Pages

17 September 2010

New Deal u praksi

Fantastičan članak Georga Willa počinje ovako:

The crime scene at 138 Griffith St. has changed in 76 years. Today it is a barber shop. In 1934, it was a tailoring and cleaning establishment owned and run by Jacob Maged, 49.

With his responsibilities as a father of four, Maged should have shunned a life of crime. Instead, he advertised his criminal activity with a placard in his shop window, promising to press men's suits for 35 cents. This he did, even though President Franklin Roosevelt's New Dealers, who knew an amazing number of things -- his economic aides were not called a "Brains Trust" for nothing -- knew that the proper price for pressing a man's suit was 40 cents.

Neke Ruzveltove politike danas deluju suludo bez obzira na vaše ideološko opredeljenje -- namerna kartelizacija ekonomije, naredbe o obaveznom podizanju cena ili pokolj svinja radi podizanja cene mesa (mada ovo poslednje liči na Obamin cash-for-clunkers program) -- ali i dalje se perpetuira mit o New Dealu i njemu kao spasiocu ekonomije. To je čovek kome je Kejns, današnji simbol intervencionizma, pisao pisma da mu kaže da prestane da se meša u ekonomiju i ostavi biznis na miru. Ovaj članak je o jednom tipičnom slučaju iz tog vremena, krojaču koji je završio u zatvoru jer je jeftino peglao odela.

1 comment:

  1. Šumpeter je o New Deal-u pisao kao o napadu na sistem od kojeg se SAD neće nikada oporaviti.

    ReplyDelete

Da biste komentarisali potrebno je da imate Google ili OpenID nalog. Budući da otvaranje novog naloga ne zahteva više od 2 minuta, a kad ga jednom otvorite ostaje zauvek, smatramo da to nije velika prepreka.

Napominjemo da će uvredljivi komentari biti obrisani.