Opinion

[Print]  [Email]        

FDR's New Deal Prolonged the Great Depression

Examiner Editorial
-
October 30, 2008

A groundbreaking study by UCLA economists Harold Cole and Lee Ohanian demonstrates that President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s excessively pro-labor, anti-competitive New Deal actually prolonged for seven long years the severe economic pain immortalized in John Steinbeck’s “Grapes of Wrath.”

Using 1929 data, the two researchers calculated what wages and prices would have been had without the New Deal, and then compared them to actual wages and prices at the time. Their findings were startling: In 11 key industries, actual wages averaged 25 percent higher than market conditions warranted, but unemployment was also 25 percent higher as well. Meanwhile, the New Deal pushed up prices 23 percent higher than they should have been, so consumers couldn’t afford to buy, leading to even more unemployment.

Cole and Ohanian blame FDR’s National Industrial Recovery Act for “short-circuiting the market’s self-correcting forces.” Instead of stimulating the economy, they argue, FDR managed to depress it even further. Without government intervention, the Great Depression would have ended in 1936 instead of 1943. If FDR unnecessarily prolonged the Great Depression, thank the Federal Reserve Bank for starting it. Current Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke conceded the central bank’s culpability in a Nov. 8, 2002 speech honoring University of Chicago free market economist Milton Friedman on his 90th birthday.

During the Roaring ‘20s, the Federal Reserve was busy pumping “easy money” into the nation’s banking system, distorting price signals, and sending a false message of prosperity to Wall Street tycoons, who responded by engaging in highly speculative lending practices. Sound familiar?  Bernanke concurred with Friedman’s basic argument that changes in the money supply were responsible for causing the changes in the economy that directly led to the 1929 collapse. “I would like to say to Milton and [his wife] Anna: Regarding the Great Depression. You're right, we did it. We're very sorry,” Bernanke said. “But thanks to you, we won't do it again.” Don’t count on it. As Cole and Ohanian point out, generations of economists and voters have learned the false lesson that free people and free markets cannot be trusted and that major government intervention is needed to prevent another Great Depression, even though the facts now clearly show otherwise.



beltway confidential

Lincoln a 'Yes' Senate Democrats will be able to begin debate on an $849 billion health care reform bill now that Sen. Blanche Lincoln has committed to voting to move the...

In his weekly radio and YouTube address, President Obama this week makes the case for his recent trip to Asia, saying one of the main reasons for going was helping the U.S....

Call it what you like -- it deserves a complete investigation. (afp) Any reporter worth their salt knows that when government decides to investigate itself, exonerations tend...

Where is your stimulus money going? In Baker City, Ore., the Bureau of Land Management is putting $256,000 of it toward "rattlesnake stewardship." It's the latest...


Most Popular Headlines





To view this site, you need to have Flash Player 8.0 or later installed. Click here to get the latest Flash player.


 


 



 

Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

Right Wing Obsession with Discrediting FDR

Oct 30, 2008

The far right wing is obsessed with smearing FDR, one of America's greatest presidents who lead the country out of not just the Great Depression but through World War II as well. The rationale for the smear, of course, is the knee-jerk ideology that all government is bad and the New Deal in particular. Never mind that George W. Bush just nationalized Wall Street. P.S. -- You can find at least two economists who will "prove" any hair-brained idea on the planet.

 

roger o.

Oct 30, 2008

FDR was a terrible president and about time more economists say so. Just like my mom told me about growing up in the 1930,s with hearing about the WPA program and how people changed the meaning to mean WE PIDDLE AROUND. Ha dumb A__s back then who would not listen to economists like Mises but listened to clowns like Keynes.

 

Jay R. Baker

Oct 30, 2008

Your otherwise excellent editorial has an egregious error where you have misidentified Anna in the Bernanke quote where he refers to "Milton and [his wife] Anna". Milton Friedman's wife's name is Rose. Bernanke is referring to Anna Schwartz, Milton's co-author on their major work "A Monetary History of the United States 1867-1960".

 

Jay R. Baker

Oct 30, 2008

Your otherwise excellent editorial has an egregious error where you have misidentified Anna in the Bernanke quote where he refers to "Milton and [his wife] Anna". Milton Friedman's wife's name is Rose. Bernanke is referring to Anna Schwartz, Milton's co-author on their major work "A Monetary History of the United States 1867-1960".

 

Nov 13, 2009



Anybody knows the numbers replica handbags
replica bagsofin CA, I need to call them and get my bag repaired.

 


Post a comment


Email:
(This will not be displayed or shared. Privacy Policy)

Display Name:

Comment:




Sports

Suspended NASCAR Sprint Cup driver Jeremy Mayfield chats with attendees during a public auction Friday, Nov. 20, 2009, at his Catawba, N.C. property. As NASCAR prepares to crown a champion in its fina...

Long way from the track, suspended Mayfield holds large auction to help pay for court fight

Jeremy Mayfield sat in the back of his large barn Friday morning about 800 miles from where NASCAR's season-ending weekend was kicking off. Several hundred people surrounded him, listening intently as a fast-speaking auctioneer sold dozens of items. Full story

Economy

Venezuela seeks to annul pharmaceutical patents for antibiotic produced by Bayer HealthCare

Venezuela's trade minister says the government plans to annul the pharmaceutical patents for an antibiotic produced by Bayer HealthCare. Full story

Entertainment

Pedro Almodovar discusses his childhood, his influences and what he won't put on film

Sex. Drugs. Prostitution. Pedophilia. Rape. Pedro Almodovar has been able to translate some of the most delicate subjects to the big screen with grace and humor. Full story