The Great Depression
R.G. Hawtrey, the English economist, said, in the March, 1926 American
Economic Review:
"When external investment outstrips the supply of general savings the
investment market must carry the excess with
money borrowed from the banks. A remedy is control of credit by a rise in
bank rate."
The Federal Reserve Board applied this control of credit, but not in
1926, nor as a remedial measure. It was not applied until 1929, and then
the rate was raised as a punitive measure, to freeze out everybody but the
big trusts.
Professor Cassel, in the Quarterly Journal of Economics, August 1928,
wrote that:
"The fact that a central bank fails to raise its bank rate in
accordance with the actual situation of the
capital market very much increases the strength of the cyclical movement
of trade, with all its pernicious effects on
social economy. A rational regulation of the bank rate lies in our hands,
and may be accomplished only if we perceive its
importance and decide to go in for such a policy.
With a bank rate regulated on these lines the conditions for the
development of trade cycles would be radically
altered, and indeed, our familiar trade cycles would be a thing of the
past."
This is the most authoritative premise yet made relating that our
business depressions are artificially precipitated. The occurrence of the
Panic of 1907, the Agricultural Depression of 1920, and the Great
Depression of 1929, all three in good crop years and in periods of
national prosperity, suggests that premise is not guesswork. Lord Maynard
Keynes pointed out that most theories of the business cycle failed to
relate their analysis adequately to the money mechanism. Any survey or
study of a depression which failed to list such factors as gold movements
and pressures on foreign exchange would be worthless, yet American
economists have always dodged this issue.
The League of Nations had achieved its goal of getting the nations of
Europe back on the gold standard by 1928, but three-fourths of the world’s
gold was in France and the United States. The problem was how to get that
gold to countries which needed it as a basis for money and credit. The
answer was action by the Federal Reserve System.
Following the secret meeting of the Federal Reserve Board and the heads
of the foreign central banks in 1927, the Federal Reserve Banks in a few
months doubled their holdings of Government securities and acceptances,
which resulted in the exportation of five hundred million dollars in gold
in that year. The System’s market activities forced the rates of call
money down on the Stock Exchange, and forced gold out of the country.
Foreigners also took this opportunity to purchase heavily in Government
securities because of the low call money rate.
"The agreement between the Bank of England and the Washington Federal
Reserve authorities many months ago was that we
would force the export of 725 million of gold by reducing the bank
rates here, thus helping the stabilization of France and Europe and
putting France on a gold basis."89
(April 20, 1928)
On February 6, 1929, Mr. Montagu Norman, Governor of the Bank of
England, came to Washington and had a conference with Andrew Mellon,
Secretary of the Treasury. Immediately after that mysterious visit, the
Federal Reserve Board abruptly changed its policy and pursued a high
discount rate policy, abandoning the cheap money policy which it had
inaugurated in 1927 after Mr. Norman’s other visit. The stock market crash
and the deflation of the American people’s financial structure was
scheduled to take place in March. To get the ball rolling, Paul Warburg
gave the official warning to the traders to get out of the market. In his
annual report to the stockholders of his International Acceptance Bank, in
March, 1929, Mr. Warburg said:
"If the orgies of unrestrained speculation are permitted to spread, the
ultimate collapse is certain not only to affect
the speculators themselves, but to bring about a general depression
involving the entire country."
During three years of "unrestrained speculation", Mr. Warburg had not
seen fit to make any remarks about the condition of the Stock Exchange. A
friendly organ, The New York Times, not only gave the report two columns
on its editorial page, but editorially commented on the wisdom and
profundity of Mr. Warburg’s observations. Mr. Warburg’s concern was
genuine, for the stock market bubble had gone much farther than it had
been intended to go, and the bankers feared the consequences if the people
realized what was going on. When this report in The New York Times started
a sudden wave of selling on the Exchange, the bankers grew panicky, and it
was decided to ease the market somewhat. Accordingly, Warburg’s National
City Bank rushed twenty-five million dollars in cash to the call money
market, and postponed the day of the crash.
The revelation of the Federal Reserve Board’s final decision to trigger
the Crash of 1929 appears, amazingly enough, in The New York Times. On
April 20, 1929, the Times headlined, "Federal Advisory Council Mystery
__________________________
89 Clarence W.
Barron, They Told Barron, Harpers, New York, 1930, p. 353
Meeting in Washington. Resolutions were adopted by the council and
transmitted to the board, but their purpose was closely guarded. An
atmosphere of deep mystery was thrown about the proceedings both by the
board and the council. Every effort was made to guard the proceedings of
this extraordinary session. Evasive replies were given to newspaper
correspondents."
