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Global Labor’s Forgotten Plan to Fight the Great Depression
In the early 1930s, as global unemployment tripled in two years and the world plunged into the Great Depression, the world's labor movements developed a program for fighting the global crisis through international public works. It's a little-known historical might-have-been that could have helped halt the Great Depression, the rise of Adolph Hitler, and the Second World War. And, as the efforts of world leaders to address today's "Great Recession" threaten to break down in nationalist rivalry and petty political bickering, it bears lessons - and perhaps an alternative vision - for today.
Workers and organized labor have historically advocated government public works as a solution to unemployment. Not only would they provide jobs and income for those directly employed, but they would raise overall purchasing power, thereby creating demand for the products of other workers and creating a virtuous circle of economic growth. In the context of swelling unemployment in the early Depression, discussion of national public works programs developed in many countries.
The proposal for international public works originated with General German Trade Union Alliance (ADGB), which included most of Germany's trade unions and represented the great majority of its workers. The plan won the support first of the German union alliance, then of unions around the world, and finally of the League of Nations' International Labor Organization.
The plan was worked out by the head of the Alliance's statistical department, W.S. Woytinsky. Woytinsky was a Russian émigré who had been president of the St. Petersburg Council of the Unemployed during the 1905 revolution and had organized mass action to force the city to provide public works employment. Observing Germany's combination of spiraling deflation and spiraling unemployment in the early 1930s, he came up with the idea of using credit expansion to finance massive public works.
Taking a cue from recent League of Nations policy proposals, Woytinsky proposed an international agreement that would allow the lowering the gold reserve requirements for national currencies. That would let central banks create new money that could finance international public works and thereby create the purchasing power needed to reflate the economy.
In a June, 1931, article, Woytinsky proposed an "Action Program for Reviving the Economy." It called for the labor movement to "assume the role of conveyor of the idea of an activist world economic policy." It was up to the labor movement to "force the state and all public institutions to implement measures to revive the economy."
Labor's policy "must be a global economic policy. All nations are suffering because the world economy is sick, and therefore they must all concentrate their forces upon joint action to overcome the worldwide crisis." The international agreement would provide an alternative to the rise of economic nationalism, supporting "tariff reductions and European economic unification" as well as "internationalization of wage policy and social policy." The program would also support workers' fight for higher wages, shorter hours, social rights, and regulation of business.
The funds freed up by international money-creation policies would be applied to job creation through "public works on a grand scale" for a "grand plan for European reconstruction" with "the employment of one million unemployed." The creation of jobs would "spark a revival of the consumer goods industry, thereby sucking a further, considerable number of unemployed back into employment."
A primary objection to such a plan was that it would lead to runaway inflation like that which had been so devastating to Germany in 1922-23. But Woytinsky argued that the conditions were entirely different. "We have a huge amount of unutilized capacity in our productive apparatus. Consequently, increases in production can, without difficulty, follow along in the wake of planned increases in purchasing power." Why international public works?
As the International Labour Organization's International Labor Review explained in its introduction to Woytinsky's January, 1932 article "International Measures to Create Employment: A Remedy for the Depression," there were two problems with big public works programs to fight unemployment. First, it was hard to find enough money. Second, "in a worldwide depression like the present one, if one country goes very much ahead of other countries in its public works program" there is "danger of price inflation." Both, the Review noted, "can be overcome by international cooperation."
Woytinsky elaborated the danger. The creation of credit on a large scale "represents a daring experiment for any one country, and failure would shake and weaken the economic system of the country, and more especially its finances." An international agreement is "the only method of avoiding this danger and clearing the way for individual countries to undertake schemes of this kind."
How would such a plan work in practice? An international office would "collect the newly-created capital from every country" to create a fund for creating new purchasing power and new employment on an internationally agreed plan. "From the fund thus constituted, different countries would be granted loans in proportion to their needs for the creation of employment." Two or two-and-a-half billion dollars would employ four to five million workers and provide the economic stimulus the world required.
Such programs should be selected for their social usefulness, not to their profitability for one or another company. Such works "must produce something of lasting value, but they do not need to be productive in the sense in which private enterprise employs the term and show a direct profit to meet the interest and redemption charges on the capital employed." Each part doesn't need to show a profit on capital. What is necessary is that "the plan as a whole" will reduce the resources wasted by the Depression and "improve the conditions of life throughout the world."
In Europe, the funds would be used for "the construction of an international network of motor roads, of canals to link up the most important waterways of the Continent, and the international supply of electric power." In individual countries they would be used for such purposes as land improvement, roads, and housing.
