Pushing his agenda for higher taxes on “the rich,”
President Obama kicked off his December 6 speech in Kansas by
saying his Kansas grandparents “shared the optimism of a nation
that triumphed over the Great Depression.”
In fact, the 1929 stock market crash turned into the
long-running Great Depression because the counterproductive
soak-the-rich policies of the federal government hadn’t “triumphed”
in reversing the downturn.
Franklin Roosevelt’s forceful expansion of federal
regulations and confiscatory taxation, his intimidation of “the
rich,” encouragement of labor strikes, and half-baked policy
experiments discouraged employers from hiring workers and provided
strong disincentives to new business investment.
“From 1929 to 1940, from Hoover to Roosevelt, government
intervention helped make the Depression Great,” writes Amity Shlaes
in The Forgotten Man: A New History of the Great
Depression. “The trouble, however, was not merely the new
policies that were implemented but also the threat of additional,
unknown, policies. Fear froze the economy, but that uncertainty
itself might have a cost was something the young experimenters
simply did not consider.”
Roosevelt’s goal was to enlarge the power of the public
sector, increase revenues to the government, and expand the
economic controls of the centralized bureaucracy, even for dubious
projects (today’s version of unending and equally dubious projects
include federal handouts for the Chevy Volt, $500 million in loan
guarantees to politically correct but economically bankrupt
Solyndra, Cash for Clunkers, and federally-imposed mortgage goals
that promoted zero-down loans to unqualified buyers).
“Businessmen and businesses were the targets,” writes
Shales, while Roosevelt “made groups where only individual citizens
or isolated cranks had stood before, ministered to those groups,
and was rewarded with votes.”
The craving for political power took precedence over
national unity. “Roosevelt and his staff were becoming habitual
bullies, pitting Americans against one another,” writes
Shlaes.
As Roosevelt stated it in his second inaugural address, he
sought “unimagined power.”
Those two words alone were enough to turn employers and
investors into John Galt, the fictional character in Ayn Rand’s
novel Atlas Shrugged who, refusing to become a cog in an
anti-individualist society, urges the world’s producers, including
businessmen, to strike, to withdraw their talent and investments
from society in order to bring about the collapse of
collectivism.
In their 2010 book, Return to Prosperity: How America
Can Regain Its Superpower Status, Stephen Moore and Arthur B.
Laffer summarize the Roosevelt legislative victories that deepened
and lengthened the Great Depression.
Draining investment capital from the system, the top
income tax rate was raised from 25 percent to 63 percent in 1932,
and then to 79 percent, creating clear disincentives for business
expansion and ever-higher obstacles to capital accumulation and new
investment.
The corporate tax rate was raised from 11 percent to 12
percent in 1931, 13.75 percent in 1932, and 15 percent in 1936 with
a 27 percent surtax on undistributed profits.
The highest inheritance tax rate was more than doubled in
1932, from 20 percent to 45 percent, raised to 60 percent in 1934
and 70 percent in 1935. In 1932, a gift tax was reinstated with a
top rate of 33.5 percent, raised to 45 percent in 1934 and 52.5
percent in 1935.
The result was enduring stagnation. “The DOW did not
return to 1929 levels until nearly a decade after Roosevelt’s
death,” writes Shlaes, while the unemployment rate “did not return
to pre-crash levels until the war.”
After summarizing the aforementioned triumphs of
Roosevelt’s anti-rich, anti-business policy agenda, Moore and
Laffer issue a clear warning: “U.S. federal and state tax policies
are on an economic crash trajectory today, just as they were in the
1930s.”
VonMisesJr| 12.13.11 @ 9:35AM
Hayek's "Socialism and War" explains how statist governments utilize war economy to central plan and then attempt to justify peacetime planning as necessary and better than capitalism.
Von Mises in "socialism" explains that free trade encourages peace while statism encourages war since central planning fails to supply for the people and the politicians need a scape goat.
Today's Progressives are using depression or threat of a downturn to impose statist control as FDR did in the Great Depression.
ONTIME| 12.15.11 @ 1:42PM
If the Mysery Man has such fondness for FDR and his era, maybe he should emulate his hero by sitting in a wheelchair with two useless legs and pontificate. He is already crippled with a deffective ideology, a poor work ethic, a series of consistent failure and his lack of credentials make him sound like someone talking in a barrel.
FlaJim| 12.16.11 @ 10:01AM
A big difference between FDR and miracle boy in the White House is that although both see socialism as consolidating their power, FDR was actually dumb enough to think that it worked while the boy knows it won't and is pursuing it because he sees it as a way to destroy America, a country he hates.
His speech in Osawatomie should have been an eye opener for those sitting on the fence about him. The American system has never worked and never will without fundamental changes? It must be just plain luck, then, that we became the strongest and richest nation in the world while others were -- what? -- distracted?
His agenda is clear. He wants to see the downfall of our country by whatever means available to him. Currently, that's taken the form of over regulation and ruling by fiat.