Only the innermost council of "The London Connection" knew that it had
been decided at this "mystery meeting" to bring down the curtain on the
greatest speculative boom in American history. Those in the know began to
sell off all speculative stocks and put their money in government bonds.
Those who were not privy to this secret information, and they included
some of the wealthiest men in America, continued to hold their speculative
stocks and lost everything they had.
In FDR, My Exploited Father-in-Law, Col. Curtis B. Dall, who was a
broker on Wall Street at that time, writes of the Crash, "Actually it was
the calculated ‘shearing’ of the public by the World Money-Powers,
triggered by the planned sudden shortage of the supply of call money in
the New York money market."90 Overnight, the
Federal Reserve System had raised the call rate to twenty percent. Unable
to meet this rate, the speculators’ only alternative was to jump out of
windows.
The New York Federal Reserve Bank rate, which dictated the national
interest rate, went to six percent on November 1, 1929. After the
investors had been bankrupted, it dropped to one and one-half percent on
May 8, 1931. Congressman Wright Patman in "A Primer On Money", says that
the money supply decreased by eight billion dollars from 1929 to 1933,
causing 11,630 banks of the total of 26,401 in the United States to go
bankrupt and close their doors.
The Federal Reserve Board had already warned the stockholders of the
Federal Reserve Banks to get out of the Market, on February 6, 1929, but
it had not bothered to say anything to the rest of the people. Nobody knew
what was going on except the Wall Street bankers who were running the
show. Gold movements were completely unreliable. The Quarterly Journal of
Economics noted that:
"The question has been raised, not only in this country, but in several
European countries, as to whether customs statistics record with accuracy
the movements of precious metals, and, when
investigation has been made, confidence in such
figures has been weakened rather than strengthened. Any movement between
France and England, for instance, should be recorded in each
country, but such comparison shows an average
yearly discrepancy of fifty million francs for France
and eighty-five million francs for England. These enormous
discrepancies are not accounted for."
The Right Honorable Reginald McKenna stated that:
__________________________
90 Col. Curtis B. Dall, F.D.R., My
Exploited Father-in-Law, Liberty Lobby, Wash., D.C. 1970
"Study of the relations between changes in gold stock and movement in
price levels shows what should be very obvious,
but is by no means recognized, that the gold standard is in no sense
automatic in operation. The gold standard can be, and is, usefully
managed and controlled for the benefit of a
small group of international traders."
In August 1929, the Federal Reserve Board raised the rate to six
percent. The Bank of England in the next month raised its rate from five
and one-half percent to six and one-half percent. Dr. Friday in the
September, 1929, issue of Review of Reviews, could find no reason for the
Board’s action:
"The Federal Reserve statement for August 7, 1929, shows that signs of
inadequacy for autumn requirements do not exist.
Gold resources are considerably more than the previous year, and gold
continues to move in, to the financial embarrassment of Germany and
England. The reasons for the Board’s action must
be sought elsewhere. The public has been given only the hint that ‘This
problem has presented difficulties because of certain peculiar
conditions’. Every reason which Governor Young
advanced for lowering the bank rate last year exists now. Increasing the
rate means that not only is there danger of
drawing gold from abroad, but imports of the yellow metal
have been in progress for the last four months. To do anything to
accentuate this is to take the responsibility
for bringing on a world-wide credit deflation."
Thus we find that not only was the Federal Reserve System responsible
for the First World War, which it made possible by enabling the United
States to finance the Allies, but its policies brought on the world-wide
depression of 1929-31. Governor Adolph C. Miller stated at the Senate
Investigation of the Federal Reserve Board in 1931 that:
"If we had had no Federal Reserve System, I do not think we would have
had as bad a speculative situation as we had, to
begin with."
Carter Glass replied, "You have made it clear that the Federal Reserve
Board provided a terrific credit expansion by these open market
transactions."
Emmanuel Goldenweiser said, "In 1928-29 the Federal Board was engaged
in an attempt to restrain the rapid increase in security loans and in
stock market speculation. The continuity of this policy of restraint,
however, was interrupted by reduction in bill rates in the autumn of 1928
and the summer of 1929."
