From new era to New Deal : Herbert Hoover, the economists, and American economic policy, 1921-1933

Bibliographic Information

From new era to New Deal : Herbert Hoover, the economists, and American economic policy, 1921-1933

William J. Barber

(Historical perspectives on modern economics)

Cambridge University Press, c1985

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Note

Bibliography: p. 231-232

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In popular imagery, Herbert Hoover is often stereotyped as a 'do-nothing' president who offered only nineteenth-century slogans for the greatest economic catastrophe in twentieth-century American history. Nothing could be further from the truth. This study examines the properties of an innovative approach to economic growth and stability formulated by Hoover and his associates during his years as secretary of commerce (1921-9) and inspects his deployment of this strategy from the White House following the Great Crash in the autumn of 1929. Attention is then focused on Hoover's attempts to reformulate his macro-economic programme as the depression deepened in late 1931 and 1932. Archival materials provide arresting insights into Hoover's aspirations for a new institution - the Reconstruction Finance Corporations - as a vehicle for stimulating investment through a novel form of 'off-budget' financing. To complement the discussion of Hoover's theories of economic policy in their various manifestations, the views of contemporary economists on problems of the day are surveyed.

Table of Contents

  • Preface
  • Prologue
  • 1. The ingredients of a model of a new economics
  • 2. Challenges to the new economics of the 1920s
  • 3. The new economics at center stage in 1929
  • 4. Activating the stabilization model in late 1929 and 1930
  • 5. Preliminary readings of the results of the stabilization strategy
  • 6. The unraveling of the first official model in 1931
  • 7. Shifting course in late 1931 and early 1932
  • 8. Renewing the offensive in February and March
  • 9. The economists and their views on policy for 1932
  • 10. Official model II as shaped in May 1932 and the aftermath
  • Epilogue
  • Notes
  • Selected bibliography, Index.

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