By J.T. Young on 5.7.09 @ 6:07AM
Prolong the Depression it did -- but it never replaced the
Federal Reserve and its monetary policy as the main culprit.
Seventy-six years ago in the depths of the Great Depression, FDR
launched its intended solution, the New Deal. If, as it now
seems, the current financial crisis's closest counterpart is the
Great Depression, it is paramount we understand both it and its
intended solution. In contrast to conventional wisdom, the
Depression's cause -- not its cure -- came from the government
and the New Deal did less than both its supporters and critics
claim.
The stock market's crash on October 29, 1929, did not immediately
trigger its larger economic effects. However, within a year they
were well underway and produced huge Republican losses in
Congress -- compounded again in 1932 with the loss of the
presidency. Franklin Roosevelt's response to the Depression was
the New Deal, an unprecedented peacetime governmental response to
the spiraling economy.
Popularly remembered as massive government intervention,
government spending did not surge as many believe. Certainly
federal spending increased -- 40% from 1932 to 1934 -- but it had
already surged 49% from 1929 to 1932, prior to FDR even taking
office. From 1934 to 1940, it increased another 44%, hardly
dramatic given previous increases. The larger and overlooked
surge in government spending actually occurred around World War
I: from 1916-1928, government spending increased four-fold; from
1929-1940, it tripled.
On the receipt side, revenues fell, as is standard during
economic downturns. However, by 1933, revenues had begun to grow
again. By 1936, federal revenues exceeded their 1929 level --
fully four years before the economy did likewise.
For these reasons, the federal deficit did not exhibit an
inexorable growth. It was actually rather stable. The budget
swung into deficit in 1931 by $462 million. By 1932, it was $2.7
billion in the red, but again this was before FDR even took
office. By 1940, after eight years of Roosevelt, the deficit was
$2.9 billion.
The New Deal's economic results are far more contrarian than its
fiscal impact. America began 1929 with a GDP of $103.6 billion.
Yet for all the New Deal hoopla, when 1940 began -- the final
year of FDR's second term -- GDP stood at just $101.4 billion --
still below its level of eleven years earlier.
Why is the breakpoint of 1940 chosen for all these
comparisons? Not because it was the year in which FDR would
seek an unprecedented third term. It was the year prior to what
really ended the Great Depression: WWII's massive military
build-up.
Beginning with 1941's Lend-Lease program to arm the Allies,
American military spending exploded. From 1940 to 1941, U.S.
military spending grew from $2.2 billion to $6.4 billion. With
America's direct involvement in 1942, it rose to $25.7 billion --
roughly double the previous year's entire federal budget
($13.7 billion). By 1945, federal spending was $92.7 billion --
higher than GDP ($92.2 billion) when 1939 began!
As the economy grew -- and even more importantly, enlistments --
unemployment fell dramatically. In 1940, America had 533,000
military personnel. That grew to an annual average of 1.6 million
in 1941, 4 million in 1942, 8.9 million in 1943, 11.4 million in
1944, and 11.6 million in 1945 (11% of the US population).
Unemployment fell apace: 4.7% in 1942, 1.9% in 1943, and 1.2% in
1944.
While it was war, not government, that solved the Depression, it
was government -- in the form of the Federal Reserve and its
mishandling of the money supply -- that caused it. We have known
this, though many still refuse to accept it, since Nobel laureate
economist Milton Friedman wrote A Monetary History of the
United States, 1867-1960 in 1963. Friedman dispatched the
prevailing Keynesian mindset and showed monetary policy, not
fiscal policy, was the dominant economic determinant.
As biographer Lanny Ebenstein writes, Friedman showed the Federal
Reserve decreased America's money supply during the post-Crash
years. These "unprecedented annual consecutive
declines…constituted the Great Contraction and were the primary
source…" of the Great Depression.
What do the numbers add up to? First, they give us better
perspective on the two financial crises. The current financial
crisis is not the Great Depression. Even with unemployment now
8.5%, it is still just over half the lowest point attained for
any year during FDR's pre-WWII administration. The
current economy has experienced just three consecutive
quarters of negative GDP growth; from January 1, 1929 to
January 1, 1933, it shrunk for four consecutive years
and did not regain its 1929 level for eleven years.
Second, it shows that the New Deal of rhetoric was not the New
Deal of reality. The New Deal's real contribution was as a
precedent for government involvement in a peacetime economy.
While it did not end the Depression it laid the foundation for
the massive federal entitlement edifice now threatening the
federal budget and, ironically, the economy the New Deal is
popularly claimed to save.
topics:
The New Deal, The Great Depression, Monetary Policy