Book contents
- Frontmatter
- CHAPTER I European trade policy, 1815–1914
- CHAPTER II Commercial policy between the wars
- CHAPTER III International financial policy and the gold standard, 1870–1914
- CHAPTER IV The gold standard and national financial policies, 1919–39
- CHAPTER V Taxation and public finance: Britain, France, and Germany
- CHAPTER VI State policy towards labour and labour organizations, 1830–1939: Anglo-American union movements
- CHAPTER VII Labour and the state on the continent, 1800–1939
- CHAPTER VIII British public policy, 1776–1939
- CHAPTER IX American economic policy, 1865–1939
- CHAPTER X Economic and social policy in France
- CHAPTER XI German economic and social policy, 1815–1939
- CHAPTER XII Economic policy and economic development in Austria–Hungary, 1867–1913
- CHAPTER XIII East-central and south-east Europe, 1919–39
- CHAPTER XIV Economic and social policy in the USSR, 1917–41
- CHAPTER XV Economic and social policy in Sweden, 1850–1939
- CHAPTER XVI Aspects of economic and social policy in Japan, 1868–1945
- Bibliographies
- References
CHAPTER IX - American economic policy, 1865–1939
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2008
- Frontmatter
- CHAPTER I European trade policy, 1815–1914
- CHAPTER II Commercial policy between the wars
- CHAPTER III International financial policy and the gold standard, 1870–1914
- CHAPTER IV The gold standard and national financial policies, 1919–39
- CHAPTER V Taxation and public finance: Britain, France, and Germany
- CHAPTER VI State policy towards labour and labour organizations, 1830–1939: Anglo-American union movements
- CHAPTER VII Labour and the state on the continent, 1800–1939
- CHAPTER VIII British public policy, 1776–1939
- CHAPTER IX American economic policy, 1865–1939
- CHAPTER X Economic and social policy in France
- CHAPTER XI German economic and social policy, 1815–1939
- CHAPTER XII Economic policy and economic development in Austria–Hungary, 1867–1913
- CHAPTER XIII East-central and south-east Europe, 1919–39
- CHAPTER XIV Economic and social policy in the USSR, 1917–41
- CHAPTER XV Economic and social policy in Sweden, 1850–1939
- CHAPTER XVI Aspects of economic and social policy in Japan, 1868–1945
- Bibliographies
- References
Summary
The general character of American economic policy
‘Laissez-faire’ and the welfare state
Many historians have said that the whole history of American economic policy is a movement from laissez-faire to the welfare state or alternatively from capitalism to a mixed economy, the turn having been briskly executed by the New Deal between 1933 and 1939. As the raw material for this history consists of a mass of evidence, overabundant yet fragmentary, much of it dubious and more contradictory, it is no wonder that historians try to extract from it a compact digestible capsule. But the necessary work of distillation can go too far, as it has in this instance.
The critical terms used in the common summary of American economic policy are misleading because they were alien to American experience. ‘Capitalism’ and ‘laissez-faire’ do not appear in the Constitution of the United States, nor do any even remote synonyms, contrary to the suggestion by Charles Beard and others that the Constitution was chiefly intended to guarantee a capitalist economic order. It is not surprising, in any event, that those particular terms are absent from the Constitution. Capitalism, as the name for one kind of economic order, was not invented until the middle of the nineteenth century. Laissez-faire, to be sure, was available for use by the founders of American economic policy, but there was no strong reason why Americans should reach out for a French term, or that French term, when Adam Smith had supplied a perfectly good English one, ‘the system of natural liberty’, to go with the economic policy worked out in The Wealth of Nations, published, as it happened, in the same year as the Declaration of Independence.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1989