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RUDIKE [14]
3 years ago
13

Explain Hoover's assessment of government interference as damaging to liberty and

History
1 answer:
Olegator [25]3 years ago
6 0

Answer:

<h2>Hoover’s early career</h2>

  1. Hoover, a very successful mining engineer, thought that the engineer’s focus on efficiency could enable government to play a larger and more constructive role in the economy.
  2. In <u>1917</u>, he became head of the wartime Food Administration, working to reduce American food consumption. Many Democrats, including FDR, saw him as a potential presidential candidate for their party in the <u>1920s.</u>
  3. <u>1920s. For most of the 1920s,</u> Hoover was Secretary of Commerce under Republican Presidents Harding and Coolidge.
  4. As Commerce Secretary during <u>the 1920-21</u> recession, Hoover convened conferences between government officials and business leaders as a way to use government to generate “cooperation” rather than individualistic competition.
  5. He particularly liked using the “cooperation” that was seen during wartime as an example to follow during economic crises. In contrast to Harding’s more genuine commitment to laissez-faire, Hoover began one <u>1921</u> conference with a call to “do something” rather than nothing.
  6. That conference ended with a call for more government planning to avoid future depressions, as well as using public works as a solution once they <u>started.2</u> Pulitzer-Prize winning historian David Kennedy summarized Hoover’s work in the <u>1920-21</u> recession this way.
  7. No previous administration had moved so purposefully and so creatively in the face of an economic downturn.
  8. Hoover had definitively made the point that government should not stand by idly when confronted with economic difficulty.
  9. <u>3</u> Harding, and later Coolidge, rejected most of Hoover’s ideas. This may well explain why the <u>1920-21 recession, as steep as it was, was fairly short, lasting 18 months</u>.
  • Interestingly, though, in his role as Commerce Secretary, Hoover created a new government program called <u>“Own Your Own Home,”</u> which was designed to increase the level of homeownership.
  • Hoover jawboned lenders and the construction. industry to devote more resources to homeownership, and he argued for new rules that would allow federally chartered banks to do more residential lending.
  • <u>In 1927,</u> Congress complied, and with this government stamp of approval and the resources made available by Federal Reserve expansionary policies through the decade, mortgage lending boomed.
  • Not surprisingly, this program became part of the disaster of the depression, as bank failures dried up sources of funds, preventing the frequent refinancing that was common at the time, and high unemployment rates made the government-encouraged mortgages unaffordable. The result was a large increase in foreclosures.

  1. Hoover did not stand idly by after the depression began. To fight the rapidly worsening depression, Hoover extended the size and scope of the federal government in six major areas: (1) federal spending, (2) agriculture, (3) wage policy, (4) immigration, (5) international trade, and (6) tax policy.
  2. Consider federal government spending. (See Fiscal Policy.) Federal spending in the <u>1929</u> budget that Hoover inherited was <u>$3.1 billion</u>.
  3. He increased spending to <u>$3.3 billion in 1930, $3.6</u> billion <u>in 1931, and $4.7 billion</u> and $4.6 billion in <u>1932 and 1933, respectively</u>, a <u>48</u>% increase over his four years.
  4. Because this was a period of deflation, the real increase in government spending was even larger: The real size of government spending in <u>1933 was</u> almost double <u>that of 1929.5 </u>
  5. The budget deficits of <u>1931 and 1932 were 52.5%</u> <u>and 43.3% of</u> total federal expenditures. No year <u>between 1933 and</u> <u>1941 under</u> Roosevelt had a deficit that large.6 In short, Hoover was no defender of “austerity” and “budget cutting.”

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