26.
The Great Depression
The Great Depression,
as with previous and subsequent downturns in the economy, was brought on by an
artificial increase in the money supply, in this case engineered by the Federal
Reserve during the 1920's. The
increased money supply resulted in an artificially low interest rate and
stimulated investment in capital projects--in particular the stock market and
real estate.
The necessary
adjustment began in 1929 as such malinvestments were being liquidated and
production was once again shifting to that based on genuine consumer
demand. Unfortunately, unlike many
previous downturns, this one was fought tooth and nail by the Hoover
administration thus turning it into the GREAT depression. Hoover's first intervention thwarting
the needed adjustment was in calling in the major industrialists of the day and
extracting guarantees of continued high wages for their employees on the faulty
theory that high wages cause prosperity (rather than prosperity causing high
wages). Also, the Smoot-Hawley
tariff signed by Hoover in June 1930 resulted in a 50% tariff wall against
trade with other countries thereby interrupting the international division of
labor.
In 1932 Hoover
managed an increase in the income tax from a top rate of 25% to 64%, further
burdening a weakened economy.
Hoover was thus no laissez-faire champion. Additionally, the feds created a new agency to prop up
failing large businesses with the Reconstruction Finance Corporation in
1930. As Hoover stated in
1932: "I have waged the most
gigantic program of economic defense and counter-attack ever evolved in the
history of the Republic."
Rather than allowing the recovery to proceed, the federal government
took numerous measures which prolonged the conditions and prevented the much
needed recovery.
Against this massive
series of interventions, the Democrats offered a candidate for president
committed to reduced intervention, lower taxes, less federal spending and
maintenance of the gold standard.
Unfortunately, once in office Franklin Roosevelt governed very
differently than he had campaigned.
Within a month gold had been confiscated from the American people upon
penalty of a ten year prison sentence and a $10,000 fine. The dollar was devalued by 40%, and the
National Industrial Recovery Administration was established to reduce
competition and output. The NIRA
cartelized industries with councils establishing codes for minimum prices,
including minimum wages, the net effect of which was to increase business costs
by 50%. In addition, the
Agricultural Adjustment Act authorized crop destruction as a way to boost farm
prices (reducing output during time of need is surely among the most heartless
acts one could imagine!).
Fortunately, the
Supreme Court began finding much of this central planning for favored
businesses unconstitutional in 1935 and these offensive programs were ended.
But Roosevelt was not
through with his social engineering.
In 1937 an undistributed profits tax was signed, Securities and Exchange
regulations were increased and the Wagner Act of 1935 went into effect. The Wagner Act undermined free labor
relations, empowered unions and generated greater misery for those in search of
employment. Also, Roosevelt
brought back a less constitutionally offensive version of the Agricultural Adjustment
Act in 1936 and 1938.
In 1937-38 the
economy experienced a sharp drop as the first known depression within a
depression occurred. To further
compound the misery, the Wage and Hours Act became law in 1938. This act mandated 48 hour pay while
reducing the workweek to 40 hours, thereby increasing business costs and
limiting the freedom of labor to contract. The 1930's downturn became the Great Depression because of
massive government intervention, the climate of uncertainty all businesses faced
as new laws were passed at breakneck speed and then struck down and then
reestablished in altered form, higher taxes, mandated costs, and currency
manipulation (and this recounting is only a fraction of the innumerable
interventions). As Hans Sennholz has
stated, "the 1930's was a case of politics running wild in economic
life."
Those economists who
blame the Great Depression on the free market are playing wildly loose with the
facts; there has been no less free market in so rapid a fashion as there was
during this period of American history.
When Keynesians say the free market failed and demonstrated the need for
widescale government management of the economy they are doing so oblivious to
the facts. The two major camps are
in effect talking past one another as the free marketeer explains that a free
market is stable, only to have the Keynesian respond with a proof to the
contrary based on an episode lacking a free market.
-
Anderson, Benjamin M.
Economics and the Public Welfare,
(Indianapolis, Indiana: LibertyPress, 1949) pp. 224 - 483.
-
Brown, Susan, et. al.
The Incredible Bread Machine,
(San Diego, California: World Research, Inc, 1974) pp. 30 - 53.
-
Hospers, John
Libertarianism,
(Santa Barbara, California: Reason Press, 1971) pp. 335 - 344.
-
Rothbard, Murray N.
America's Great Depression,
(Los Angeles: Nash Publishing, Inc., 1972) pp. 167 - 296.
-
Sennholz, Hans
The Great Depression: Will We Repeat It?,
(Irvington-on-Hudson, New York: The Foundation For Economic Education, 1993.)
-
Sennholz, Hans
The Politics of Unemployment,
(Spring Mills, Pennsylvania: Libertarian Press, Inc., 1987)
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