Wednesday, April 28, 2021

Italian Fascist Leader Benito Mussolini on This Day in History

 


This Day in History: Italian Fascist leader Benito Mussolini and his mistress are killed on this day in 1945. Fascism is a term that gets thrown about liberally, but few actually know what it means. Another word for Fascism is Corporatism, and for many, it is the economic system of most Western countries, including the United States. Mussolini was a Socialist who believed that business should be closely tied to the State.

"No aspect of life is untouched by government intervention, and often it takes forms we do not readily see. All of healthcare is regulated, but so is every bit of our food, transportation, clothing, household products, and even private relationships. Mussolini himself put his principle this way: 'All within the State, nothing outside the State, nothing against the State.' I submit to you that this is the prevailing ideology in the United States today." Lew Rockwell

Ben O’Neill in his “The Vampire Economy and the Market" described Fascism as “attempts to secure economic growth and prosperity by fusing a ‘partnership’ between business and the State, absorbing business into the State in this process.” While communism '[when] faced with existing institutions that threaten the power of the state – be they corporations, churches, the family, tradition – the Communist impulse is by and large to abolish them, while the fascist impulse is by and large to absorb them.' Essentially, 'fascism is a form of hyper-interventionism amounting to socialism.'”

When Mussolini's dead body was hung upside-down in a public square, his form of governance should have died with him. But the bad ideas of the past (socialism / communism /fascism) don't die as these ideologies provide the recipe for power too many so eagerly desire.


Monday, April 26, 2021

David Hume on This Day in History


Visit my Economics blog at http://fredericbastiat1850.blogspot.com/

See also The Philosophy of Hume, Voltaire and Priestley - Over 170 Books on DVDrom

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This Day In History: Scottish Philosopher David Hume was born on this day in 1711 (April 26, old calendar). One puzzle that Hume posed is especially pertinent today in the era of mass lockdowns. In his First Principles of Government, Hume wrote, "Nothing appears more surprising to those who consider human affairs with a philosophical eye, than the easiness with which the many are governed by the few; and the implicit submission, with which men resign their own sentiments and passions to those of their rulers."

200 years prior to Hume, Étienne de La Boétie wrote his "Discourse on Voluntary Servitude" wherein he wonders, "how it happens that so many men, so many villages, so many cities, so many nations, sometimes suffer under a single tyrant who has no other power than the power they give him; who is able to harm them only to the extent to which they have the willingness to bear with him; who could do them absolutely no injury unless they preferred to put up with him rather than contradict him. Surely a striking situation!"

It was however the great H.L. Mencken that figured out how this was done: “The whole aim of practical politics is to keep the populace alarmed (and hence clamorous to be led to safety) by menacing it with an endless series of hobgoblins, all of them imaginary.”

What the above discovered is the Sheeple...herd behavior in a political context. 

Sheeple is a portmanteau of "sheep" and "people" and is a derogatory term that highlights the passive herd behavior of people easily controlled by a governing power which likens them to sheep, a herd animal that is "easily" led about. The term is used to describe those who voluntarily acquiesce to a suggestion without any significant critical analysis or research, in large part due to the majority of a population having a similar mindset. Word Spy defines it as "people who are meek, easily persuaded, and tend to follow the crowd (sheep + people)". Merriam-Webster defines the term as "people who are docile, compliant, or easily influenced: people likened to sheep". The word is pluralia tantum, which means it does not have a singular form.

Sheeple are easily led thanks to poor education and a lack of critical thinking skills coupled with fear. Such people give in to Authority Bias, which is the tendency to attribute greater accuracy to the opinion of an authority figure and be more influenced by that opinion. An individual is more influenced by the opinion of this authority figure, believing their views to be more credible, and hence place greater emphasis on the authority figure’s viewpoint. This concept is considered one of the so-called social cognitive biases or collective cognitive biases. Humans generally have a deep-seated duty to authority and tend to comply when requested by an authority figure. Some scholars explain that individuals are motivated to view authority as deserving of their position and this legitimacy leads people to accept and obey the decisions that it makes.

