(Judis started out in life as a young radical but moved to the 
right in the 1980s, eventually supporting the contras in 
Nicaragua. However, he has always been pretty strong on economic 
questions.)

http://www.tnr.com/article/economy/magazine/94963/economic-doom

Doom!
Our economic nightmare is just beginning.

by John B. Judis
September 14, 2011 | 9:57 pm

Mitt Romney has shed the dark blue suit, white shirt, and pale 
blue tie of his 2008 campaign for an open-neck tattersall shirt 
with its sleeves rolled up. His sideburns are graying, and his 
eyes are lined, but he still sports a boyish grin and radiates the 
can-do enthusiasm of a man who is promising to turn the country 
around the way he once turned around the Salt Lake City Winter 
Olympics. This August morning, in the wake of the battle over 
raising the debt ceiling and Standard & Poor’s decision to 
downgrade America’s credit rating, he has come to Concord, New 
Hampshire, to speak to the local Chamber of Commerce. Beforehand, 
he agreed to answer a few questions from reporters.

In an opening statement, Romney blamed Standard & Poor’s decision 
on President Obama. The president’s spokespeople, he said, “would 
substitute Harry Truman’s ‘The buck stops here’ with a new motto: 
‘The buck stops somewhere else.’ The truth is the buck stops at 
the president’s desk, and he needs to reassert the leadership 
necessary to restore America’s financial foundation.” To achieve 
such a foundation, Romney endorsed the congressional Republican 
plan, dubbed “cut, cap, and balance,” which would slash $111 
billion from next year’s budget, reduce federal spending as a 
percentage of GDP from 22.5 to 19.7 percent in six years, and 
adopt a balanced budget amendment to the Constitution. The plan 
represents an attempt to achieve private-sector prosperity through 
public-sector austerity.

“Mr. Romney,” I said, after he had fielded several other 
questions, “I want to ask you something about history. You know, 
when Herbert Hoover had to face a financial crisis and then 
unemployment, his strategy was to balance the budget and cut 
spending, and that made things worse. When Roosevelt came in, 
unemployment was twenty-five and went to fourteen percent by 1937. 
With deficits. Aren’t you repeating the Hoover mistake?” Romney’s 
grin turned quizzical. “Do you really think so?” he asked me. “I 
do think so, but you go ahead,” I replied.

“Let’s go back to the Hoover days,” Romney began. “The issue in 
the Hoover years was what was happening in the budget that year. 
This year, we are spending $1.6 trillion more than we take in, and 
that would have made anyone in either party blush if they saw 
numbers like that. And the issue today is not just this year’s 
deficit, it’s deficits as far as the eyes can see. ... America has 
to rein in the excessive spending not just this year, but over the 
long period of time.”

I didn’t think it would be proper to turn Romney’s press 
conference into a debate about history, so I let his answer stand. 
But he seemed to be suggesting that the premise of my question was 
flawed because deficits are much larger today and will probably 
continue unabated. And they are larger—but that is because our GDP 
and government are also larger. Meanwhile, if our deficits stretch 
“as far as the eyes can see,” so did the deficits in Hoover’s day, 
which continued unabated for 16 years. Romney was insisting that 
there was nothing to be learned from Hoover’s response to the 
Great Depression. But, in fact, what happened in the United States 
and Europe in the ’30s is an excellent—perhaps, the best—guide to 
what is happening to us now.

Yet it’s not just Romney and the other Republican presidential 
candidates who seem oblivious to the lessons of the ’30s. From 
David Cameron to Angela Merkel to Japan’s new Prime Minister 
Yoshihiko Noda, many of the world’s leaders are convinced that 
austerity is the way to fix our broken economy. President Obama—at 
least judging by his recent jobs speech to Congress—seems to 
understand that this approach is leading to economic disaster; but 
he may have waited too long to begin making this case to the 
American people, and the odds that he can actually get any kind of 
massive spending bill through Congress, now or even after 2012, 
remain low.

