Archive for: August, 2010

The Great Depression and Great Engineer ( Hoover )

Aug 20 2010 Published by under professional

(1929–1939)

”If some unprece­dented calamity should come upon this nation, I would be sac­ri­ficed to the unrea­son­ing dis­ap­point­ment of peo­ple who had expected too much.”(Herbert Hoover)

The Great Depres­sion started in Amer­ica in 1929 and lasted till 1939– the time of the begin­ning of World War II. It evoked a lot of debates, spec­u­la­tions and mis­un­der­stand­ings among politi­cians and econ­o­mists of all lev­els. It is com­mon to believe that Her­bert Hoover was a care­less pres­i­dent who allowed already crum­bling econ­omy of 1929 to go down into deep pit hole pulling along the entire nation. Major­ity of mid­dle class pop­u­la­tion, who are not well rounded in eco­nom­ics and pol­i­tics, judge Hoover upon the out­come and they do not seem to be unfair. Paul John­son, in his book ” A his­tory of the Amer­i­can peo­ple ”, rea­son­ably said that ”there is no logic or jus­tice in history-only chronology.”

Her­bert Hoover came to his pres­i­dency in 1929 in a very dif­fi­cult time in Amer­i­can his­tory. The Wall Street crash was sig­nif­i­cant evok­ing a four-week panic. Indexes were down to 224 from 452, GM (Gen­eral Motors) went down from GM 73 to 8; in deed a very deep plunge in a stock mar­ket. How­ever, ”the stock val­ues were right in rela­tions to earn­ings”. Con­sid­er­ing the pre­ced­ing events that took place in Amer­i­can econ­omy from 1920, with its self-adjusted reces­sions and arti­fi­cial infla­tion, the down­turn was inevitable and needed. Fed­eral Reserve Bank Sys­tem was cre­ated to main­tain pros­per­ity nation­ally and inter­na­tion­ally by delib­er­ately inflat­ing mon­e­tary sup­ply. ”Credit was expanded from 45.3 bil­lion on June 30, 1921 to $73 bil­lion in July 1929, a 61.8 per­cent expan­sion in eight years,” (John­son, Paul). This process was man­aged by two pow­er­ful fig­ures in the for­ma­tion of the US finan­cial pol­icy domes­ti­cally and inter­na­tion­ally: Mon­tage Nor­man– gov­er­nor of the bank of Eng­land and Ben­jamin Strong, gov­er­nor of the New York Fed­eral Reserve Bank. The prices steadily were going up cre­at­ing a demand-supply prob­lem and result­ing in reces­sions that suc­cess­fully self-adjusted.

Another set­back was the prob­lem with tar­iffs. Although Amer­ica had a very tol­er­ant econ­omy in 1920, mean­ing that the work­ers could demand wages and busi­ness­men could work out dif­fer­ent cor­po­rate polices, the high tar­iffs did not allow the healthy com­pe­ti­tion. Among those who ben­e­fited were domes­tic indus­tries and banks. The work­ing pop­u­la­tion, on the other hand, was denied the com­pet­i­tive prices pro­duced by cheap imports. Over­all, the repub­li­can lead­er­ship did not stand up for the eco­nomic free­dom and arti­fi­cial infla­tion along with low inter­est rates led to inevitable eco­nomic down­turn and Wall Street Crash in 1929.

Her­bert Hoover was not respon­si­ble for this vast eco­nomic plunge. ”The Great Depres­sion was caused by mon­e­tary mis­man­age­ment at the Fed­eral Reserve, as was thor­oughly detailed by Mil­ton Fried­man and Anna Schwartz in their bril­liant “A Mon­e­tary His­tory of the United States.”(Wall Street Journal).Contrary, Hoover gen­uinely wanted to help the suf­fo­cat­ing econ­omy of Amer­ica. Orphaned at the age of nine he was a self-made indi­vid­ual who worked his way through the school and Stan­ford Uni­ver­sity to obtain engi­neer­ing degree. He was lib­eral and never expressed any anti-Semitic remarks. His good will spread over the poor third world coun­tries that he wanted to aid. Many politi­cians, includ­ing Roo­sevelt, con­sid­ered him to be a great pres­i­den­tial can­di­date. ‘He is cer­tainly a won­der and I wish we could make him a pres­i­dent of the United States. There could not be a bet­ter one.” (Franklin Roosevelt)