See also: David Hume: How Easily the Masses are Manipulated by the Few
https://thebookshelf2015.blogspot.com/2018/02/david-hume-how-easily-masses-are.html


Friday, April 16, 2021

Today is Tax Freedom Day

 

This Day in History: April 16 has been generally accepted as Tax Freedom Day. Tax Freedom Day is the date after which we no longer work to pay taxes, and from here on in you work for yourself for the remainder of the year. I personally believe Tax Freedom Day is probably much later, as it is difficult to really calculate how much taxes we really pay as taxes are hidden and embedded into so many things. However, even if I accept April 16 as Tax Freedom Day, it is interesting to note in the early 1900s, Tax Freedom Day was January 20. It stayed there until 1917, when it was Jan. 22. With World War I, Tax Freedom Day was Feb. 6 in 1918, then Feb. 20 in 1921. After Roosevelt's New Deal in 1940, Tax Freedom Day was March 3, and after World War II, Tax Freedom Day was March 31.

Tax Freedom Day in Canada is June 14. In the UK it is June 12. In Austria it is August 5.


Dickens Knew Taxes Started the French Revolution
https://thebookshelf2015.blogspot.com/2017/06/dickens-knew-taxes-started-french.html

How They Viewed an Income Tax Over 100 Years Ago
https://thebookshelf2015.blogspot.com/2018/04/how-they-viewed-income-tax-over-100.html

See also The History & Mystery of Money & Economics-250 Books on DVDrom

Visit my Econ blog at http://fredericbastiat1850.blogspot.com/

For a list of all of my disks and ebooks (PDF and Amazon) click here


Monday, April 12, 2021

The Zimbabwean Dollar on This Day in History

 

This Day in History: Zimbabwe officially abandoned the Zimbabwean dollar as its official currency. The reason for this is hyperinflation. As the currency loses value the authorities respond by issuing more of it, thereby ensuring that it will lose even more value which then leads to the printing of even more money and so on. A year before this, a newspaper in Zimbabwe went from $200,000 to $25 billion in the space of one month. A beer was $150 billion. "The chaos spreads through everything. ATMs and computers cannot handle all the additional zeros. Suitcases full of paper are needed to buy things – what few things are available. The inflation is so rapid that wages cannot keep pace. A worker might find that his bus fare today is more than his weekly wage. Life becomes intolerable for almost everyone."~Bill Trench

In place of their own dollar Zimbabwe uses other currencies, such as the American dollar. However, the US is also doing what Zimbabwe did. Endless stimulus programs means more money printing. This then leads to inflation,

Current inflation levels:

Average Food Index 25%
Wheat 28%
Steel 145%
Lumber 188%
Oil 76%
Soybeans 71%
Corn 67%
Copper 48%
Silver 40%
Cotton 35%

40% of all dollars in circulation were "printed" in the last 12 months.

All paper money is doomed to fail. However, we live in a strange time right now when all dominant economies are engaged in inflating their money supply (Quantitative Easing).




Monday, April 5, 2021

Thomas Hobbes on This Day in History

This Day in History: English philosopher Thomas Hobbes was born on this day in 1588. Hobbes is best known for his 1651 book Leviathan, in which he expounds an influential formulation of social contract theory. In this book he postulated that a world without a strong government would be one of chaos and violence, so people need to give up many of their freedoms in order to prop up a powerful State that would protect them. 

"Hobbes labeled the State as Leviathan, 'our mortal God.' Leviathan signifies a government whose power is unbounded, with a right to dictate almost anything and everything to the people under its sway. Hobbes declared that it was forever prohibited for subjects in 'any way to speak evil of their sovereign' regardless of how badly power was abused. Hobbes proclaimed that 'there can happen no breach of Covenant on the part of the Sovereign; and consequently none of his subjects, by any pretense of forfeiture, can be freed from his subjection.' Hobbes championed absolute impunity for rulers: 'No man that hath sovereign power can justly be put to death, or otherwise in any manner by his subjects punished.' Hobbes offered what might be called suicide pact sovereignty: to recognize a government’s existence is to automatically concede the government’s right to destroy everything in its domain."~James Bovard

David Hume wrote that “Hobbes’s politics were fitted only to promote tyranny.” Voltaire condemned Hobbes for making “no distinction between kingship and tyranny … With him force is everything.” Jean Jacques Rousseau condemned Hobbes for viewing humans as “herds of cattle, each of which has a master, who looks after it in order to devour it.”

