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FDR The Man, the Leader, the Legacy, Part 10
by Ralph Raico, July 2000
When it comes to
the question of money, mankind made its preference abundantly clear long
ago. For millennia it has looked to the precious metals above all,
gold as the ideal medium of exchange. So central has this standard
been to any thinking about value that concepts like the Golden Age, the
Golden Mean, and the Golden Rule were woven into the cultural fabric of
civilized peoples. In modern history, gold was esteemed by the productive
classes of society, the artisans and independent merchants and business-
people, who trusted it as a shield against the inflationist machinations of
state-connected financiers. As the economist Benjamin M. Anderson wrote
in Economics and the Public Interest:
Gold needs no endorsement. It can be tested with scales and with acids. No
act of faith is called for when gold is used in payments, and no compulsion
is required. Gold is an unimaginative taskmaster. It demands that men and
governments and central banks be honest. It demands that they keep their
promises on demand or at maturity. Gold was old-fashioned and it was
honest.
Americas and the
Western worlds vast economic growth and rising
prosperity in the late 19th and early 20th centuries were undergirded by
the international gold standard. By it, each of the national currencies, the
dollar, the pound, the franc, and so on, was defined as a specific
quantity of gold.
To be sure, there had been occasional
lapses. In 1862, in order to finance its war against Southern independence
through inflation, the Lincoln administration went off the gold standard.
The period of the greenbacks, of unbacked paper money,
lasted until 1879, with the value of the dollar in constant turmoil.
But despite the clamor of inflationist
lobbies, clear-sighted leaders saw to it that the greenbacks experience
was not repeated. In 1895, when U.S. gold stocks reached a dangerously
low point, Grover Cleveland, the last decent American president,
nonetheless defended the dollar. The Treasury continued to pay out gold on
demand, and the crisis was weathered. Even during World War I, the United
States did not go off the gold standard, when all the other major
belligerents abandoned it, again, in order to finance the war through
inflation.
Gold an obstacle in FDRs
path
However, even before
Roosevelts inauguration, rumors that he intended to forsake the
traditional standard intensified the run on the banks and the hoarding of
gold. Knowledgeable men rushed to golds defense. In January 1933,
a letter was sent to the president-elect, urging him not only to lower
tariff barriers to revive international trade, but to maintain the gold
standard unflinchingly. The letter was signed by a number
of prominent traditional economists, headed by the
American Austrian, Frank A. Fetter, of Princeton.
But the new president understood that
the old standard was a major stumbling block to his plans. On April 5,
1933, Roosevelt issued a proclamation declaring the possession of gold
coins, bullion, or certificates unlawful and subject to criminal penalties.
It was the first step in dismantling the monetary system that had served
the nation so well. A few reactionaries protested. Sen.
Carter Glass (D-Va.) declared, simply: Its a dishonor,
sir. He was right. The 1932 Democratic Party platform had pledged
to defend the gold standard, as had Roosevelt himself in the campaign.
Federal Reserve notes and U.S. government bonds stated on their face that
they were redeemable in gold. None of these solemn promises meant
anything to Franklin.
In May, the Thomas Amendment to the
Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA) was passed, giving the president the
authority to increase the money supply by $3 billion in unbacked bills and
to reduce the value of the gold dollar by up to half. In June, a supine
Congress delivered to FDR the joint resolution he had requested,
forbidding private debtors to fulfill their obligations in gold and relieving
the government of its own sworn obligations. One of the last holdouts was
another reactionary, Thomas P. Gore, Democrat of Oklahoma,
who, though blind, was one of the most learned men in the U.S. Senate.
When FDR asked him what he thought of the new policy, Gore replied:
Well, thats just plain stealing, isnt it, Mr.
President.
Roosevelt never forgave Gore, who
committed the added sin, from the presidents standpoint, of being
a confirmed isolationist in foreign affairs. In 1936, FDR
made sure that Gore was defeated in the Democratic primary. But many of
the old gentlemans ideas were carried on, late into the 20th
century, by his grandson, Gore Vidal, caustic critic of the
banksters and American global imperialism.
Finally, in January 1934, came the
Gold Reserve Act. All the gold held by the Federal Reserve banks was
seized by the U.S. Treasury. In return, the banks received something called
gold certificates. These could not be exchanged for actual
gold, but functioned merely as receipts for the gold stolen. By executive
decree, Roosevelt reduced the value of the gold dollar for purposes
of foreign exchange transactions from $20 an ounce to $35, a
devaluation of 40 percent.
The upshot of FDRs gold
confiscation was described by Murray Rothbard, in For a New
Liberty:
[Before] 1933, there was an important shackle upon the Feds
ability to inflate and expand the money supply: Federal Reserve Notes
themselves were payable in the equivalent weight of gold. ...The
government cannot create new gold at will. But Federal Reserve Notes can
be issued at will, at virtually zero cost in resources. In 1933, the United
States government removed the gold restraint on its inflationary potential
by shifting to fiat money: to making the paper dollar itself the standard of
money, with government the monopoly supplier of dollars.
