
Great Depression Online
Long Beach, CA
October 29, 2010
Inside This Issue You Will Discover…
*** Ghost of Keynes Past
*** The Roaring Twenties
*** Depression Within a Depression
*** And More
[Editor’s note: Today’s guest essay is brought to you
courtesy of regular Casey Report contributor James Quinn. Mr.
Quinn is head of strategic planning for one of the world’s most
prestigious business schools and the host of TheBurningPlatform.com
blog. In this article, he is presenting historical indicators that
may tell us what’s in store for the U.S. economy. Enjoy!
M.N. Gordon]
---
Depression Within a Depression
By James Quinn, Contributor,
The Casey Report
In recent months, worshippers at the altar of Keynes have
been hyperventilating over the possibility Congress will run a
deficit of “only” $1.5 trillion in 2010. They have issued dire
proclamations about a replay of the 1937-1938 Depression within the
Great Depression. White House favorite and #1 Keynesian on the
planet, Paul Krugman, declared that not borrowing an additional $100
billion to hand out to the unemployed for another 99 weeks would
surely plunge the country into recession again:
“Suddenly, creating jobs is out, inflicting pain is in.
Condemning deficits and refusing to help a still-struggling economy
has become the new fashion everywhere, including the United States,
where 52 senators voted against extending aid to the unemployed
despite the highest rate of long-term joblessness since the 1930s.
Many economists, myself included, regard this turn to austerity as
a huge mistake. It raises memories of 1937, when F.D.R.’s premature
attempt to balance the budget helped plunge a recovering economy
back into severe recession.” – Paul Krugman in NYT
So did Roosevelt’s attempt to balance the budget in 1937
cause the second major downturn in 1938? I’m a trusting soul, but I
prefer to verify what is being peddled to me by any economist,
especially Paul Krugman.
Ghost of Keynes Past
Today’s Keynesian economists have convinced boobus
Americanus that the Great Depression was caused by the Federal
Reserve being too tight with monetary policy and the Hoover
administration not providing enough fiscal stimulus. Ben Bernanke
and Barack Obama used this line of reasoning to ram through an $850
billion pork-laden stimulus package, as well as the purchase of $1.2
trillion of toxic mortgages by the Federal Reserve.
The only trouble is that this storyline is a complete sham.
The fact that colossal stimulus spending, zero interest
rates, the purchase of over a trillion in toxic assets by the Fed,
and the loosest monetary policy in history have done absolutely
nothing to revitalize the economy, has proven that Keynesian
policies have been a wretched failure. This is not a surprise to
Austrian school economists.
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Keynesian policies failed during the Great Depression, and
they are failing today. An economic catastrophe caused by loose
monetary policies, crushing levels of debt, and appalling lending
practices cannot be solved by looser monetary policies, issuance of
twice as much debt, and government commanding banks (or, in the case
of Fannie and Freddie, “commandeering”) to make more bad
loans.
Ludwig von Mises described what happened in the 1920s and
1930s. His explanation accurately illustrates the situation in
America today.
“There is no means of avoiding the final collapse of a boom
brought on by credit and fiat monetary expansion. The only question
is whether the crisis should come sooner in the form of a recession
or later as a final and total catastrophe of depression as the
currency systems crumble.”
The Roaring Twenties
They don’t call the 1920s roaring because money wasn’t
flowing freely and consumers were practicing frugality. The newly
created Federal Reserve expanded credit by setting below-market
interest rates and low reserve requirements that favored the big
Wall Street banks. The Federal Reserve increased the money supply
by 60% during the period following the recession of 1921. By the
latter part of the decade, "buying on margin" entered the American
vocabulary as more and more Americans overextended themselves to
speculate on the soaring stock market.
The 1920s marked the beginning of mass production and the
emergence of consumerism in America, with automobiles a prominent
symbol of the latter. In 1919, there were just 6.7 million cars on
American roads. By 1929, the number had grown to more than 27
million cars, or nearly one car for every household. During this
period banks offered the country’s first home mortgages and
manufacturers of everything – from cars to irons – allowed consumers
to pay “on time.” Installment credit soared during the 1920s. About
60% of all furniture and 75% of all radios were purchased on
installment plans. Thrift and saving were replaced in the new
consumer society by spending and borrowing.
Encouraging the spending, the three Republican
administrations of the 1920s practiced laissez-faire economics,
starting by cutting top tax rates from 77% to 25% by 1925.
Non-intervention into business and banking became government policy.
These policies led to overconfidence on the part of investors and a
classic credit-induced speculative boom. Gambling in the markets by
the wealthy increased. While the rich got richer, millions of
Americans lived below the household poverty line of $2,000 per year.
The days of wine and roses came to an abrupt end in October 1929,
with the Great Stock Market Crash.
Between 1929 and 1932, the market fell 89% from its high.
The Keynesian storyline is that Herbert Hoover’s administration did
nothing to try and revive the economy. It took Franklin Delano
Roosevelt and his New Deal Keynesian policies to save the country.
It’s a nice story, but completely false. Between 1929 and 1933,
when Roosevelt came to power, the Hoover administration increased
real per-capita federal expenditures by 88%, not exactly austere.
Excessive Consumer Spending
When examining the BEA chart of GDP from 1929 to 1939, some
fascinating similarities with today’s economy leap out. In 1929,
consumer expenditures accounted for 72.3% of GDP, confirming that
the much-commented-upon American consumerism is not a modern
development. In fact, consumer spending peaked at 81% of GDP in
1932 and remained above 70% during the entire depression.