“The theory of Hobbes is a theory of unadulterated despotism, or it is nothing.”~Charles Tarlton. Tarlton also wrote: "Hobbes was fond of posing the stark alternatives of unlimited authority and the state of nature, to frighten us back into our chains. But if authority is necessarily as he described it, then maybe anarchy (and) disorganization ... are really no worse." ("The despotical doctrine of Hobbes", p. 89)

Leviathan, with its politics and its views on religion led to its being banned, and even burned at Oxford University.







 

Friday, March 19, 2021

Pope Pius XI and the Divini Redemptoris on This Day in History

 

Buy this book: The Folly of Socialism (40 Chapters) for 99 cents on Amazon

This Day in History: Pope Pius XI issued the Divini Redemptoris, an anti-communist encyclical on this day in 1937. The encyclical describes communism as "a system full of errors and sophisms" that "subverts the social order, because it means the destruction of its foundations."

Pius XI goes on to contrast Communism with the civitas humana (ideal human civilization), which is marked by love, respect for human dignity, economic justice, and the rights of workers. He faults industrialists and employers who do not adequately support their workers for creating a climate of discontent in which people are tempted to embrace Communism. This reminds me of Willi Schlamm's refrain: “The problem with capitalism is capitalists. The problem with socialism is socialism.”

Pius XI once remarked, "No one can be at the same time a good Catholic and a true socialist."

His work expressed concern with Communism developing in the Soviet Union, Spain, and Mexico, and it condemned the Western press for its apparent "conspiracy of silence" in failing to cover such events in those countries. People forget that Mexico was one of the first Communist countries. 

Times change and now the present pope is often labelled a Socialist.


Sunday, March 14, 2021

Eli Whitney on This Day in History

 

This Day in History: Eli Whitney was granted a patent for the cotton gin on this day in 1794. A cotton gin – meaning "cotton engine" – is a machine that quickly and easily separates cotton fibers from their seeds, enabling much greater productivity than manual cotton separation.

The book "Against Intellectual Monopoly" by Michele Boldrin and David K. Levine has an interesting story about the cotton gin and Eli Whitney: "the cotton gin was enormously valuable in the South of the United States, where it made Southern cotton a profitable crop for the first time...Eli Whitney also had a business partner, Phineas Miller, and the two opted for a monopolistic pricing scheme...They would install their machines throughout Georgia and the South and charge farmers a fee to do the ginning for them. Their charge was two-fifths of the profit, paid to them in cotton. Not surprisingly, farmers did not like this pricing scheme very much and started to 'pirate' the machine. Whitney and Miller spent a lot of time and money trying to enforce their patent on the cotton gin, but with little success. Between 1794 and 1807, they went around the South bringing to court everyone in sight, yet received little compensation for their strenuous efforts. In the meanwhile, and thanks also to all that 'pirating', the Southern cotton-growing and cotton-ginning sector grew at a healthy pace."

Eli Whitney did eventually become wealthy with muskets without enforcing copyright.


Wednesday, March 10, 2021

Eugen Richter on This Day in History

 

Buy this book: The Folly of Socialism (40 Chapters) for 99 cents on Amazon

This Day in History: German politician and journalist Eugen Richter died on this day in 1906. Richter was a fervent anti-Socialist, and his 1891 novel "Pictures of the Socialistic Future" was the 19th century equivalent of George Orwell's 1984. In "Pictures of the Socialistic Future" he predicts what would happen if socialism was put into practice. He showed that government ownership of the means of production and central planning of the economy would lead to shortages, and he drew attention to the problem of incentives in the absence of profits. He also anticipated the Berlin Wall where he showed that it would be necessary to kill people to prevent them from leaving. His work has been described as "prophetic" of what socialism would mean.