During the next year of campaigning, we are going to hear lots of 
uplifting slogans about America’s can-do spirit and the bright 
prospects for our national future. That is the way politicians 
talk, and there is nothing wrong with that. But such optimistic 
rhetoric should not fool anyone about the underlying reality: 
Unless there is a fundamental—and difficult-to-imagine—change in 
the way our politics interacts with our economy, the United States 
and much of the world are headed for a very grim future.



TODAY’S RECESSION does not merely resemble the Great Depression; 
it is, to a real extent, a recurrence of it. It has the same 
unique causes and the same initial trajectory. Both downturns were 
triggered by a financial crisis coming on top of, and then 
deepening, a slowdown in industrial production and employment that 
had begun earlier and that was caused in part by rapid 
technological innovation. The 1920s saw the spread of 
electrification in industry; the 1990s saw the triumph of 
computerization in manufacturing and services. The recessions in 
1926 and 2001 were both followed by “jobless recoveries.”

In each case, the financial crisis generated an overhang of 
consumer and business debt that—along with growing unemployment 
and underemployment, and the failure of real wages to rise—reduced 
effective demand to the point where the economy, without extensive 
government intervention, spun into a downward spiral of 
joblessness. The accumulation of debt also undermined the use of 
monetary policy to revive the economy. Even zero-percent interest 
rates could not induce private investment.

Finally, in contrast to the usual post-World War II recession, our 
current downturn, like the Great Depression, is global in 
character. Financial disturbances—aggravated by an unstable 
international monetary system—have spread globally. During the 
typical recession, a country suffering a downturn might hope to 
revive itself by cutting its spending. That might temporarily 
increase unemployment, but it would also depress wages and prices, 
simultaneously cutting the demand for imports and making a 
country’s exports more competitive against those of its rivals. 
But, when the recession is global, you get what John Maynard 
Keynes called the “paradox of thrift” writ large: As all nations 
cut their spending and attempt to devalue their currencies (which 
makes their exports cheaper), global demand shrinks still more, 
and the recession deepens.

Politicians today might not want to remember, but, in the first 
phase of the Great Depression, the major economies, oblivious to 
the paradox of thrift, took steps that made things much worse. In 
the United States, Hoover, who was a Republican progressive in the 
tradition of William Howard Taft rather than Calvin Coolidge, 
responded initially to the stock market crash and the drop in 
employment by proposing a tax cut and a modest public works 
program. He also tried to bring industry together to agree to 
invest and to maintain wages and prices. But, when firms continued 
to cut back, unemployment continued to rise, and tax revenues 
dropped—creating a budget deficit—Hoover and the Republicans 
turned to cutting government spending and raising taxes on the 
assumption that a government, like a business, should not respond 
to hard times by going further into debt. In a news conference in 
December 1930, Hoover declared, “Prosperity cannot be restored by 
raids upon the Public Treasury.” In fiscal year 1933 (which began 
in June 1932), federal spending actually decreased. By March 1933, 
when Franklin Roosevelt took office, the unemployment rate had 
climbed to 24.9 percent from 3.2 percent in 1929.

In Great Britain, the economy had begun to decline after 1925, 
when the Tory government, rejecting Keynes’s advice, decided to go 
back on the original pre-World War I gold standard. By raising the 
price of the pound in dollars or francs, the Tories priced British 
exports out of the world market. In May 1929, the Labour Party 
ousted the Conservative Party, whom voters blamed for the 
downturn. But Labour Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald pursued many 
of the same policies as the conservatives. MacDonald was a 
socialist and blamed a “breakdown” in world capitalism for 
Britain’s ills, but he thought that as the head of capitalist 
Britain, he had to adhere to the gold standard and free trade, 
while cutting the budget.

Keynes’s Liberal Party, led by former Prime Minister Lloyd George, 
advocated massive public works, but Labour leaders branded the 
Liberal proposals “madcap finance.” They rejected any idea of a 
third way between laissez-faire capitalism and socialism. As 
unemployment soared in Britain, MacDonald proposed raising taxes 
and cutting spending on unemployment insurance in order to balance 
the budget. MacDonald had always been averse to partisanship and 
had earlier urged the parties to put their “ideas in a common 
pool.” When Labour’s trade union members balked at his cuts, 
MacDonald created a national unity government with the Tories in 
1931 and passed spending cuts and tax increases. By the next year, 
unemployment in Britain had risen to 22.1 percent from 10.4 
percent of the wage-earning workforce in 1929.