In 1933, sixty nations sent high-level representatives to the London Monetary and Economic Conference to forge a solution to the Great Depression. The ILO had voted to present its plan "to set on foot immediately large-scale public works" and "to coordinate these measures on an international basis" there. But instead of developing an international strategy to solve the Depression, the Conference broke down in nationalist bickering. The worldwide spread of mass unemployment, Hitler's rise to power, and World War II followed apace.
Lessons for today's "Great Recession"?
After the meeting of finance ministers from the world's major economic powers in mid-March, 2009 the participants issued a statement saying, "We have taken decisive coordinated and comprehensive action to boost demand and jobs" and "we are prepared to take whatever action is necessary until growth is restored." It sounds as though the lessons of the Great Depression have been learned and a plan like that advocated by the unions in the early 1930s for job creation and economic stimulus has been adopted. But, as one news account put it, the ministers "stopped short of announcing any details." In fact, world leaders are facing the same paralysis in the face of the "Great Recession" that they did in the face of the Great Depression eighty years ago.
What would it mean for the world's labor movement, and the broader community of allies often known as the "Global Justice Movement," to develop an "activist world economic policy" to confront today's "Great Recession"? Conditions are of course different, but in many ways the core of such a program can be the same.
That core can be public works to create jobs to meet public needs. In today's world, threatened as it is by global warming, the number one public need is to rebuild the world's economy in a way that protects the Earth's climate. So a global jobs program today means primarily a program for global green jobs.
Such a program needs to be global for the same reasons that it did in the 1930s. First, the problems are global, and therefore require a global solution. Second, if any country expands credit too much by itself, it is likely to face rebound effects from the international economy. (Think about the way the Chinese, who hold much of the U.S. debt, recently forced Barack Obama to give assurances that the U.S. would not inflate its currency.) Such measures by one country alone also lead to loss of trade.
There are ways to provide international credit expansion today that didn't exist in the 1930s. The primary one is a kind of international money, known as "Special Drawing Rights" (SDRs) or "paper gold" that allows countries to create new currency reserves through the International Monetary Fund. Countries can hold SDRs in their treasuries and release other currencies they are holding there - creating new money in very much the same way as Woytinsky's proposals for lowering gold reserve requirements.
The U.S, Britain, and many other countries are currently calling for an expansion of SDRs to help poorer countries get through the current economic crisis. George Soros has called for the issuing of trillions of dollars of SDRs to counteract the downturn. And Joseph Stiglitz has proposed that SDRs be used to create an international fund for supporting projects for "public purposes" in poorer countries. Expansion of SDRs, or some other form of internationally agreed global credit expansion, can be the basis for a new era of global green public works, what has recently been dubbed a Global Green New Deal.
World leaders didn't face up to their responsibility for countering the Great Depression, and it looks like the same is true of today's leaders in the face of the Great Recession. The idea of international public works financed through global agreement to credit expansion could provide a global program around which labor and popular organizations around the world could unify to "force the state and all public institutions to implement measures to revive the economy."
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29 Comments so far
Show AllKeep human populations at 2 to 3 billion and cap wealth/power. The rest will take care of itself.
Through what? Forced sterilization like China? World War III? What sort of state power do you want to reduce the population? And how does this not conflict with individual human rights?
To reduce the population, I prefer humane family planning. Nature prefers more extreme methods.
the world population is almost 7 billion.
How does family planing reduce most of the people living to be gone with Family Planning???
It's a long term solution. Nature is a lot faster.
>>Woytinsky proposed an international agreement that would allow the lowering the gold reserve requirements for national currencies. That would let central banks create new money that could finance international public works and thereby create the purchasing power needed to reflate the economy.
Caught you, you sons of bitches. Your plan was to STEAL money from ALL citizens through an inflation tax, and then redistribute it based on political efficacy. If printing money is the way out of a recession, why isn't Zimbabwe the most stable and prosperous country in Africa? Everyone there is a billionaire!
It's incredible how far the economic authors featured on CD depart from the opinions in the comments threads.
The PTB here at CD are obviously of the "fashionably leftist" variety that is nothing more than faux progressive shills for the financial elite. Either that or they don't know the first thing about economics.
Do you think they got all the way through their Keynes' pamphlet about animal spirits controlling the economy?
http://www.economist.com/research/Economics
/alphabetic.cfm?letter=A#animalspirits
From link:
Animal spirits
The colourful name that Keynes gave to one of the essential ingredients of economic prosperity: confidence. According to Keynes, animal spirits are a particular sort of confidence, "naive optimism". He meant this in the sense that, for entrepreneurs in particular, "the thought of ultimate loss which often overtakes pioneers, as experience undoubtedly tells us and them, is put aside as a healthy man puts aside the expectation of death". Where these animal spirits come from is something of a mystery. Certainly, attempts by politicians and others to talk up confidence by making optimistic noises about economic prospects have rarely done much good.
the article makes the SDR idea the simple solution... it is a International monetary fund program so here are the details and it looks like it is more complicated as the article seems to think it is simple way to create new money to finance infrastructure.
http://www.imf.org/external/np/exr/facts/sdr.htm
I wonder if the USA will use it to fund our own Debt?