"What inspired Richter to make these grim—yet uncannily accurate—predictions about the 'socialistic future'? The most plausible hypothesis is that Richter personally knew the leading socialists from the German Reichstag, and saw them for what they were. I submit that he repeatedly peppered the socialists with unpleasant hypotheticals, from 'Under socialism, who will take out the garbage?' to 'What will you do if skilled workers flee the country?' When socialist politicians responded with hysteria and evasion, Richter drew the natural inference: 'If this is how these ‘idealists’ deal with critical questions before they have power, just imagine how they’ll deal with critical actions after they have power!'" Bryan Kaplan 




 

Tuesday, March 2, 2021

Murray N. Rothbard on This Day in History

 

This Day in History: Economist Murray Rothbard was born on this day in 1926. Wikipedia describes him as a heterodox economist of the Austrian School. Heterodox economics is any economic thought or theory that contrasts with orthodox schools of economic thought. However, the mainstream (orthodox) economic thought presently advocates for endless money printing (stimulus), so we may need some heterodox thinking in this field.

Rothbard had no regard for Government, and he argued that all services provided by the "monopoly system of the corporate state" could be provided more efficiently by the private sector and wrote that the state is "the organization of robbery systematized and writ large". He called fractional-reserve banking a form of fraud and opposed central banking. He categorically opposed all military, political, and economic interventionism in the affairs of other nations. Rothbard expanded on his view of Government, especially in his "For a New Liberty" (1973), "Anatomy of the State" (1974), and "The Ethics of Liberty" (1982). Rothbard showed how “the State is nothing more nor less than a bandit gang writ large…”

Though he authored many books, Rothbard considered Ayn Rand's Atlas Shrugged "an infinite treasure house" and "not merely the greatest novel ever written, [but] one of the very greatest books ever written, fiction or nonfiction". It should be noted that he did not often get along with Rand.

Here are some quotes from Murray Rothbard:

“The State says that citizens may not take from another by force and against his will that which belongs to another. And yet the State…does just that.”

“The State is an inherently illegitimate institution of organized aggression, of organized and regularized crime against the persons and properties of its subjects… a profoundly antisocial institution which lives parasitically off of the productive activities of private citizens.”

“Since the State necessarily lives by the compulsory confiscation of private capital, and since its expansion necessarily involves ever-greater incursions on private individuals and private enterprise, we must assert that the state is profoundly and inherently anti-capitalist.”

“We must, therefore, emphasize that ‘we’ are not the government; the government is not ‘us.’ The government does not in any accurate sense ‘represent’ the majority of the people.”

“The State uses its coerced revenue, not merely to monopolize and provide genuine services inefficiently to the public, but also to build up its own power at the expense of its exploited and harassed subjects.”

“The State is a coercive criminal organization that subsists by a regularized large-scale system of taxation-theft.”

“The wry coupling of the twin certainties in the popular motto ‘death and taxes’ demonstrates that the public has resigned itself to the existence of the State as an evil but inescapable force of nature to which there is no alternative.”

“There is no reason to assume that a compulsory monopoly of violence, once acquired…by any State rulers, will remain ‘limited’ to protection of person and property. Certainly, historically no government has long remained ‘limited’ in this way.”

“Government was constructed neither for ability nor for the exercise of loving care; government was built for the use of force and for necessarily demagogic appeals for votes.”

“It is easy to be conspicuously ‘compassionate’ if others are being forced to pay the cost.”

“If mankind is diverse and individuated, then how can anyone propose equality as an ideal?...But what justification can equality find in the nature of man? If each individual is unique, how else can he be made ‘equal’ to others than by destroying most of what is human in him and reducing human society to the mindless uniformity of the ant heap?”

I often wonder what the great libertarian minds of the past would think of today's tech giants and their repressive actions?