In Germany, where the slump had begun in 1928, a coalition led by 
a Social Democratic prime minister held sway. Both the Social 
Democrats and their conservative coalition partners were committed 
to reducing Germany’s rising budget deficits, but the Socialists 
wanted to do so by borrowing money overseas, while the 
center-right parties advocated cutting the budget by slashing 
unemployment insurance. The government split and, in an election 
in 1930, a center-right coalition led by the Catholic Centre 
Party’s Heinrich Brüning took power. Brüning drastically cut 
spending and raised taxes, and, by 1932, when the next elections 
occurred, the German economy was in ruins. Production was at 40 
percent of what it had been in 1929, and unemployment had risen to 
33 percent.

In all these cases, the lesson was clear: Cutting spending and 
raising taxes to balance the budget had made things much worse. 
And, as these governments discovered, there was a political price 
to be paid. In the United States, Franklin Roosevelt and the 
Democrats turned out Hoover and his party by a landslide. The 
Republicans would not win the presidency again for 20 years and 
would remain the de facto minority party for almost 50 years. In 
the October 1931 elections in Britain, the Labour Party suffered 
its worst defeat. MacDonald would be expelled from the party, and 
Labour would not regain power until 1945. In Germany, Adolf 
Hitler’s National Socialist Party would best the other parties in 
the 1932 elections. And, in January 1933, Hitler would become 
chancellor.



IN THEIR INITIAL response to the recession of 2008, leaders in the 
United States and Europe appeared to heed the lessons of the Great 
Depression. Obama, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, and French 
President Nicolas Sarkozy each backed generous government spending 
programs to revive the economy, and they also advanced proposals 
for reforming the increasingly dysfunctional international 
monetary system. In the United States, Federal Reserve head Ben 
Bernanke and Council of Economic Advisers chair Christina Romer 
had both made their mark as academics with analyses of the Great 
Depression. And Britain’s Labour Party had become a bastion of 
Keynesianism after World War II. In short, there seemed little 
doubt that the follies of the late ’20s and early ’30s would be 
avoided this time.

But then problems began to arise. Obama’s initial stimulus proved 
woefully insufficient to stem the rise in unemployment. The $787 
billion federal stimulus included $288 billion in tax cuts, which 
were as likely to be saved as to be spent; meanwhile, the stimulus 
was partially offset by an estimated $425 billion in state and 
local spending cuts and tax increases. The need for more spending 
was evident to Romer and to liberal economists, including Paul 
Krugman and former Council of Economic Advisers head Joseph 
Stiglitz; but Obama failed in his first year to press 
energetically for additional spending. His influential treasury 
secretary, Timothy Geithner, believed that, after the initial 
stimulus, the recovery was proceeding on its own, and Obama’s 
attention was focused on passing health care reform. By the end of 
2009, the failure of the recovery to take hold had emboldened the 
Republican opposition and given birth to a new right-wing 
movement, the Tea Party, that called for a drastic reduction of 
government spending.

Republican victories in the 2010 election led Obama to backtrack. 
He embraced the rhetoric of austerity—calling on government to 
“tighten its belt”—and accepted spending cuts in order to pass a 
budget and win Republican agreement for raising the debt ceiling. 
Most of these cuts are slated to take place over a decade, but as 
much as $30.5 billion is to be cut in 2012. In acceding to the 
uncompromising Republican opposition, Obama made it less likely 
that the United States would recover from the recession during his 
first term. Recently, as Obama’s popularity sank, even among 
Democrats, and as the economy has continued to flounder, he has 
changed course, calling for $400 billion in new spending and tax 
cuts to create jobs; but the odds that Republicans will go along 
with him seem low.

