Title: Economic Theory in the Early 20th Century
1Economic Theory in the Early 20th Century
- Struggling to Explain Economic Problems Part 1
2New Wave Utilitarianism
- As the 19th century ended, a movement of
economists -- headed by John Bates Clark, Leon
Walras and Carl Menger -- resurrected the
utilitarian principle that man always seeks
pleasure and avoids pain - They developed sophisticated theories of marginal
utility - And asserted that price has the power to clear
virtually all markets
Leon Walras
John Bates Clark
Carl Menger
3Economics in Defense of the Status Quo
THE LAST THING THE INDUSTRIAL AND FINANCIAL
GIANTS WANTED WAS COMPETITION, PARTICULARLY FROM
EXTERNAL COMPETITORS
- Mercantilist notions, universally discarded
though they are by the well-informed, affect the
policy of nations, not only by strengthening the
movement toward protection, but in other ways
also. - Complex political and social questions present
themselves, quite beyond the scope of a book on
economics. - Frank Taussig, Principles of Economics, 1911
Frank Taussig
4Economics in Defense of the Status Quo(continued)
AND THE DEFENSE OF CORPORATE INTERESTS OVER THE
COMMON GOOD
Herbert J. Davenport
- Economists of all people dread the stigma of
radicalism. Far better to elucidate and emphasize
the excellent aspects of things as they are
than to question the economic harmonies, or to
doubt the validity and the beneficence of natural
law, or to bring in question the deft guiding of
the divine hand. - Herbert J. Davenport, The Economics of
Enterprise, 1925
5Economics in Defense of the Status Quo(continued)
ONLY A FEW DARED TO DISSENT
- Ricardos distinction of unearned rent
disappears because all future incomes, no
matter how monopolistic, discriminatory, or
unfair, are looked upon as future rents, to be
paid for the use of any and all kinds of
property, so that capital become the present
discounted value of those future rents. - John R. Commons, Institutional Economics, Vol,II,
1934
John R. Commons, who taught economics for 30
years at the University of Wisconsin
6Economics in Defense of the Status Quo(continued)
AND, ALSO, ONE RATHER INTERESTING VOICE COMING
FROM THE POLITICAL WILDERNESS
- It is quite true that land monopoly is not the
only monopoly which exists, but it is by far the
greatest of monopolies -- it is a perpetual
monopoly, and it is the mother of all other forms
of monopoly. It is quite true that unearned
increments in land are not the only form of
unearned or undeserved profit which individuals
are able to secure but it is the principal form
of unearned increment which is derived from
processes which are not merely not beneficial,
but which are positively detrimental to the
general public.
Winston L.S. Churchill
7Economics in Defense of the Status
Quo(continued)
MORE FROM CHURCHILL ...
- Land, which is a necessity of human existence,
which is the original source of all wealth, which
is strictly limited in extent, which is fixed in
geographical position -- land, I say, differs
from all other forms of property in these primary
and fundamental conditions. - Winston S. Churchill, 1909
8Economics in Defense of the Status Quo(continued)
ECONOMISTS FOCUSED ON MARKET FORCES BUT BEGINNING
TO BE EMPLOYED BY GOVERNMENT ALSO HAD TO RESPOND
TO CONTROVERSIAL CHALLENGES TO PUBLIC POLICY
- Should a nation restrict immigration, or even the
out-migration of population? - Do tariffs and quotas actually stimulate the
development of new domestic industries? - How should government raise its revenue?
- How should infrastructure be paid for?
- Are industrial and other monopolies harmful to an
economy?
