Ominous Parallels
by Walter E. Williams
People are beginning to compare
Barack Obama's administration to the failed administration of Jimmy Carter, but
a better comparison is to the Roosevelt administration of the 1930s and '40s.
Let's look at it with the help of a publication from the Mackinac Center for
Public Policy and the Foundation for Economic Education titled Great Myths of
the Great Depression, by Dr. Lawrence Reed.
During the first year of President
Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal, he called for increasing federal spending to
$10 billion while revenues were only $3 billion. Between 1933 and 1936,
government expenditures rose by more than 83 percent. Federal debt skyrocketed
by 73 percent. Roosevelt signed off on legislation that raised the top income
tax rate to 79 percent and then later to 90 percent. Hillsdale College
economics historian and professor Burt Folsom, author of "New Deal or Raw
Deal?", notes that in 1941, Roosevelt even proposed a 99.5 percent
marginal tax rate on all incomes more than $100,000. When a top adviser
questioned the idea, Roosevelt replied, "Why not?"
Roosevelt had other ideas for the
economy, including the National Recovery Act. Dr. Reed says: "The economic
impact of the NRA was immediate and powerful. In the five months leading up to
the act's passage, signs of recovery were evident: factory employment and
payrolls had increased by 23 and 35 percent, respectively. Then came the NRA,
shortening hours of work, raising wages arbitrarily and imposing other new
costs on enterprise. In the six months after the law took effect, industrial production
dropped 25 percent."
Blacks were especially hard hit by
the NRA. Black spokesmen and the black press often referred to the NRA as the
"Negro Run Around," Negroes Rarely Allowed," "Negroes
Ruined Again," "Negroes Robbed Again," "No Roosevelt
Again" and the "Negro Removal Act." Fortunately, the courts
ruled the NRA unconstitutional. As a result, unemployment fell to 14 percent in
1936 and lower by 1937.
Roosevelt had more plans for the
economy, namely the National Labor Relations Act, better known as the
"Wagner Act." This was a payoff to labor unions, and with these new
powers, labor unions went on a militant organizing frenzy that included
threats, boycotts, strikes, seizures of plants, widespread violence and other
acts that pushed productivity down sharply and unemployment up dramatically. In
1938, Roosevelt's New Deal produced the nation's first depression within a
depression. The stock market crashed again, losing nearly 50 percent of its
value between August 1937 and March 1938, and unemployment climbed back to 20
percent. Columnist Walter Lippmann wrote in March 1938 that "with almost
no important exception every measure (Roosevelt) has been interested in for the
past five months has been to reduce or discourage the production of
wealth."
Roosevelt's agenda was not without
its international admirers. The chief Nazi newspaper, Volkischer Beobachter,
repeatedly praised "Roosevelt's adoption of National Socialist strains of
thought in his economic and social policies" and "the development
toward an authoritarian state" based on the "demand that collective
good be put before individual self-interest." Roosevelt himself called
Benito Mussolini "admirable" and professed that he was "deeply
impressed by what he (had) accomplished."
FDR's very own treasury secretary,
Henry Morgenthau, saw the folly of the New Deal, writing: "We have tried
spending money. We are spending more than we have ever spent before and it does
not work. ... We have never made good on our promises. ... I say after eight
years of this Administration we have just as much unemployment as when we
started ... and an enormous debt to boot!" The bottom line is that
Roosevelt's New Deal policies turned what would have been a three- or four-year
sharp downturn into a 16-year affair.
The 1930s depression was caused by and
aggravated by acts of government, and so was the current financial mess that
we're in. Do we want to repeat history by listening to those who created the
calamity? That's like calling on an arsonist to help put out a fire.
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