By 1950 consumer expenditures had subsided to 64% of GDP.
In 1960, they had fallen to 63% and edged up to 64% by 1970, where
they remained until 1980. By 1990 they had ticked up to 66% and by
2000 had reached 68%. The modern-day climax appeared to many to
have been reached in 2007 at 70% of GDP. But in a replay of the New
Deal playbook, where much of the consumerism was funded by make-work
projects and federal transfer payments, the federal government has
thrown billions of dollars at consumers to buy houses, cars, and
appliances. Consumer expenditures as a percentage of GDP actually
rose to 71% in 2009. It should be readily apparent that until
consumer expenditures are narrowed to a level that leads to a
sustainable balanced economy, the current depression will continue
indefinitely.
The Depression Within the Depression
The Great Depression lasted from 1929 until 1940. What is
not well known is that GDP was at the same level in 1936 as it had
been in 1929. In no small part because GDP soared by 37% between
1933 and 1936. The unemployment rate in 1929 was 5%. In 1936, even
after GDP had recovered to pre-depression levels, the unemployment
rate was still 15%. It spiked back to 18% in 1938 and stayed above
15% until World War II. Tellingly, in 1936, private domestic
investment was 21% below the level of 1929.
By contrast, government expenditures surged by 46% between
1929 and 1936. With the government creating agencies and hiring
people into make-work projects, private industry was crowded out.
The extensive governmental economic planning and intervention that
began during the Hoover administration was expanded significantly
under Roosevelt. The bolstering of wage rates and prices, expansion
of credit, propping up of weak firms, and increased government
spending on public works prolonged the Great Depression.
The evidence strongly contradicts the notion promoted by
Krugman and other Keynesian worshippers that the supposed 1937-38
Depression within the Great Depression was caused by Roosevelt
becoming a believer in austerity. In fact, GDP only dropped by 3.5%
in 1938 and rebounded by 8.1% in 1939. What actually collapsed in
1938 was private investment, which fell 34%. By contrast,
government spending declined by only 4.5% in 1938, confirming that
Roosevelt did not slash spending. To the extent that he eased up on
the accelerator, it was by cutting back on jobs programs like those
provided by the Works Progress Administration and the Public Works
Administration.
The reason private investment collapsed in 1938 was
Roosevelt’s anti-business crusade. He denounced big business as the
cause of the depression. In March 1938, FDR appointed Yale
University law professor Thurman Arnold to head the antitrust
division of the Justice Department. Arnold soon hired some 300
lawyers to file antitrust lawsuits against businesses. Arnold
launched cases against entire industries, with lawsuits against the
milk, oil, tobacco, shoe machinery, tires, fertilizer, railroad,
pharmaceuticals, school supplies, billboards, fire insurance,
liquor, typewriter, and movie industries.
The Greater Depression and Excessive Debt
Some Conclusions
The mainstream media’s popular narrative about the causes
and cure for the Great Depression invariably start with the
storyline that the stock market crash caused the Great Depression.
Herbert Hoover purportedly refused to spend government money in an
effort to reinvigorate the economy. Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s New
Deal government spending programs allegedly saved America.
This storyline is a big lie.
The Great Depression was caused by Federal Reserve
expansion of the money supply in the 1920s that led to an
unsustainable credit-driven boom. When the Federal Reserve
belatedly tightened in 1928, it was too late to avoid financial
collapse. According to Murray Rothbard, in his book America’s Great
Depression, the artificial interference in the economy was a
disaster prior to the depression, and government efforts to prop up
the economy after the crash of 1929 only made things worse.
Government intervention delayed the market’s adjustment and made
the road to complete recovery more difficult.
The parallels with today are uncanny. Alan Greenspan
expanded the money supply after the dot-com bust, dropped interest
rates to 1%, encouraged a credit-driven boom, and created a gigantic
housing bubble. By the time the Fed realized they had created a
bubble, it was too late. The government response to the 2008
financial collapse has been to expand the money supply, reduce
interest rates to 0%, borrow and spend $850 billion on useless
make-work pork projects, encourage spending by consumers on cars and
appliances, and artificially prop up housing through tax credits and
anti-foreclosure programs. The National Debt has been driven higher
by $2.7 trillion in the last 18 months.
The government has sustained insolvent Wall Street banks
with $700 billion of taxpayer funds and continues to waste taxpayer
money on dreadfully run companies like Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac,
General Motors, and Chrysler. The government is prolonging the
agony by not allowing the real economy to bottom and begin a sound
recovery based on savings, investment, and sustainable fiscal
policies. President Obama continues to scorn business by creating
more burdensome healthcare, financial, and energy regulations.
Today’s politicians and monetary authorities have learned
the wrong lessons from the Great Depression. The result will be a
second, Greater Depression and more pain for the middle class. The
investment implications of government stimulus programs are further
debasement of the currency and ultimately inflation and surging
interest rates. Owning precious metals and mining stocks, and
shorting U.S. Treasuries will pay off over the next few years.
Sincerely,
James Quinn
Contributor, The Casey Report
P.S. Regular Casey Report contributor James Quinn is the head of strategic planning for one of the world's most prestigious business schools and the host of TheBurningPlatform.com blog. Gleaning emerging big-picture trends by putting all the puzzle pieces together is the specialty of The Casey Report. Following the theory that only a prepared and well-educated investor is a successful investor, the team of editors analyze current and historical data – and then recommend the profit opportunities that make the trend your friend. Read more here.
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