The age of unending inflation,
sometimes slow, sometimes faster, had arrived. Still, gold continued to be
used to settle international accounts, and the United States guaranteed
that dollars could be exchanged for gold by foreign governments and
central banks. This last remaining pledge was finally broken in 1971. In
response to the deteriorating position of the U.S. dollar because of
galloping domestic inflation, Richard Nixon another arch-deceiver,
though not, of course, in Roosevelts class closed
the gold window, making the dollar irredeemable in gold under any
and all circumstances.
The first New Deal
Meanwhile, the plans and programs
that constituted the first New Deal proliferated. Wide-
ranging acts were passed and agencies set up in FDRs first
Hundred Days, as they were called, after Napoleon
Bonapartes reconquest of France following his escape from Elba.
In May, the Agricultural Adjustment
Act became law. Among other provisions, it established acreage and
production controls, paying farmers not to grow or raise wheat,
corn, cotton, hogs, etc., and to plow under crops and destroy livestock. The
aim was explicitly to raise the prices of all farm commodities. The
preposterous economic theory behind this was that if
prices and wages were jacked up, that would increase purchasing
power, which was the way to lift the country out of the
Depression. In the two years of the AAAs existence, before the U.S.
Supreme Court declared it to be unconstitutional, it distributed some
$700 million to farmers to restrict production and destroy their crops, in
an attempt to make food (and textiles) dearer for consumers. And
that at a time when millions were going hungry.
In June, the most ambitious program
of the Hundred Days came into being. It was the National
Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA), setting up the National Recovery
Administration (NRA). Its aim was nothing less than total control of
American industry, again in order to raise prices and wages and hence
purchasing power.
For years, many big businessmen had
been looking for ways to restrict competition and cartelize their
industries with the help of government. High tariffs had been a major part
of their program. Their crowning achievement in this area was the Smoot-
Hawley Tariff Act of 1930, passed by a coalition of big business with
farmers groups and the labor unions, and signed into law by
President Hoover. The Act promulgated the highest tariff rates in
American history. Its impact on international trade, already reeling from
the Depression, was devastating.
The figure of Benito Mussolini, Italian
dictator and founder of fascism, also exercised a strange attraction. It is
nearly impossible now, more than half a century after his death, to realize
the effect Mussolini had on many of his contemporaries in the 1920s and
early 1930s. Today he is seen as part buffoon and part the sinister junior
partner of Adolf Hitler. But before he involved himself with the conquest
of Ethiopia and, more seriously, with Nazi Germany, Mussolini was widely
admired by many businessmen, intellectuals, and politicians (Churchill
was particularly fervent in his praises). By 1933, he had instituted the
Third Way between free enterprise and communism, a
system he called the Corporate State. He had replaced
cutthroat and destructive competition, he claimed, by cooperation and
organization. The whole Italian economy was divided into
corporations, for steel, textiles, chemicals, etc., each
corporation governed by a board representing capital, labor, and the
government, which was ultimately in charge. The boards planned,
regulated, and monitored every aspect of the industrys operation.
For his Corporate State idea, Mussolini was hailed as a visionary leader by
many who, for their various reasons, feared competitive capitalism.
Fascism comes to America
Under the NRA, the president had the
power to establish codes of fair competition for every
industry in the country. The codes soon came to cover 95 percent of the
industrial workers in the country. A retired Army general, Hugh Johnson,
was put in charge. The Blue Eagle, which became the symbol of the NRA,
displayed by every cooperating firm and organization, was
the brainstorm of Bernard Baruch, the head of the War Industries Board
during the First World War and a former business associate of
Johnsons. General Johnsons philosophy of administration is
illustrated by his heartfelt cry: May Almighty God have mercy on
anyone who attempts to trifle with that bird!
The NRA won the hearty support of big
business. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce stated:
A freedom of action which might have been justified in the relatively
simple life of the last century cannot be tolerated today. We have left the
period of extreme individualism.
But, after all, why wouldnt
established businesses enthuse over a plan that permitted them to curtail
production, fix prices, and suppress competition from
chiseling rivals, while wrapping themselves in the mantle
of superpatriotism? Union leaders quickly saw the potential benefits for
their own monopolistic aims. The promotion of collective bargaining,
minimum wages, and a 30-hour week were added to the program. Not
coincidentally, there was a great upsurge in unemployment in the South,
especially among blacks. One economist estimated that an additional
500,000 black workers were unemployed because of the minimum wage.
But hundreds of industry
codes, thousands of new bureaucrats, and a blizzard of
confusing and conflicting regulations could not prevent people from
engaging in free exchanges whenever they could evade the talons of
that bird. Within a year, a commission appointed by
Roosevelt to look into the matter blasted the NRA as an oppressive fraud.
In 1935, the U.S. Supreme Court declared the NIRA unconstitutional, as a
surrender of Congressional law-making powers to the president, and the
NRA ceased to exist. It was the most colossal of Roosevelts failed
attempts to cure the Depression. And still the New Deal rolled on.
Among Ralph Raicos recent publications are the introduction to the 50th-anniversary
edition of The Roosevelt Myth, by John T. Flynn, and essays on World War I and Winston Churchill in
the second, paperback edition of The Costs of War, edited by John V. Denson, both available from
Laissez Faire Books. He is also a contributor to The Failure
of Americas Foreign Wars, published by The Future of Freedom Foundation.
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