FDR's Folly: How Roosevelt and His New Deal Prolonged the Great Depression by Jim Powell

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(Paperback - Reprint)

  • Pub. Date: September 2004
  • 352pp
  • Sales Rank: 34,086

    Reader Rating: (16 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Provocative" See All

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: September 2004
    • Publisher: Random House Inc
    • Format: Paperback, 352pp
    • Sales Rank: 34,086

    Synopsis

    In the minds of historians and the American public alike, Franklin Delano Roosevelt was one of our greatest presidents, not least because he supposedly saved America from the Great Depression. But as historian Jim Powell reveals in this groundbreaking book, Roosevelt's New Deal policies actually prolonged and exacerbated the economic disaster, swelled the federal government, and prevented the country from turning around quickly. You'll never again look at FDR in the same way.

    Steve Forbes - Forbes Magazine

    This is the most searing indictment yet of Franklin Roosevelt's economic policies during the 1930s. Powell argues that both FDR and Herbert Hoover have much to answer for--Hoover for bringing on and FDR for prolonging the Great Depression, the worst economic smashup in American history. (25 Apr 2005)

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    Customer Reviews

    Another Example of Conservatism's Lack of Respect For Basic Historical Researchby Anonymous

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    March 09, 2009: After reading the first seventy-five or so pages, I really didn't need to see anymore of Powell's whining and yelling over the New Deal. Here are some simple facts that he and the Friedmanites don't want you to know:

    1.) The Federal Reserve was established by Congress in 1913 in response to the recent 1907-1909 depression that struck the manufacturing industry the hardest among others. Before that, at least six depressions occurred throughtout the nineteenth century from 1819 to 1895, precisely when there wasn't any governmental control.

    2.) Many prominent Republicans and Democrats such as Presidents Roosevelt,Taft,and Wilson as well as the the presidential candidates Hughes (whom Powell mentions while he served as Supreme Court chief justice) and William Jennings Bryan all supported the enactment of central banking in order to promote stabilty.

    3.) The "Roaring 20's" that Powell and other right-wing apologists fawn over was, as Powell himself admitted to a degree in the book (thus contradicting himself), marked by unrestrained spending and mounting debt, which is percisely what caused stockholders to default on their debts to lenders in the markets, causing that inevitable bubble to eventually burst in 1929.

    We must learn from the past to better our future.by TomFop

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    January 08, 2009: Let me make this clear; I am not a Republican. In fact, I truly loathe the current Republican leadership inside, and outside the White house. Now on to the book...

    Despite my having an undergraduate degree in economics and a minor in US History, at no time did any of my professors plunge into the negative aspects of the New Deal as well as did the author of this great book. We are constantly bombarded with recollections of FDR as being a superhero who rescued our nation from the great depression and anyone who dares to research the subject and question the actual economic consequences of the New Deal is casted from academia and labeled as being a "right wing lunatic." But the Great Depression lasted more than a decade. So how could the New Deal have been responsible for our eventual recovery? More and more researchers are concluding that FDR's socialist price controlling schemes, huge increases in taxation, and overall forced manipulation of the marketplace as causing a recession, or short depression, to TURN INTO the famous Great Depression.

    This book is an excellent read and a must for any person seeking to avoid the mistakes made by those of the past. Or at least gain a rounded view of one of our most popular presidents.


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