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Everything you've learned about the Great Depression and the New Deal is wrong
Now, the politically incorrect facts -- and the reasons Obama's "New New Deal" could lead to a second Great Depression even worse than the first
Special Hardcover Edition -- Not Available in Stores!!
The Politically Incorrect Guide to the Great Depression and the New Deal
by Robert Murphy
If you're a typical American, you learned that the 1920s were a
time of unregulated capitalism that led to the stock market
Crash of 1929 and the Great Depression of the 1930s. You learned
that Herbert Hoover was a laissez-faire ideologue who did
nothing to alleviate the crisis -- even as citizens starved and
were forced to live in "Hoovervilles." And you learned that the
interventionist policies and massive spending programs of
Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal gradually lifted us out of the
Depression, until World War II brought it to a definitive end.
(continued from above)
The only trouble with this official narrative -- taught in every
history text, and proclaimed as gospel by the media -- is that
every element of it is false. Worse, it is dangerous, because it
is being used to justify a "New New Deal" in response to today's
economic crisis that could lead to a second Great Depression
even deeper and longer than the first. Now, in The Politically
Incorrect Guide to the Great Depression and the New Deal,
economist Robert Murphy fact-checks the myths, shows why they're
wrong, and delves deep into history to set the record straight.
His "politically incorrect" conclusion? It was government, not
free markets, that caused the Great Depression -- and the New
Deal only made it worse.
The real "lessons of the Great Depression":
not what you've been taught
In The Politically Correct Guide to the Great Depression and the
New Deal, Robert Murphy reveals:
- The Crash of '29: not caused by capitalism, but by the
newly created Federal Reserve's easy money policy, which
fueled a speculative investment boom during the Roaring
Twenties that inevitably went bust (sound familiar?)
- The myth that, after the Crash, the Federal Reserve sat
idly back and allowed the economy to implode -- and how it
is continuing to drive misguided policies today
- The myth of the "laissez-faire" Herbert Hoover -- who
created the Great Depression precisely because he abandoned
the laissez-faire approach that all earlier presidents had
followed when faced with similar circumstances
- The "forgotten Depression" of 1921-1922: worse, initially,
than its 1930s successor -- yet it was basically over
within 18 months, because government did not intervene
- How many of the "revolutionary" policies of the New Deal
were in fact inaugurated under Hoover
- How, in the 1932 presidential race, Franklin Roosevelt
railed against Hoover's "reckless and extravagant" spending
- How the bank runs of the 1930s were caused by prior
government intervention in the banking system -- and how, in
creating the FDIC, all the government did was to put
taxpayers on the hook for potential liabilities that no
private insurer would ever dream of assuming
- The biggest myth of all: that the New Deal "got us out" of
the Great Depression -- when in fact the economy recuperated
far more slowly under FDR than it did in any other slump in
American history (until, perhaps, today's)
- How government efforts -- first under Hoover and then under
FDR -- to prop up wages despite falling prices led to a
full decade of double-digit unemployment
- How uncertainty caused by FDR's arbitrary, punitive and
ever-changing policies toward businessmen and investors
caused a "capital strike" resulting in net investment of
less than zero for much of the Depression
- The myth of "wartime prosperity": how the few ways World
War II helped America's economy were swamped by the ways in
which it was a huge burden
- How, like Herbert Hoover, George W. Bush made laissez-faire
economics the fall-guy for a stark economic downturn and
provided the rationale for liberal, statist policies that
could make for a prolonged depression.
- Is Barack Obama the new FDR? Why the answer could very well
be yes -- and why that could spell disaster for America
"Read this book and understand why massively
increasing government is not change we can
believe in." -- Congressman Ron Paul (R-TX)
"Today's central planners cower from the truth about the Great
Depression and the New Deal like Dracula before a crucifix.
Robert Murphy eviscerates the fantasy version of these episodes
that is used to justify destructive and idiotic policies today.
You almost feel sorry for the propagandists while reading this
book. Almost." -- Thomas E. Woods, Ph.D., author of the New York
Times bestseller Meltdown: A Free-Market Look at Why the Stock
Market Collapsed, the Economy Tanked, and Government Bailouts
Will Make Things Worse
"Provides defenders of liberty the intellectual arsenal they
need to counter the myth that capitalism caused, and government
cured the Great Depression, and therefore a 'New New Deal' will
solve our current economic problems. Building upon the
foundation laid out in his indispensable The Politically Incorrect
Guide to Capitalism, Murphy shows how the Great Depression was
caused by government interference in the market -- particularly the
Federal Reserve's inflationary policies. Murphy also details how
the tax-spend-regulate-inflate policies of both the Hoover and
Roosevelt administrations only prolonged and deepened the
Depression. Read this book and understand why massively
increasing government is not change we can believe in." --
Congressman Ron Paul (R-TX)
"A clear, compelling account of an era that even most economists
get wrong. Now that many people are clamoring for a rerun of the
New Deal, you owe it to yourself to find out what such a sequel
would entail. Murphy's book is the best place to begin your
quest." -- Robert Higgs, Senior Fellow in Political Economy, The
Independent Institute
"Thorough and impressive. . .Murphy employs sound economics and
key historical sources to show convincingly that the New Deal
retarded recovery. . .His book is well written and should be
required reading in all modern U. S. history courses and in
economic courses that explore the causes of wealth and poverty."
-- Burton W. Folsom, Jr., Professor of History, Hillsdale College
and author of New Deal or Raw Deal?: How FDR's Economic Legacy
Has Damaged America

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