Both J.P. Morgan and Kuhn, Loeb Co. had "preferred lists" of men to
whom they sent advance announcements of profitable stocks. The men on
these preferred lists were allowed to purchase these stocks at cost, that
is, anywhere from 2 to 15 points a share less than they were sold to the
public. The men on these lists were fellow bankers, prominent
industrialists, powerful city politicians, national Committeemen of the
Republican and Democratic Parties, and rulers of foreign countries. The
men on these lists were notified of the coming crash, and sold all but
so-called gilt-edged stocks, General Motors, Dupont, etc. The prices on
these stocks also sank to record lows, but they came up soon afterwards.
How the big bankers operated in 1929 is revealed
by a Newsweek story on May 30, 1936, when a Roosevelt appointee, Ralph W.
Morrison, resigned from the Federal Reserve Board:
"The consensus of opinion is that the Federal Reserve Board has lost an
able man. He sold his Texas utilities stock to
Insull for ten million dollars, and in 1929 called a meeting and ordered
his banks to close out all security loans by September 1. As a
result, they rode through the depression with
flying colors."
Predictably enough, all of the big bankers rode through the depression
"with flying colors." The people who suffered were the workers and farmers
who had invested their money in get-rich stocks, after the President of
the United States, Calvin Coolidge, and the Secretary of the Treasury,
Andrew Mellon, had persuaded them to do it.
There had been some warnings of the approaching crash in England, which
American newspapers never saw. The London Statist on May 25, 1929 said:
"The banking authorities in the United States apparently want a
business panic to curb speculation."
The London Economist on May 11, 1929, said:
"The events of the past year have seen the beginnings of a new
technique, which, if maintained and developed,
may succeed in ‘rationing the speculator without injuring the trader.’"
Governor Charles S. Hamlin quoted this statement at the Senate hearings
in 1931 and said, in corroboration of it:
"That was the feeling of certain members of the Board, to remove
Federal Reserve credit from the speculator
without injuring the trader."
Governor Hamlin did not bother to point out that the "speculators" he
was out to break were the school-teachers and small town merchants who had
put their savings into the stock market, or that the "traders" he was
trying to protect were the big Wall Street operators, Bernard Baruch and
Paul Warburg.
When the Federal Reserve Bank of New York raised its rate to six
percent on August 9, 1929, market conditions began which culminated in
tremendous selling orders from October 24 into November, which wiped out a
hundred and sixty billion dollars worth of security values. That was a
hundred and sixty billions which the American citizens had one month and
did not have the next. Some idea of the calamity may be had if we remember
that our enormous outlay of money and goods in the Second World War
amounted to not much more than two hundred billions of dollars, and a
great deal of that remained as negotiable securities in the national debt.
The stock market crash is the greatest misfortune which the United States
has ever suffered.
The Academy of Political Science of Columbia University in its annual
meeting in January, 1930, held a post-mortem on the Crash of 1929.
Vice-President Paul Warburg was to have presided, and Director Ogden Mills
was to have played an important part in the discussion. However, these two
gentlemen did not show up. Professor Oliver M.W. Sprague of Harvard
University remarked of the crash:
"We have here a beautiful laboratory case of the stock market’s
dropping apparently from its own weight."
It was pointed out that there was no exhaustion of credit, as in 1893,
nor any currency famine, as in the Panic of 1907, when clearing-house
certificates were resorted to, nor a collapse of commodity prices, as in
1920. What then, had caused the crash? The people had purchased stocks at
high prices and expected the prices to continue to rise. The prices had to
come down, and they did. It was obvious to the economists and bankers
gathered over their brandy and cigars at the Hotel Astor that the people
were at fault. Certainly the people had made a mistake in buying
over-priced securities, but they had been talked into it by every leading
citizen from the President of the United States on down. Every magazine of
national circulation, every big newspaper, and every prominent banker,
economist, and politician, had joined in the big confidence game of urging
people to buy those over-priced securities. When the Federal Reserve Bank
of New York raised its rate to six percent, in August 1929, people began
to get out of the market, and it turned into a panic which drove the
prices of securities down far below their natural levels. As in previous
panics, this enabled both Wall Street and foreign operators in the know to
pick up "blue-chip" and gilt-edged" securities for a fraction of their
real value.
The Crash of 1929 also saw the formation of giant holding companies
which picked up these cheap bonds and securities, such as the Marine
Midland Corporation, the Lehman Corporation, and the Equity Corporation.
In 1929 J.P. Morgan Company organized the giant food trust, Standard
Brands. There was an unequaled opportunity for trust operators to enlarge
and consolidate their holdings.