In Great Britain, the dour Brown, who was inept as a politician, 
was replaced in May 2010 by Tory David Cameron. A modest recovery 
had begun under Brown, but Cameron, concerned about a rising 
deficit, slashed spending and raised taxes. Cameron’s five-year 
plan calls for the elimination of 300,000 public-sector jobs. As a 
result, growth has slowed to a crawl in Britain. The economy 
increased .2 percent in the second quarter. And unemployment, 
which fell in 2010, has begun to rise.

On the continent, the leaders of more prosperous nations have 
responded to growing unemployment, lagging growth, and the threat 
of insolvency on the periphery by calling for austerity. Dutch 
Prime Minister Mark Rutte has proposed appointing a Eurozone 
commissioner who could expel countries (like Greece) that don’t 
adhere to strict budget rules. Sarkozy and Merkel have proposed 
that all the Euro countries pass legislation requiring balanced 
budgets and balked at creating “Eurobonds” that would give 
struggling countries access to lower-interest loans. “Austerity is 
the only cure for the Eurozone,” Merkel’s finance minister, 
Wolfgang Schäuble, declared in The Financial Times.

SOMETIMES LEADERS do things that harm their own nations because 
they don’t know any better. Hoover, like many Republicans and 
Democrats at the time, couldn’t conceive of deficit spending as 
being beneficial under any circumstances. But others have had 
choices and have still adopted the alternative that is most 
damaging to their country. That was true of British Labour during 
the beginning of the Great Depression—and it is true of the 
leading American and European politicians who have backed the 
current round of austerity measures.

There are three factors that explain these bad choices. The most 
common, but least persuasive, explanation is that political 
leaders and governments are in thrall to powerful financial 
interests. The City of London (Britain’s Wall Street) was 
certainly enthusiastic about reviving the gold standard in 1925 
and resisting devaluation afterward; London’s bankers saw the 
prewar gold standard as essential to maintaining their hold over 
international finance. In the United States today, bankers on the 
Federal Reserve’s Open Market Committee have opposed the Fed 
injecting more money into the economy because it might be 
inflationary. Inflation reduces the value of the loans that banks 
have made.

But this explanation is unsatisfying because support for austerity 
goes well beyond bankers. A second explanation is that national 
leaders, faced with a severe downturn, model their own reaction 
for what a nation should do on what an individual business, faced 
with more efficient competition, would do. They want the 
government, like a business, to respond by cutting costs rather 
than increasing debt. They also see public spending and deficits, 
which must be financed on the same bond market where businesses 
raise money, as “crowding out” what’s available for private 
investment. And the more sophisticated see austerity as part of a 
general strategy—along with eliminating business taxes and 
regulations—to boost exports and reduce imports. Cutting spending 
makes it possible to cut taxes on business; less spending on 
unemployment insurance or welfare puts downward pressure on wages 
and prices, making it easier to outsell foreign competitors. It is 
a model that assumes an atomized world economy in which each 
nation is out for itself. The United States and Europe embraced 
this “beggar thy neighbor” strategy at the beginning of the Great 
Depression, and today’s Republicans, as well as Cameron’s Tories 
and Merkel’s Christian Democrats, do so, too. Japan’s Noda also 
endorses a version of this strategy.

The third factor has to do with what economist Robert Skidelsky, 
trying to explain the dogged adherence of MacDonald’s Labour 
government to the gold standard and to laissez-faire capitalism, 
called “political culture.” It is particularly relevant to the 
United States and Britain. Nations, like individuals, grow up with 
certain assumptions about government and the economy that can 
persist over centuries. Britain and the United States both have 
strong anti-statist traditions, dating from the English and 
American revolutions, that were reinforced by their economic 
success. Writes the anthropologist Jared Diamond, “The values to 
which people cling most stubbornly under inappropriate conditions 
are those values that were previously the source of their greatest 
triumphs over adversity.”

In the American political culture, opposition to “big government” 
has become an article of faith that brooks no contradiction. When 
I was in New Hampshire this summer, I accompanied Republican 
Congressman Charlie Bass on a visit to a small factory that 
produces industrial-strength air-conditioning filters. Bass asked 
the factory owner what he would do first if he were Obama. The 
owner replied immediately: “Cut spending.” Later, as I was touring 
the plant, I learned that schools, government buildings, and the 
military bought their filters there.