9Economics in Defense of the Status Quo(continued)
ONE MAJOR POLITICAL FIGURE IN THE UNITED STATES
WEIGHED IN ON THE QUESTION OF IMMIGRATION
- We cannot have too much immigration of the right
sort and we should have none whatever of the
wrong sort. It is our right and duty to consider
his moral and social quality. His standard of
living should be such that he will not, by
pressure of competition, lower the standard of
living of our own wage-workers for it must ever
be a prime object of our legislation to keep high
their standard of living. - Theodore Roosevelt, Annual Message to the
Congress,1905
10Economics in Defense of THE Status Quo(continued)
PROGRESSIVE JOURNALISTS CALLED FOR NEW LAWS TO
TAME THE MONOPOLISTS
- What big and little businesses all had in
common was not size but the need of privileges
franchises and special legislation, which
required legislative corruption protective
tariffs, interpretations of laws in their special
interest or leniency or protection in the
enforcement of laws, calling for pulls with
judges, prosecutors, and the police. - Lincoln Steffens, Autobiography
11Recovering from Global Warfare
THE COST OF WAR IS RARELY PAID FOR BY TAXATION OF
THOSE WITH THE MOST TO GAIN OR LOSE
- In 1918, Britains national debt exceeded 7
billion pounds - The war did raise nominal wages for workers, in
part to meet rising costs of everything - The need for industrial calm strengthened the
negotiating ability of the trades unions - Rural agriculture also expanded to replace the
loss of imports, driving up agricultural land
prices so that farmers took on higher levels of
debt (exposing them to the risk of losing their
farms should commodity prices fall
12Recovering from Global Warfare(continued)
FRANCE ENDED THE FIRST WORLD WAR IN MORE
DESPERATE CIRCUMSTNACES THAN BRITAIN
- The wealthy in France had moved over half of the
nations financial reserves into overseas
investments - Frances national debt had skyrocketed
13Recovering from Global Warfare(continued)
AND, IN RUSSIA, THE STAGE WAS SET FOR A BOLSHEVIK
TAKEOVER
- Russias Minister of the Interior, Peter
Stolypin, hoped to stem peasant unrest by
creating a class of market-oriented smallholding
landowners. Failing this, he predicted the
worst - The legislative institutions and the
intellectual opposition parties, lacking real
authority in the eyes of the people, will be
powerless to stem the popular tide aroused by
themselves, and Russia will be flung into
hopeless anarchy, the issue of which cannot be
foreseen.
Peter Stolypin
14Recovering from Global Warfare(continued)
THE END TO CZARISM FOR THE RUSSIAN PEOPLE
- After riots occurred in Petrograd, the autocracy
fell - Alexander Kerensky became head of a new
government as chaos spread throughout Russia - Under Leon Trotskys leadership, the Bolsheviks
emerged as the dominant revolutionary group - In November Lenin arrived in Petrograd to head a
new government
15Recovering from Global Warfare(continued)
LENIN CLEARLY UNDERSTOOD THE NEAR IMPOSSIBILITY
OF BRINGING THE MARXIST VISION OF SOCIALISM TO
RUSSIA
- Only by the hard and long path of
self-discipline would it be possible to overcome
the disintegration that the war had caused in
capitalist society, that only by extraordinarily
hard, long, and persistent effort could we cope
with this disintegration and defeat those
elements aggravating it, elements which regarded
the revolution as a means of discarding old
fetters and getting as much out of it for
themselves as they possibly could. ...
16Recovering from Global Warfare(continued)
AND, THIS MEANT A LONG PERIOD OF HARDSHIP,
DEPRIVATION AND RELENTLESS ELIMINATION OF ANY
RESISTANCE TO THE NEW REGIME OF STATE-SOCIALISM
- The emergence of a large number of such
elements was inevitable in a small-peasant
country at a time of incredible economic chaos,
and the fight against these elements that is
ahead of us will be a hundred times more
difficult it will be a fight which promises no
spectacular opportunities.
17Wilsonian Pragmatism
WOODROW WILSON DETERMINED TO USE THE POWERS OF
GOVERNMENT TO CREATE A MORE LEVEL PLAYING FIELD
- Tariff reductions were implemented early in 1913
- The 16th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was
ratified, allowing a 1 tax on individual incomes
above 3,000, an additional 1-6 tax on incomes
above 20,000 and up - The Clayton Antitrust Act was passed late in 1914
18Wilsonian Pragmatism(continued)
WILSON APPOINTED DAVID HOUSTON, PRESIDENT OF
WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY IN ST. LOUIS, TO HIS
CABINET. HOUSTON HELD AN M.A. IN POLITICIAL
SCIENCE FROM HARVARD UNIVERSITY
- Houston became Secretary of Agriculture, then
Secretary of the Treasury in 1920 - His tenure in the cabinet occurred during years
of great challenges and controversies
19Wilsonian Pragmatism(continued)
WILSON REALIZED HIS SUCCESS DEPENDED ON
CONSOLIDATION OF HIS POWER WITHIN THE RANKS OF
THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY. TO JOSEPHUS DANIELS
(SECRETARY OF THE NAVY), HE SAID
- I would rather trust a machine Senator when he
is committed to your program than a talking
Liberal who can never quite go along with others
because of his admiration of his own patented
plan of reform.
20Wilson Challenged
AS THE U.S. EMBARKED ON A MILITARY BUILD-UP IN
1916, PROGRESSIVES AND ISOLATIONISTS JOINED
FORCES IN PROTEST OVER HOW THE COSTS WOULD BE
PAID FOR
- The group the Association for an Equitable
Federal Income Tax -- included John Dewey and
Frederic C. Howe - They demanded that the burden be carried by those
who stood to gain most form wartime expenditures - A bill to this effect was passed by the Congress
John Dewey
END