FDR’s Biggest Mistake During the Depression
by
Jim Powell
by Jim Powell
FDR
didnt know what to do about the Great Depression he inherited
from Herbert Hoover, so he tried everything. He hiked taxes, spent
more money, established monopolies, enforced cartels, filed antitrust
lawsuits, promoted compulsory unionism, multiplied business regulations,
denounced investors, and started welfare programs, public works
projects, a big entitlement, on and on.
One theme runs
through such misguided policies: the failure to focus single-mindedly
on the recovery of the private sector that pays all the bills, including
tax bills. FDR was very much a creature of the progressive
era, when many intellectuals embraced the view that experts could
make a better world if only they had enough power. Some of FDRs
New Dealers were impressed by Mussolinis fascist corporate
state model, others liked Stalins centralized economic planning
in the Soviet Union, and still others just seemed to believe that
any problem could be fixed by issuing more laws and regulations.
With very few exceptions, New Deal discussions werent about
helping the private sector recover. Discussions were about making
government bigger.
The influential
newspaper columnist Walter Lippmann observed that New Deal reformers
would rather not have recovery if the revival of private initiative
means a resumption of private control in the management of corporate
business.
Whatever gave
progressive intellectuals the idea that government could
run an economy? History is littered with government failures.
During the
19th century, Illinois, Indiana, Maryland, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania
and Virginia built canals with taxpayers money. Almost all
were losers. State governments lost money in railroads. Economic
historian Clifford Thies noted that turnpikes were also money-losers.
Economic historians Ernest L. Bogart and Donald L. Kemmerer observed
that Most of the enterprises were extravagantly, if not corruptly,
managed.
Desperate to
pay their debts, states raised taxes and unloaded assets as fast
as they could. Altogether, nine state governments a third
of all states that had spent large sums on all sorts of business
ventures defaulted on their debts during the 1840s. Many state constitutions
were amended to make sure such disasters didnt happen again.
A couple decades
later, Washington politicians tried their hand at business by subsidizing
construction of the transcontinental railroad. In 1872, this exploded
into the biggest American financial scandal of the 19th century.
Principals of Crédit Mobilier pocketed millions of dollars
of subsidies, bribed congressmen, and brought on the collapse of
the Union Pacific Railroad.
During the
late 19th century, a number of western states tried to increase
their populations and political clout by attracting people willing
to farm in the desert the most costly kind of farming imaginable.
States issued bonds to finance dams and reservoirs for irrigation.
Result: lots of corruption and waste.
President
Theodore Roosevelt thought past experience didnt apply to
him. He taxed people in eastern states, where rainfall made possible
efficient farming, to subsidize those who wanted to become farmers
in western deserts. In 1902, TR signed the Reclamation Act that
established a federal dam-building monopoly, the Bureau of Reclamation.
Historian Marc Reisner called it an unparalleled experiment
in federal intervention in the economy. There were few settlers
but much corruption. Reisner added, Every Senator wanted a
project in his state, every Congressman wanted one in his district.
Politicians didnt care whether they made economic sense or
not.
World War I
gave most Americans their first opportunity to see what a government-run
economy would be like. The feds seized control of industries, fixed
prices, and ran everything through big bureaucracies. As historians
Samuel Eliot Morrison, Henry Steele Commager, and William E. Leuctenburg
reported, Baby carriages were standardized; traveling salesmen
were limited to two trunks; and the length of uppers on shoes was
cut down. It was such a regimentation of the economy as had never
before been known, and it later served as a model for the New Deal.
So, FDR didnt
need to know much about economics to realize that big government
was no way to go. He would have done better to remove obstacles
starting with Hoovers obstacles that interfered
with the ability of the private sector to recover and prosper.
May
19, 2009
Jim
Powell, a Senior Fellow at the Cato Institute, is the author of
Wilson’s
War, How Woodrow Wilson’s Great Blunder Led To Hitler, Lenin, Stalin
And World War II (2005), FDR’s
Folly, How Roosevelt and His New Deal Prolonged the Great Depression
(2003), and The
Triumph of Liberty, A 2,000-Year History Told Through The Lives
Of Freedom’s Greatest Champions (2000).
Copyright
© 2009 Future of Freedom Foundation
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