November 20, 2003,
8:52 a.m. It has been 70 years since Franklin Delano Roosevelt launched his New Deal in an effort to banish the Great Depression perhaps the most important economic event in American history. The New Deal was controversial then, and still is, because it failed to resolve the most important problem of the era: chronic unemployment, which averaged 17 percent throughout the New Deal period. Frequent changes in the tax laws, plus FDR's anti-business rhetoric ("economic royalists"), discouraged people from making investments essential for growth and job creation. New Deal securities laws made it harder for employers to raise capital. FDR issued antitrust lawsuits against some 150 employers and companies, making it harder for them to focus on business. He also signed a law ordering the breakup of America's strongest banks with the lowest failure rates. New Deal farm policies destroyed food 10 million acres of crops and 6 million farm animals thereby wiping out farm jobs and forcing food prices above market levels for 100 million American consumers. (FDR's Folly spells out much more in detail.) There's a fascinating split between economists and political historians about the New Deal. The idea that FDR cured high unemployment, wrote Thomas Sowell in a recent column, "was never pervasive among economists, and even J.M. Keynes a liberal icon criticized some of FDR's policies as hindering recovery from the depression." Meanwhile, pro-FDR political historians such as James MacGregor Burns, Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., Frank Freidel, William Leuchtenburg, and Kenneth S. Davis, have focused on the personalities, elections, speeches, "Fireside Chats," and other aspects of the New Deal's political story, disregarding evidence about its economic consequences. This continues to be the case with younger political historians like Alan Brinkley, author of The End of Reform: New Deal Liberalism in Recession and War , who called the New Deal "a bright moment." Disregarding the economic consequences, too, are children's book authors like Joy Hakim, whose recent bestseller Freedom: A History of US includes a glowing account of New Deal heroics. In addition to FDR's Folly, the only major work mentioning evidence about the economic consequences of the New Deal is by Stanford University political historian David M. Kennedy: his 1999 book Freedom from Fear won the Pulitzer Prize. "Whatever it was," he wrote, the New Deal "was not a recovery program." The New Deal might be gone, but the debate goes on. Jim Powell is a senior fellow at the Cato Institute and the author of FDR's Folly. | ||||||||
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http://www.nationalreview.com/nrof_comment/powell200311200852.asp
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