Saturday, February 13, 2021

Doomer Thomas Malthus on This Day in History

 

Malthus and the Assault on Population 

This Day in History: Economist Thomas Malthus was born on this day in 1766. He is famous for his book An Essay on the Principle of Population where he argued that human population growth would outpace food production, which would lead to societal ruin. However, Malthus was wrong. He failed to anticipate the Industrial Revolution that came after his book and people were able to produce more despite rising populations. Yet, people still cling to this Malthusian way of thinking. Paul Ehrlich in 1968 published The Population Bomb which sold millions of copies. In it he warned: “The battle to feed all of humanity is over. In the 1970s the world will undergo famines — hundreds of millions of people are going to starve to death in spite of any crash programs embarked upon now. At this late date nothing can prevent a substantial increase in the world death rate. . . .”

"The predicted famines did not occur in the 1970s or the 1980s. What did occur was a surplus of food. The apocalyptic critics in 1965 should have paid more attention to the statistics of food production. After 1950, worldwide grain production increased steadily. From 1950 through 1975, this increase was in the range of 25% to 40% per capita. In the less developed countries (excluding Communist China), the increase was in the 13% range. Between 1950 and 1980, the world’s supply of arable land grew by more than 20%, and it grew even faster in the less developed countries. From 1967 to 1977, the world’s irrigated acreage grew by more than 25%. The price of seed, fertilizer, pesticides, and farm equipment also dropped in this period, in some cases by as much as half. In the 1980’s, grain farmers all over the world suffered economic losses as a result of overproduction. While these trends may not be permanent, they did create a tremendous public relations problem for the heralded famine-predictors of the counter-culture era (1965-70)."~Gary North=

Where there was famine, it was largely due to government interference. "Zimbabwe was agriculturally rich but, with government interference, was reduced to the brink of mass starvation. Any country faced with massive government interference can be brought to starvation. Blaming poverty on overpopulation not only lets governments off the hook but also encourages the enactment of harmful, inhumane policies."~Walter Williams 


Monday, February 8, 2021

Joseph Schumpeter on This Day in History

 

This Day in History: Austrian political economist Joseph Schumpeter was born on this day in 1883. Schumpeter was one of the most influential economists of the early 20th century, and popularized the idea of "creative destruction."
According to Christopher Freeman, a scholar who devoted much time researching Schumpeter's work: "the central point of his whole life work [is]: that capitalism can only be understood as an evolutionary process of continuous innovation and 'creative destruction'".

According to Schumpeter: "Capitalism ... is by nature a form or method of economic change and not only never is but never can be stationary. ... The fundamental impulse that sets and keeps the capitalist engine in motion comes from the new consumers' goods, the new methods of production or transportation, the new markets, the new forms of industrial organization that capitalist enterprise creates... The opening up of new markets, foreign or domestic, and the organizational development from the craft shop and factory to such concerns as U.S. Steel illustrate the process of industrial mutation that incessantly revolutionizes the economic structure from within, incessantly destroying the old one, incessantly creating a new one. This process of Creative Destruction is the essential fact about capitalism. It is what capitalism consists in and what every capitalist concern has got to live in... Capitalism requires] the perennial gale of Creative Destruction."

Take for instance the Walmart Effect and now the Amazon Effect. Both companies revolutionized and changed the way people shopped, and they destroyed a lot of businesses along the way. Hence, Creative Destruction.

Schumpeter also predicted that Capitalism would weaken and collapse by devolving into Corporatism and to values hostile to capitalism, especially among intellectuals (intellectuals tend to have a negative outlook of capitalism).








Sunday, February 7, 2021

Capitalist Charles Dickens on This Day in History

 

This Day in History: English writer Charles Dickens was born on this day in 1812. He created some of the world's best-known fictional characters and is regarded by many as the greatest novelist of the Victorian era. His works enjoyed unprecedented popularity during his lifetime and, by the 20th century, critics and scholars had recognized him as a literary genius. His novels and short stories are still widely read today. His stories had a big impact, and the illiterate poor would pay for his stories, opening up literature to a whole new class of people. I recently read Great Expectations and his writing still holds up. He also gave us: Oliver Twist, A Tale of Two Cities, The Old Curiosity Shop, David Copperfield, Bleak House, Hard Times, The Signal-Man and much more. 

