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False Dawn: The New Deal and the Promise of Recovery, 1933–1947: Markets and Governments in Economic History

Autor George Selgin
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 23 apr 2025
A definitive history of the United States’ recovery from the Great Depression—and the New Deal's true part in it.
FDR’s New Deal has long enjoyed a special place in American history and policy—both because it redefined the government’s fundamental responsibilities and because Roosevelt’s “bold experimentation” represented a type of policymaking many would like to see repeated.
But “the thing about bold experiments,” economist George Selgin reminds us, “is that they often fail.” In False Dawn Selgin draws on both contemporary sources and numerous studies by economic historians to show that, although steps taken during the Roosevelt administration’s first days raised hopes of a speedy recovery from the Great Depression, instead of fulfilling those hopes, subsequent New Deal policies proved so counterproductive that over seventeen percent of American workers—more than the peak unemployment rate during the COVID-19 crisis—were still either unemployed or on work relief six years later.
By distinguishing the New Deal’s successes from its failures, and explaining how the U.S. finally managed to lay the specter of mass unemployment to rest, Selgin draws salient lessons for dealing with future recessions.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780226832937
ISBN-10: 0226832937
Pagini: 384
Ilustrații: 4 halftones, 12 line drawings, 2 tables
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:First Edition
Editura: University of Chicago Press
Colecția University of Chicago Press
Seria Markets and Governments in Economic History


Notă biografică

George Selgin is professor emeritus of economics at the University of Georgia and a senior fellow and director emeritus of the Cato Institute’s Center for Monetary and Financial Alternatives. His writings have appeared in the Economic Journal, Financial Times, and the Wall Street Journal. His most recent book is The Menace of Fiscal QE.

Cuprins

List of Illustrations
Preface

Part I: Groundwork
1. The Record
2. Inventing the New Deal
3. The Banking Crisis
4. The Bank Holiday
5. Deposit Insurance
6. The RFC, Part 1
7. FDR and Gold

Part II: The New Deal
8. The AAA
9. The NRA
10. The NRA, Coda: The Brookings Report
11. A New Deal for Housing
12. The RFC, Part 2
13. Fiscal Stimulus?
14. FDR’s Fed
15. The Recovery So Far
16. The Roosevelt Recession
17. The Keynesian Myth
18. The Keynesian Myth, Continued
19. Fear Itself
20. Fear Itself, Continued

Part III: After the New Deal
21. War, and Peace
22. The Phantom Depression
23. The Fate of Rosie the Riveter
24. Happy Days
25. Postwar Monetary Policy
26. The Great Rapprochement
Notes
References
Index

Recenzii

False Dawn is perhaps one of the best books ever written about the Great Depression. It is thoroughly informed by academic literature, comprehensive in its coverage, balanced in its treatment, and a lively and engaging read. A great achievement.”

"Norman Thomas, six times presidential candidate of the American Socialist Party, and for decades the second most popular speaker in America behind whoever was president, used to complain that the Democrats and FDR had stolen the Socialist Party Platform of 1928. Thomas was right. Read Selgin’s new book and learn why that was a false dawn for the US economy."

False Dawn is an extraordinary achievement. Economists, historians, and others have been researching the New Deal's recovery programs and policies since the 1930s, but no one has ever done so as comprehensively and astutely as Selgin. False Dawn will be required reading for all who seek to understand how the New Deal affected the course of the Great Depression.”

“The New Deal is the proverbial elephant grasped by blind men. No one is quite sure what it is. The NRA, the AAA, the RFC? Something else, something more? And did it all add up to recovery or malaise? Selgin has done a great service in writing this comprehensive, engaging, and fair-minded appraisal—one that is destined to become a standard reference.”