Posted on 06/09/2009 10:09:53 AM PDT by bs9021
New Deal Nostalgia Deconstructed
by: Alana Goodman, June 09, 2009
With the U.S. unemployment rate hitting a 25-year record high of 9.4 percent in May, economists have expressed pessimism about the future of the economy, but were quick to draw distinctions between the current recession and the Great Depression.
Speaking at the Cato Institutes Lessons from the New Deal and Great Depression seminar, Economics Professor Harold Cole of the University of Pennsylvania told the audience, You want to be careful about comparing the current [recession] with the Great Depression The Great Depression was much worse.
Cole explained that during the Great Depression both unemployment and productivity fell drastically, while this recession has not shown a dramatic decrease in productivity.
East Carolina University Professor Randall Parker said that he believes unemployment rates will eventually level off, but at a much higher percentage than the United States has been accustomed to in the past. Seven and a half is the new four and a half, said Parker, referring to the four and a half percent unemployment rates common in the late 1990s and early 2000s.
The panelists discussed the practicality of implementing economic policies reminiscent of the New Deal, in which the government enforced many anti-Capitalist measures with the hope of revitalizing the economy during the Great Depression.
While the speakers praised certain New Deal policies, like the federal relief program and road construction, they were also wary.
The story of the 30s is the story of a recovery that chose to stay away, said journalist Amity Shlaes, author of The Forgotten Man: A New History of the Great Depression, implying that government regulations may have slowed the economys revival.
To love the New Deal too much is a form of nostalgic self-indulgence
To overdo it is too risky for the United States, Shlaes added....
(Excerpt) Read more at campusreportonline.net ...

Actually the unemployment rate is closer to 20% (I think I read it was around 18% or so), in terms of the methodology used to measure it in President Reagan’s term in office.
We’re approaching the numbers for the high point of the Great Depression, where they hit about 25% unemployment in the 30s...
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