It sounds like just another finance scheme of the system and the term "Paper Gold" is a clue for me.
From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special_Drawing_Rights
"So-called "paper gold" is little more than an accounting transaction within a ledger of accounts, which eliminates the logistical and security problems of shipping gold back and forth across borders to settle national accounts.
Joseph Stiglitz has argued that usage by central banks of SDRs as foreign exchange reserve could be viewed as the prelude to the creation of a single world currency.[2] It has also been suggested that having holders of US dollars convert those dollars into SDRs would allow diversification away from the dollar without accelerating the decline of the value of the dollar."
Looks like Sarkozy, Bush, Kissinger, Abdullah Gul, and many others are right about the New World Order and the one-world currency heh heh
Wow, "paper gold", that's a good one TC, JB and BS! Mostly the latter though because "paper gold" employs some sort of alchemy outside the traditional methods of creating gold through cost prohibitive nuclear reactions and straight up super novas. It also requires a bit of Orwellian logic, this paper is gold proposal.
How about real gold? Or silver? This is stuff that's in limited supply and can't be inflated (increased) by the global central banksters. Real gold is currency that allows workers to save the fruits of their labor for future purchases instead of always borrowing from the banksters to survive. Sound money is power for the people.
The authors should really consider reading something besides Keynes' central planning panaceas. The last thing that working people around the world need is global hyper-inflation that transfers everything, completely, to the global central banksters once and for all. You better buy some wheelbarrows if these ideas every fly.
Yes we are in for a wild time. Wall Street figures that the recession is over when inflation hits.
I hear Obama had to tell China that all this new money borrowing and Debt will not cause inflation....
The worst thing about being president is it seems you have to behave like you are in control of the situation.
The inflation, as in growth of the money supply, already happened, and continues to happen as the banksters try to re-inflate the bubble. It's the effects of this inflation which cause price distortions at different times in the market.
For example, government and banksters get first crack at the free money they create, so they bid up sectors where they intervene the most, like stocks, housing, college, health care, etc. They outbid working people who are not legally allowed to print up their own money. Contrast that with industries largely outside the scope of government intervention, like consumer electronics, where prices are still falling.
This is why inflation is a hidden tax. It robs you of your wealth quietly. That was the nice thing about the gold standard. When FDR stole the gold at $20/oz then upped it to $35/oz, you could see the government was devaluing the dollar, blatantly. But steady inflation makes it much less obvious.
a brilliant and concise explanation!
Thanks! How about this one?
Scene 1
College Student: I can barely afford the $10K for tuition.
Government Politician: Here's $5K for college. That should help.
College President: (LAUGHING ON WAY TO BANK) Tuition is now $15K.
Scene 2
CS: I can barely afford the $15K for tuition.
GP: Keep voting for me. Here's $10K.
CP: (WETTING PANTS WITH LAUGHTER AT THE BANK) Tuition is now $20K.
Scene 3
CS: Please help. Need $20K for tuition.
GP: That's it, price controls!
CP: (SPILLS DRINK IN CARIBBEAN) You mean no college to train the future of America?
ADD $10K AND REPEAT FROM SCENE 1 UNTIL THE EMPEROR WEARS NO CLOTHES.
Right,
There is a steady inflation already built into the system, and a bigger inflation is on the way.
If say 7 trillions or so in "Revival Money" is borrowed as they say, and there is only 400 billion in cash circulating in the USA, just in the past 6 months, we are committing at least on paper or word of mouth, 15 times the amount in circulation Now?!?!
I think China Knows that is inflationary no matter what any optimist tells them.
"In the absence of the gold standard, there is no way to protect savings from confiscation through inflation. There is no safe store of value. If there were, the government would have to make its holding illegal, as was done in the case of gold……The financial policy of the welfare state requires that there be no way for the owners of wealth to protect themselves. This is the shabby secret of the welfare statists’ tirade against gold. Deficit spending is simply a scheme for the confiscation of wealth. Gold stands in the way of this insidious process. It stands as the protector of property rights. If one grasps this, one has no difficulty in understanding the statists’ antagonism toward the gold standard." - Alan Greenspan (1966-67)
Greenspan said this before Richard Nixon took us off of the "gold standard" in 1971. Since then, this country has seen one economic bubble after another under the control of the Federal Reserve Bank whose job is:
According to the Federal Reserve’s own website, their duties fall into four general areas:
1. Conducting the nation's monetary policy by influencing the monetary and credit conditions in the economy in pursuit of maximum employment, stable prices, and moderate long-term interest rates.
