Ludwig von Mises Institute, 1996),
99.
- Gene Smiley,
The
U.S. Economy in the 1920s, EH.Net Encyclopedia, ed.
Robert Whaples, March 26, 2008.
- Ludwig von
Mises, Bureaucracy
(New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1944).
The
above piece comes from the Fall 2009 issue of The
Intercollegiate Review. If you are a student or faculty member
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October
14, 2009
Thomas
E. Woods, Jr. [visit
his website; send
him mail] is the author of nine books, including
two New York Times bestsellers: Meltdown:
A Free-Market Look at Why the Stock Market Collapsed, the Economy
Tanked, and Government Bailouts Will Make Things Worse and
The
Politically Incorrect Guide to American History. Read Congressman
Ron Paul's foreword
to Meltdown.
Copyright
© 2009 Intercollegiate Studies Institute
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