As Bass was leaving, I asked the owner whether, in proposing that 
Obama reduce government spending, he wasn’t cutting off his nose 
to spite his face. He was taken aback and took a moment to reply. 
He began by denying that cutting federal spending would have any 
effect on his business, which was mostly local, but then 
acknowledged that schools and offices now had less money to buy 
filters. It was as if he had never made the connection before 
between his deep-seated cultural assumptions about government and 
the fate of his own business—and by extension that of other 
businesses.

Charismatic leaders can reshape and even defy their nation’s 
political culture. Franklin Roosevelt did so during his first 
term. But Roosevelt inherited a situation so desperate that the 
public was willing to tolerate any kind of experimentation. Obama 
entered office with some of the preconditions for radical reform. 
Crisis was in the air. Wall Street was in disfavor. Voters blamed 
the downturn on his Republican predecessor, George W. Bush. And he 
had the rudiments of a political movement. But the country was not 
in as desperate shape as it was in 1933, and the opposition was 
still functioning. To have put in place a program that might have 
spurred at least the beginnings of a recovery, Obama would have 
had to be both extraordinarily bold and fiercely combative. And he 
was neither.

In dealing with the downturn and financial crisis, the president 
was cautious—as evidenced by his choice of Geithner, who had 
presided over the Federal Reserve Bank of New York during the 
crash. Like MacDonald, Obama harbored a dream of bringing the 
parties and interest groups together behind his program. As The 
Financial Times’s Martin Wolf put it, “Mr. Obama wishes to be 
President of a country that does not exist. In his fantasy US, 
politicians bury differences in bipartisan harmony.” After the 
bruising battle over the debt ceiling, Obama may have finally put 
his dream of a post-partisan politics to rest and adopted a more 
aggressive political style. But the narrow opening for dramatic 
change that existed in early 2009 has probably closed.

TO EXTRICATE THEMSELVES from this mess, the United States and 
other leading nations are going to have take the same kind of 
steps that the West took after World War II—steps that led to 25 
years of prosperity. After World War II, governments came to play 
a much greater role in national economies, particularly in the 
United States. In 1929, U.S. federal spending accounted for 3.68 
percent of GDP. During World War II, it rose to 43.6 percent; by 
the mid-’50s, it had leveled off between 17 and 23 percent. This 
spending helped complement private investment and sustain consumer 
demand.

In the future, the United States will once again have to raise 
rather than lower the level of federal spending as a percentage of 
GDP. Republicans want to cap spending at 19 percent of GDP, but, 
in the wake of the recession, it may have to hover between 25 and 
30 percent or perhaps climb even higher. That’s because of an 
aging population that will need public services, the growing 
importance of publicly funded science and technology, the need to 
transform the nation’s energy and transportation networks, and the 
impact on employment of the trend toward automation in 
manufacturing and services. Even if the U.S. economy grows at a 
healthy pace, the private sector may not provide enough jobs.

The United States and other nations will also have to reform the 
world’s monetary system—again—in order to instill a sense that we, 
the world’s nations, are all in it together. Near the end of World 
War II, the United States, with Britain as a junior partner, 
established the Bretton Woods international monetary system. That 
eliminated a major source of instability and division that had 
arisen when the older British-based gold standard had broken down. 
The Bretton Woods system was based on the dollar’s equivalence to 
gold, but, unlike the older system, it allowed countries other 
than the United States to devalue or revalue their currencies and 
thereby reduce either their trade deficits or surpluses.

In the 1970s, Bretton Woods broke down. The new dollar-based 
system has fueled a succession of crises. It has been held 
together tenuously by a triangular relationship among the United 
States, Japan, and China in which the Asian countries have sought 
to maintain their export surpluses with the United States by 
keeping their currencies undervalued. Rather than exchanging their 
surplus dollars for their own currency, they have used the dollars 
to buy U.S. government or private securities. They have funded 
U.S. deficits, but also helped provide the money that inflated the 
housing bubble. As the recession set in, China, in particular, has 
been in a position to alleviate the crisis and to confound the 
paradox of thrift by substantially revaluing its currency, which 
would encourage exports from the United States and Europe—but it 
has balked at doing so. In effect, China, too, has followed a 
strategy of “beggar thy neighbor.”