2. Supervising and regulating banking institutions to ensure the safety and soundness of the nation's banking and financial system and to protect the credit rights of consumers.
3. Maintaining the stability of the financial system and containing systemic risk that may arise in financial markets.
4. Providing financial services to depository institutions, the U.S. government, and foreign official institutions, including playing a major role in operating the nation's payments system.
In conducting the nation's monetary policy, and given that over the past 30 years only the Wall Street Gang's interests have been served, which can be seen in the numbers of newly created $$Millionaires and $$Billionaires while the wages of "working people" stagnated or their jobs were shipped off-shore, it's clear to see that the Fed failed its 1st duty to the citizens of this country.
When we look at their second duty of supervising and regulating banking institutions to ensure the safety of the banking system and protect credit rights of consumers, we can see they also failed at both of those duties.
Did the Federal Reserve contain "systemic risk" or were they its cheerleaders? Another failure!
On the other hand, their major role in operating the nation's payments system worked like a charm: $$Billions/Trillions in profits were distributed to the super-wealthy around the globe while losses were dumped onto taxpayers. I have no doubt that the benefactors of this "trickle-up scheme" would consider it a great success.
On the whole, they have failed the majority in this country. Bring back the "original gold standard" - not more paper promises!
Thanks for bringing it up because Maybe you are right but it would be wise to know how much gold the USA has.
I had to check again and I thought the USA had trillions in "DEEP Storage Gold" Not so.
Some reports say only 100 billion worth.. http://www.infopirate.org/bm_three-dollars-day-how-much-gold-stored-fort-knox.
We can Google it.
from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Bullion_Depository
" At April 2008 rates of $913 an ounce it is worth roughly $134 billion, while the World War II total of 649.6 million troy ounces would be worth approximately $593 billion.[2]"
from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Official_gold_reserves
"Gold reserves (or gold holdings) are held by central banks as a store of value. In 2001, it was estimated that all the gold ever mined totaled 145,000 tonnes.[1] One tonne of gold equated to a value of US$30.27 million as of February 14, 2009 ($941.35/troy ounces)[2]. The total value of all gold ever mined would be US$4.39 trillion at that price.[note 1]"
Also from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federal_Reserve_Bank_of_New_York
"The Federal Reserve Bank of New York maintains a vault that lies 86 feet (26 m) below sea level, resting on Manhattan bedrock. By 1927, the vault contained ten percent of the world's official gold reserves. Currently, it is reputedly the largest gold repository in the world (though this cannot be confirmed as Swiss Banks do not report their gold stocks) and holds approximately 5,000 metric tons of gold bullion ($160 billion as of March 2008), more than Fort Knox. The gold is owned by many foreign nations, central banks and international organizations. The Federal Reserve Bank does not own the gold but serves as guardian of the precious metal, which it protects at no charge as a gesture of good will to other nations."
----------------
Now Don't the folks who control the Gold market also control the Central Banks through interlocking directorships and stuff?
So 130 billion in Gold in the treasury and 160 billion under the NY Federal Reserve vault which is not USA Gold is almost equal to what we gave one bailout to AIG.
I am not sure the Gold standard would work at this late date.
"So 130 billion in Gold in the treasury"
Sweet, $433 for every American! I suppose that'll be ok if home prices then come down to about $3,000 per home and say a steak costs 50 cents.
It's too bad that US labour has made itself so irrelevant by embracing "business unionism" (what's good for business is good for labour) at every level. Raising sane proposals, like this one from the last Great Depression, is simply impossible among labour.
Hell, both the NEA and AFT have signed off on Obama's "ideas" of charter schools and so-called merit pay for educators while the SEIU embraces labor exploitation though "guest worker" programs and has taken the lead in increasing the massive over-blown health care budget that is designed to subsidize profit, at the expense of cost-saving universal single-payer health insurance. These are the largest unions in the nation.
History matters, but not in the US. Business unionism killed labour here and all that is left is to write hip-hop funeral dirges.
I went to a charter school after getting expelled from public high. They gave me a chance, and I was able to leverage my intelligence to do 1.5 years of work in 2 months and graduate more than a year early. What do you have against charters?