Charles Dickens had a disdain for law and lawyers, and this worked his way into some of his writings (Mr. Tulkinghorne and Uriah Heep). In A Tale of Two Cities Dickens wrote that taxes started the French Revolution. Ironically, France still has high taxes.

Dickens wrote in 1861 that American presidents no longer had the qualities of the Founding Fathers, “The system, for some reason, does not choose great men but brings to the top unknowns who have little really going for them and little really quality of greatness.”

Dickens complained of a lack of copyright protections in America, though he was actually paid royalties by three American publishers and he earned more royalties from the sale of books in the US, where he had no copyright protection, than in England, where he did.

His Bleak House had an early ode to Public Choice theory (where self-interest is the primary driving force behind all human actions). "The one great principle of the English law is, to make business for itself. There is no other principle distinctly, certainly, and consistently maintained through all its narrow turnings. Viewed by this light it becomes a coherent scheme, and not the monstrous maze the laity are apt to think it. Let them but once clearly perceive that its grand principle is to make business for itself at their expense, and surely they will cease to grumble."

Many like to portray Dickens as a Socialist, but he was a wildly successful capitalist and entrepreneur, a driving force behind the great nineteenth-century innovation of the serialized, commercial novel. 

See also In Defense of Scrooge

Charles Dickens and Hans Christian Andersen

The Mysterious Charles Dickens By Lyndon Orr 1912

Charles Dickens and "Great Expectations"

The 1850's the Greatest Decade in the History of the English Novel by William Phelps

A Look at The Victorian Novel, 1906 Article


Friday, February 5, 2021

Fascist Thomas Carlyle on this Day in History


This Day in History: Scottish historian, satirical writer, essayist, translator, philosopher, mathematician, and teacher, Thomas Carlyle, died on this day in 1881. Carlyle also gave us the idea of the Great Man: "Universal History, the history of what man has accomplished in this world, is at bottom the History of the Great Men who have worked here. They were the leaders of men, these great ones; the modellers, patterns, and in a wide sense creators, of whatsoever the general mass of men contrived to do or to attain; all things that we see standing accomplished in the world are properly the outer material result, the practical realization and embodiment, of Thoughts that dwelt in the Great Men sent into the world: the soul of the whole world's history, it may justly be considered, were the history of these." 

If you read the above and are thinking of a Randian Great Men, that is not what Carlyle had in mind. 

"He made his appearance in the midst of the age of laissez faire, a time when the UK and the US had already demonstrated the merit of allowing society to take its own course, undirected from the top down. In these times, kings and despots were exercising ever less control and markets ever more. Slavery was on its way out. Women obtained rights equal to men. Class mobility was becoming the norm, as were long lives, universal opportunity, and material progress.
Carlyle would have none of it. He longed for a different age. His literary output was devoted to decrying the rise of equality as a norm and calling for the restoration of a ruling class that would exercise firm and uncontested power for its own sake. In his view, some were meant to rule and others to follow. Society must be organized hierarchically lest his ideal of greatness would never again be realized. He set himself up as the prophet of despotism and the opponent of everything that was then called liberal." ~Jeffrey A. Tucker

As such, Thomas Carlyle can be viewed as the forefather of Fascism. His idea of a Great Man was that of a dictator. 

"Carlyle's distaste for democracy and his belief in charismatic leadership was appealing to Joseph Goebbels, who frequently referenced Carlyle's work in his journal, and read his biography of Frederick the Great to Hitler during his last days in 1945. Many critics in the 20th century identified Carlyle as an influence on fascism and Nazism." Wikipedia

"Great men are almost always bad men." Lord Acton


 

Wednesday, February 3, 2021

The Sixteenth Amendment on This Day in History


 The Sixteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution was ratified on this day in 1913, authorizing the Federal government to impose and collect an income tax. Before this, the government relied largely on alcohol sales for tax revenue. When they saw how much money they were raking in on income tax, the state went ahead with Prohibition of alcohol. 

