Franklin D Roosevelt prolonged the American depression

They say "truth will come out" but sometimes it takes a long time. For more than half a century, it has been a "well-known fact" that President Franklin D. Roosevelt got the U.S. out of the Great Depression of the 1930s. That view was never pervasive among economists, and even J.M. Keynes – a liberal icon – criticised some of FDR's policies as hindering recovery from the depression.

In "FDR's Folly," author Jim Powell argues persuasively that the policies of the Roosevelt administration actually prolonged the depression and made things worse:

  • It tried to raise farm prices by destroying vast amounts of produce – at a time when hunger was a serious problem in the United States.

  • It imposed minimum wage rates that priced unskilled labour out of jobs, at a time of massive unemployment.

  • Then there were the monetary authorities contracting the money supply in the midst of the biggest depression in history – when the economy was showing some signs of revival, until their monetary contraction touched off another big downturn.

    Perhaps worse than any specific policy under FDR was the atmosphere of uncertainty generated by incessant new experiments. Billions of dollars of investment were needed to create millions of jobs for the unemployed. But investors were reluctant to risk their money while the rules of the game were constantly being changed in Washington, amid strident anti-business rhetoric, explains Powell.

    Some of the people who most admired and almost worshipped FDR – poor people and blacks, for example – were hurt the most by amateurish tinkering with the economy by Roosevelt's New Deal administration. This book is an education in itself, both in history and in economics. It is also a warning of what can happen when leaders are chosen for their charm, charisma and rhetoric.

    Source: Thomas Sowell, Great Myths About the Great Depression, www.townhall.com , October 9, 2003; based upon Jim Powell, FDR's Folly, Crown Forum, September 23, 2003.
    For text http://www.townhall.com/columnists/thomassowell/ts20031009.shtml
    For more on Economic Growth http://www.ncpa.org/iss/eco/

    RSA Comment:
    South Africa’s current employment rate is comparable to that experienced by the USA during the depression of the 1930’s. Now let us compare the policies of the SA administration with those of FDR. It:
  • Has not destroyed food in an attempt to iraise farm prices.
  • Has imposed minimum wage rates that are pricing “unskilled labour out of jobs, at a time of massive unemployment”.
  • Has not contracted the money supply but did increase it excessively in 2001, requiring a sharp reduction in the rate of increase in order to rein in inflation, the resultant instability causing havoc for producers.
  • Has created great uncertainty with a flood of policy and statutory changes, and the granting of discretionary powers to the executive at a time when certainty is vital for the attraction of job-creating investment.
  • Has and will hurt the poor the most if this trend continues.
    FDR’s social engineering caused great harm and so will South Africa’s.

    FMF Policy Bulletin/ 14 October 2003
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