You were very lucky. My sister taught in five different charter schools in Houston over the years. Four of the five were basically criminal enterprises taking the taxpayers money and giving the poorest quality education imaginable in return. Those who set up the schools and ran them came out of it like bandits, even though their schools went under. The kids did not fare so well.
This is ABSOLUTELY TRUE.
"unionism" in the USA has become a "hand in glove" partner of BUSINESS interests that are inherently ANTI labor.
There is no such thing as Global labor or Global anything. The only thing Global are the folks trying to persuade people there is such a thing.
Every country has their own interests and will increasinly follow them.
Well, There is a Global private Central banking system and Global institutions that are mainly set up do go around the laws and even control each countries interests and opinions.
The United Nations is under this influence also.
The CIA for instance has a culture of protecting the interests of the Global economic elite and the agents follow the orders from above.
All this to work must have the look of "National Interests" but in reality, who is looking out for the interests of the common Folk. or the majority? Money controlled politicians for the most part.
But you are right each country will and should do what is best for them and that usually means countering the Global economic Financial forces that have failed the real national interests of every nation.
I think there is a Global Dream now... Lets Get together so we can live in Peace with truth, love and justice for everyone.
Happy St Pat's Day!
So can someone explain to me how going back to a gold standard would solve everything? There is obviously not enough gold in the world to back present currency values, so everybody's supply of money would quickly shrivel up to a fraction of its present value. What then? Do prices also fall just as much? If so, then why does it matter what kind of money is used, so long as it has adequate purchasing power? And if not, then what the hell would it have accomplished?
"So can someone explain to me how going back to a gold standard would solve everything?"
The gold standard would solve a lot by stopping the government and banksters from cheating through inflation (increase) of the money supply. Every paper dollar they print up makes the paper dollar in your pocket worth less. Same thing happens, you could argue, when somebody digs up more gold thus devaluing the gold coin in your pocket. But one of the key differences is that somebody had to put time and effort into mining that gold coin. Clicking the "print" or "wire" button on the "new paper money" screen of "Federal Reserve Office 2009 Edition" is much easier. Adding another "0" at the end of the entry box takes 1/10 of a second. Adding another "0" at the end of the gold mine's periodic ounces produced report takes a lot more work.
"There is obviously not enough gold in the world to back present currency values, so everybody's supply of money would quickly shrivel up to a fraction of its present value. What then?"
There might not be enough of anything on the planet to back present currency values! I've seen the word quadrillion in print repeatedly in relation to credit default swaps. The problem of sorting out the current state of financial affairs is in large part figuring out what everything costs because the price was terribly manipulated by fractional reserve banking and other fraudulent activities.
"Do prices also fall just as much?"
Many of these prices are trying to fall -- like housing -- but the government, and their partners in proto-fascism, the banksters, keep intervening to prop them up. Witness today's Fed announcement of $1.2T more out of thin air to re-inflate the bubble:
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Fed-to-buy-up-to-300B-apf-14679757.html
(And yet Rep. Barney Frank complains about the $165M in AIG bonuses, a figure roughly 7,272 times smaller than the $1.2T that the Fed just allocated with no vote by the Congress at all.)
"If so, then why does it matter what kind of money is used, so long as it has adequate purchasing power?"
After fateful experiments with paper money and other methods inherited from the previous empire, the Constitution was pretty clear about using gold and silver as money. From Article I Section 10, "No state shall ... make any Thing but gold and silver Coin a Tender in Payment of Debts..."
"And if not, then what the hell would it have accomplished?"
Allowing you the freedom to choose your own standard (gold, silver, copper, labor, time, solar, energy, etc.) would solve even more problems by allowing people to associate with other people providing goods and services in exchange for mutually agreed upon currencies. Don't like coal? Only buy your bread from bakers who take wind credits. Value local work in your community? Trade your hour for another in the future with local labor hour certificates. Or use durable and divisable commodities like gold and silver.
Many of these options are available today. But it is the legal tender laws enforced by the government that keep us all trading in Federal Reserve Notes -- the somewhat silent third party in (almost) every market transaction. You can't force payment of a contract in seashells, wampum or gold. You have to take FRNs in the US, and thanks to global military empire, a good portion of the rest of the world. Even China asks, "what else can we do?"
Thanks for taking the time to answer my questions, but from your responses it doesn't look like switching to gold would solve anything. Sure, in small communities, for very basic goods and services, people can swap labor, goods, a kind of barter system, and I have read about a couple villages in the US that currently do this. But say, the computer I am using right now...would Dell accept payment of manual labor for it? Doubtful...and if they did, how long would it be? Years? Reminiscent of indentured servitude, at least in the case of high-value goods. Would there be such a thing as credit under a gold system?