"Despite pleas throughout the 1920s by journalist H.L. Mencken and a tiny handful of other sensible people to end Prohibition, Congress gave no hint that it would repeal this folly. Prohibition appeared to be here to stay — until income-tax revenues nose-dived in the early 1930s." ~Justin M. Ptak

That's right. With the great depression tax revenues kept decreasing. However, the government still wanted their money...so they repealed Prohibition in 1933 and started collecting alcohol tax again.

And yes, taxation is still theft:

"All other persons and groups in society (except for acknowledged and sporadic criminals such as thieves and bank robbers) obtain their income voluntarily: either by selling goods and services to the consuming public, or by voluntary gift (e.g., membership in a club or association, bequest, or inheritance). Only the State obtains its revenue by coercion, by threatening dire penalties should the income not be forthcoming. That coercion is known as 'taxation,' although in less regularized epochs it was often known as 'tribute.' Taxation is theft, purely and simply even though it is theft on a grand and colossal scale which no acknowledged criminals could hope to match. It is a compulsory seizure of the property of the State’s inhabitants, or subjects." Murray Rothbard

Saturday, January 30, 2021

The FDR Myth on This Day in History

FDR was born on this day in 1882

Textbooks galore point out that President Franklin Roosevelt left a permanent stamp on the American economy. But no textbook in print explains how Roosevelt promoted what is probably the greatest economic myth of the twentieth century: the view that capitalism caused the Great Depression.

During the 1932 campaign against Herbert Hoover, Roosevelt repeated in speech after speech his view that free markets had failed America. During that election year, the U.S. economy was in tatters: 25 percent unemployment, a plummeting stock market, and rampant pessimism sapped American morale. To audiences all over the nation, Roosevelt expounded his theory of why capitalism had failed.

The boom of the 1920s had created a maldistribution of wealth, Roosevelt alleged. The rich were getting richer and the poor poorer. "Corporate profit resulting from this period was enormous," Roosevelt argued, but "very little of it went into increased wages; the worker was forgotten."1

In fact, the poor were getting so poor they could no longer consume enough to support a robust economy, and so naturally it collapsed into depression. The solution, Roosevelt pledged, was New Deal programs for the purpose "of meeting the problem of underconsumption, of adjusting production to consumption, of distributing wealth and products more equitably."2 Economists called Roosevelt’s diagnosis the "underconsumption" thesis.

During the campaign Roosevelt often flayed the capitalists, whose power had "become so disproportionate as to dry up purchasing power within any other group. . . . It is a proper concern of the Government to use wise measures of regulation which will bring this purchasing power back to normal."3 In another speech, he said that "if the process of concentration goes on at the same rate, at the end of another century we shall have all American industry controlled by a dozen corporations, and run by perhaps a hundred men. Put plainly, we are steering a steady course toward economic oligarchy, if we are not there already."4

The underconsumption thesis was not original with Roosevelt, but he acted on it and did more to popularize it than anyone else. But is it valid? Does the evidence support the view that (1) wealth was becoming increasingly concentrated during the 1920s, and (2) that industrial workers were not able to consume adequately because they were receiving a steadily smaller share of corporate earnings during the 1920s?

The economic statistics collected during the 1920s and 1930s give little support to Roosevelt’s ideas. In 1921 the percentage of national income received by the top 5 percent of the population was 25.5. That share remained stable throughout the decade, and by 1929 the top 5 percent received 26.09 percent of the national income.5 Does that microscopic increase really suggest, as Roosevelt charged, that we were "steering a steady course toward economic oligarchy, if we are not there already"?