Her­bert Hoover under­stood all the respon­si­bil­ity of being a pres­i­dent in such a hard time in Amer­i­can his­tory. ”The bat­tle to save our eco­nomic machine in motion in this emer­gency takes new forms and requires new tac­tics from time to time. We used such emer­gency pow­ers to win the war; we can use them to fight Depres­sion.” ( H.Hoover, May 1932) Nev­er­the­less, with all his can­did inten­tions did Hoover over­es­ti­mate his own pow­ers? Paul John­son, the author of ”A his­tory of the Amer­i­can Peo­ple” com­pares Hoover to a social engi­neer. The con­cept of social engi­neer­ing is the abil­ity to deter­mine the shape of the soci­ety by manip­u­lat­ing human beings with help of some pow­er­ful force, per­haps a pres­i­dent. The peo­ple, in such case, are com­pared to earth and con­crete, and the great out­comes to such engi­neer­ing won­ders as the Boul­der Canyon Dam. The inter­est­ing fact is that Lenin and Stalin were two lead­ers of social­is­tic regime who became fas­ci­nated by the con­cept of the orga­niz­ing power over nature. As a result, the switch­ing of vast rivers from Arc­tic to other out­lets proved to be a dis­as­ter along with their impos­ing total­i­tar­ian regime over the entire nation that even­tu­ally led to the well-known crash of the Soviet Union in 1990.

Her­bert Hoover was a dic­ta­tor in his own way. His inten­tions to be the first, the inven­tor, the pio­neer resulted in the San Fran­cisco Bay Bridge, the Los Ange­les Aque­duct and the Hoover Dam. ” More major works were started in the Hoover’s 4 years than in pre­ced­ing 30 years of Amer­i­can his­tory.” (John­son, Paul). H. Hoover took the approach of the great inven­tor in sav­ing Amer­i­can econ­omy as well. He wrote: ” No pres­i­dent before has ever believed there was a gov­ern­ment respon­si­bil­ity on such cases…there we had to pio­neer the field.” And he did what he con­sid­ered to be a new approach of the inter­ven­tion­ist gov­ern­ment: ”He resumed credit infla­tion, adding to the Fed­eral Reserve almost $300 mil­lion of credit in the last week of Octo­ber 1929 alone.” Instead of allow­ing wages nat­u­rally drop he decided to keep them high and even held sev­eral con­fer­ences tak­ing promises from the cor­po­rate world to main­tain the wages high and even to pay more when­ever pos­si­ble. This did not have a pos­i­tive impact on those who did not have any wages at all, con­sid­er­ing ris­ing unemployment.

Besides keep­ing wages high Hoover did not con­sider inter­est rates that were too low. He cer­tainly could allow the inter­est rates to go up, which would be the right eco­nom­i­cal deci­sion, but he ignored it. In addi­tion H. Hoover did not veto the Smoot-Hawley Act of 1930 about tar­iffs, which had a neg­a­tive impact nation­ally and inter­na­tion­ally. ”His poli­cies were far from per­fect, espe­cially on trade,” wrote Mil­ton Fried­man and Anna Schwartz in their “A Mon­e­tary His­tory of the United States.( Wall Street Journal)

With all eco­nom­i­cal dis­as­ter of the Great Depression–education suf­fered enor­mously. Almost 1,500 higher edu­ca­tion uni­ver­si­ties went bank­rupt. ”Uni­ver­sity enroll­ment fell, for the first time in Amer­i­can his­tory, by a quarter-million. ” Look­ing at the con­se­quences of the Great Depres­sion on edu­ca­tion John Stein­beck said, ”When peo­ple are broke the first thing they give up is books.”

Her­bert Hoover fore­shad­owed his future by say­ing: ”If some unprece­dented calamity should come upon this nation, I would be sac­ri­ficed to the unrea­son­ing dis­ap­point­ment of peo­ple who had expected too much.” The calamity was there, before the Hoover took over his pres­i­dency, and it turned into dis­as­ter dur­ing four years of him being a pres­i­dent of the United States. Was Her­bert Hoover ”sac­ri­ficed” to the ”unrea­son­ing dis­ap­point­ment ” of peo­ple with unrea­son­able expec­ta­tions? Were the expec­ta­tions of an Amer­i­can nation so unrea­son­able? The spec­u­la­tors are still not sure about the exact answer. Paul John­son rightly said in his book: ”There is no logic and jus­tice in history-only chronology.”

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Solitude

Aug 19 2010 Published by under creative, poem


Oh, closer to the Absolute,
In out­lines of moun­tains indigo sky is slowly melt­ing into
Shad­ows,
Lean­ing away from set­ting sun and over­cast­ing darken mead­ows,
The End and ulti­mate Begin­ning, the Sham­bala of Soul
Where Yin and Yang cre­ate a ver­i­ta­ble Mean­ing…..
Enchanted Mecca of the Moon, tran­quil­ity rein­car­na­tion,
where stars engrav­ing con­stel­la­tions
Cre­ate a crys­tal clear path for tired soul to find its rest..
There lived a Solitude…for years
She hid in creeks and slept in Shad­ows
With word­less stars on silent nights
With clover bed at moon­lit mead­ows
Alone…for many years..alone
Sur­rounded by peace­ful Bliss
No one to love…No one to miss…

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