To escape the recession, the leading nations, including China, 
would have to establish a new international system that could 
avoid these kinds of imbalances. But how? The economic historian 
Charles Kindleberger pioneered the argument that a stable, 
well-functioning international system requires a single, leading 
nation—an absolute monarch. But no country will be ready within a 
decade or two to assume the role that the British played in the 
nineteenth century or the United States played after World War II. 
This means the leading countries will have to reach agreement 
among themselves. And that won’t be easy, particularly as a 
version of economic isolationism gains ground.



OBAMA IS UNLIKELY to get substantial spending increases through 
the Republican House during the next year, and, even if he wins 
reelection, he probably won’t have large enough majorities in 
Congress to force through the kind of spending the economy needs. 
Indeed, as a second-term president, he would likely be in the same 
position as MacDonald in 1931, presiding over a national 
government that he ultimately does not control.

Romney and Rick Perry, the two leading candidates to replace 
Obama, are both business conservatives who can be expected to take 
their cues on economic policy from the Chamber of Commerce, Wall 
Street, and the Business Roundtable rather than from the Tea 
Party. Romney, who cherishes the image of himself as a pragmatic 
turnaround artist, may prove more adaptable to economic 
circumstances than Perry. In his appearances, Romney sends out dog 
whistles—audible to liberals—that he is not as economically 
radical as his opponents. For his part, Perry should not be 
dismissed as an anti-government activist. A Tea Party enthusiast 
would not have established the Texas Emerging Technology Fund, 
which uses government money to boost high-tech business ventures.

If they are faced with a continuing slowdown, Romney or Perry 
would be likely to support what they would think of as a stimulus 
program—one that is heavily weighted toward reducing business 
costs through cutting corporate tax rates, eliminating capital 
gains taxes, reducing or eliminating regulations, and discouraging 
unionization. The hope will be, as Romney has put it, to make 
“American businesses competitive in the global economy.” But such 
a strategy assumes that there is a backlog of demand for U.S. 
consumer and capital goods that firms would meet if government 
increased their potential profit margins. In a global downturn, 
that’s not necessarily the case. Such an approach would probably 
do what Calvin Coolidge, Ronald Reagan, and George W. Bush’s 
economic proposals did: redistribute wealth and income from the 
bottom toward the top—out of the hands of people who are most 
likely to spend what they have and into the hands of people most 
likely to save rather than spend. In a downturn, that’s not a good 
strategy for getting the economy going.

The policy outlook is similarly grim in Europe. To remain viable, 
the Eurozone will have to widen its responsibility for the 
economic health of the weaker, peripheral nations that are 
tottering under debt and exorbitant interest rates. But France and 
Germany are urging these countries to escape their debts by 
drastically cutting spending; that, again, will reduce demand in 
the Eurozone during a downturn. And powerful conservative forces 
within the wealthier countries—asking, “Why should we help 
them?”—are against any expansion of fiscal responsibility in the 
Eurozone.

In the ’40s, it finally took a world war to bring about the 
conditions for reforming the world’s leading economies. The war 
established the United States as the unchallenged leader of world 
capitalism, and it convinced Washington that a renewed strategy of 
“beggar thy neighbor” would be self-destructive. The popular New 
Deal reforms also established a floor under government’s role. 
Western Europe and Japan followed America’s lead. Will it take 
another global catastrophe to convince the leaders of the United 
States, Europe, and Asia to halt the repetition of past errors—to 
recognize that they need to establish a new economic order? What 
will it take to convince the people of the United States that they 
have to overcome their cultural predilections against big 
government? These are the questions that will have to be answered 
over the years, but, in the coming election, I would expect they 
would meet with the same Cheshire Cat grin that I received when I 
asked Romney whether he wasn’t calling on America to repeat 
Hoover’s mistakes.

John B. Judis is a senior editor at The New Republic and a 
visiting scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for International 
Peace. This article appeared in the October 6, 2011, issue of the 
magazine.
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