On the second issue of worker earnings, the evidence directly refutes Roosevelt’s charges. The employee share of corporate income did not decline, but instead steadily increased during the 1920s-from under 70 percent in 1920 to well over 70 percent during the last years of the decade.6

As Peter Temin, an economist at MIT, concluded, "The ratio of consumption to national income was not falling in the 1920s. An underconsumption view of the 1920s, therefore, is untenable." As of 1976, Temin observed, "the concept of underconsumption has been abandoned in modern discussions of macroeconomics."7 In other words, the economic idea that inspired Roosevelt to launch the New Deal was so discredited it was no longer even discussed by economists just one generation after Roosevelt’s death.

Consumption Boost

But the damage was done. To boost consumption, the New Deal had given some kind of government subsidy to farmers, factory workers, veterans, and even silver miners. The era of big government in America was launched.

Why did Roosevelt err? It is tempting to argue that he manipulated data and words to win votes in the short run with an idea that had no resilience in the long run. And, too, many of his Brain Trusters urged him to promote underconsumptionist thinking.

Another possibility is that Roosevelt popularized underconsumptionist ideas because he never understood free markets in particular or economics in general. He came from a wealthy family, and his mother said they never discussed economic ideas at home. When he went off to school he apparently never studied economics seriously or disciplined his mind to study subjects logically. At Groton, the rector, Endicott Peabody, voted for Hoover in 1932, readily conceding that Roosevelt was "not brilliant." At Harvard, Roosevelt was only a C or C-plus student. He showed little interest in his introductory economics course, which he took in his sophomore year.8

Afterward, at Columbia Law School, his professor for a public-utilities course, Jackson E. Reynolds, said, "Franklin Roosevelt was no good as a student. He didn’t appear to have any aptitude for law, and made no effort to overcome that handicap by hard work. . . . He passed both of my courses, but he never received a degree because he flunked. Afterwards in offices downtown he made the same kind of records."9

Once Roosevelt was president, many of those who worked with him were startled by his undisciplined mind and economic ignorance. In a secret diary Brain Truster Raymond Moley wrote in May 1936 after a discussion with the president: "I was impressed as never before by the utter lack of logic of the man, the scantiness of his precise knowledge of things that he was talking about, by the gross inaccuracies in his statements. . . ."10

Moley suggests that both economic ignorance and political calculation shaped Roosevelt’s criticism of free markets. In any case, what we can learn from this historical episode is that bad economic ideas, if not effectively challenged, can sweep an ill-prepared man into the presidency, and permanently change the nation’s economic direction.

Burton Folsom, Jr., is historian in residence at the Center for the American Idea in Houston, Texas, and author of The Myth of the Robber Barons. He is currently working on a history of Franklin Roosevelt and the New Deal.


Notes

  1. 1. Samuel I. Rosenman, ed., The Public Papers and Addresses of Franklin D. Roosevelt (New York: Random House, 1938), I, p. 650.
  2. 2. Ibid., pp. 751-52.
  3. 3. Ibid., p. 784.
  4. 4. Ibid., p. 751.
  5. 5. Bureau of Census, Historical Statistics of the United States (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Commerce, 1975), p. 302.
  6. 6. Peter Temin, Did Monetary Forces Cause the Great Depression? (New York: W.W. Norton and Co., 1976), p. 4. See also Thomas B. Silver, Coolidge and the Historians (Durham, N.C.: Carolina Academic Press, 1982), p. 136.
  7. 7. Temin, pp. 4, 32.
  8. 8. Geoffrey C. Ward, Before the Trumpet: Young Franklin Roosevelt, 1882-1905 (New York: Harper & Row, 1985), pp. 180, 207, and Daniel R. Fusfeld, The Economic Thought of Franklin D. Roosevelt and the Origins of the New Deal (New York: Columbia University Press, 1954), p. 23.
  9. 9. Jackson E. Reynolds interview, Columbia Oral History Project, p. 42. I would like to thank Gary Dean Best for calling this interview to my attention.
  10. 10. Raymond Moley diary, May 4, 1936, Hoover Institution.
Burton W. Folsom
Burton W. Folsom

Burton Folsom, Jr. is a professor of history at Hillsdale College and author (with his wife, Anita) of FDR Goes to WarHe is a member of the FEE Faculty Network

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