Emmanuel Goldenweiser, director of research for the Federal Reserve
System, said, in 1947:
"It is clear in retrospect that the Board should have ignored the
speculative expansion and allowed it to
collapse of its own weight."
This admission of error eighteen years after the event was small
comfort to the people who lost their savings in the Crash.
The Wall Street Crash of 1929 was the beginning of a world-wide credit
deflation which lasted through 1932, and from which the Western
democracies did not recover until they began to rearm for the Second World
War. During this depression, the trust operators achieved further control
by their backing of three international swindlers, The Van Sweringen
brothers, Samuel Insull, and Ivar Kreuger. These men pyramided billions of
dollars worth of securities to fantastic heights. The bankers who promoted
them and floated their stock issue could have stopped them at any
time, by calling loans of less than a million dollars, but they let these
men go on until they had incorporated many industrial and financial
properties into holding companies, which the banks then took over for
nothing. Insull piled up public utility holdings throughout the Middle
West, which the banks got for a fraction of their worth. Ivar Kreuger was
backed by Lee Higginson Company, supposedly one of the nation’s most
reputable banking houses. The Saturday Evening Post called him "more than
a financial titan", and the English review Fortnightly said, in an article
written December 1931, under the title, "A Chapter in Constructive
Finance": "It is as a financial irrigator that Kreuger has become of such
vital importance to Europe."*
"Financial irrigator" we may remember, was the title bestowed upon
Jacob Schiff by Newsweek Magazine, when it described how Schiff had bought
up American railroads with Rothschild’s money.
The New Republic remarked on January 25th, 1933, when it commented on
the fact that Lee Higginson Company had handled Kreuger and Toll
Securities on the American market:
"Three-quarters of a billion dollars was made away with. Who was able
to dictate to the French police to keep secret
the news of this extremely important suicide for some hours, during which
somebody sold Kreuger securities in large amounts, thus getting out
of the market before the debacle?"
The Federal Reserve Board could have checked the enormous credit
expansion of Insull and Kreuger by investigating the security on which
their loans were being made, but the Governors never made any examination
of the activities of these men.
The modern bank with the credit facilities it affords, gives an
opportunity which had not previously existed for such operators as Kreuger
to make an appearance of abundant capital by the aid of borrowed capital.
This enables the speculator to buy securities with securities. The only
limit to the amount he can corner is the amount to which the banks will
back him, and, if a speculator is being promoted by a reputable banking
house, as Kreuger was promoted by Lee Higginson Company, the only way he
could be stopped would be by an investigation of his actual financial
resources, which in Kreuger’s case would have proved to be nil.
The leader of the American people during the Crash of 1929 and the
subsequent depression was Herbert Hoover. After the first break of the
__________________________
* NOTE: Ivar Kreuger,
we may recall, was occasionally the personal guest of his old friend,
President Herbert Hoover, at the White House. Hoover seems to have
maintained a cordial relationship with many of the most prominent
swindlers of the twentieth century, including his partner, Emile Francqui.
The receivership of the billion dollar Kreuger Fraud was handled by Samuel
Untermeyer, former counsel for Pujo Committee hearings.
market (the five billion dollars in security values which disappeared
on October 24, 1929) President Hoover said:
"The fundamental business of the country, that is, production and
distribution of commodities, is on a sound and
prosperous basis."
His Secretary of the Treasury, Andrew Mellon, stated on December 25,
1929, that:
"The Government’s business is in sound condition."
His own business, the Aluminum Company of America, apparently was not
doing so well, for he had reduced the wages of all employees by ten
percent.
The New York Times reported on April 7, 1931, "Montagu Norman, Governor
of the Bank of England, conferred with the Federal Reserve Board here
today. Mellon, Meyer, and George L. Harrison, Governor of the Federal
Reserve Bank of New York, were present."
The London Connection had sent Norman over this time to ensure that the
Great Depression was proceeding according to schedule. Congressman Louis
McFadden had complained, as reported in The New York Times, July 4, 1930,
"Commodity prices are being reduced to 1913 levels. Wages are being
reduced by the labor surplus of four million unemployed. The Morgan
control of the Federal Reserve System is exercised through control of the
Federal Reserve Bank of New York, the mediocre representation and
acquiescence of the Federal Reserve Board in Washington." As the
depression deepened, the trust’s lock on the American economy
strengthened, but no finger was pointed at the parties who were
controlling the system.
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