Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-ndw9j Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-07T21:00:08.174Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Secretary Hoover and the Emergence of Macroeconomic Management

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 June 2012

Evan B. Metcalf
Affiliation:
Assistant Professor of Economics, Johnson State College

Abstract

This study describes the 1920s movement (spearheaded by Herbert Hoover) to reduce unemployment by reducing fluctuations in business production and investment. Although the efforts had very limited success, they anticipated later attempts to manage prosperity for the economy as a whole.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The President and Fellows of Harvard College 1975

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Donald Winch also places the emergence of similar “demands for a conscious system of state economic management” in the U.K. in the 1920s. Winch, , Economics and Policy (New York, 1969), esp. 17, 7071Google Scholar.

2 Herbert Hoover, Address to President's Conference on Unemployment (PCU), Report (Washington, 1921), 34Google Scholar; cf. Hoover, , “A Plea for Cooperation,” American Federationist, XXVIII (January, 1921), 36Google Scholar.

3 In the nine years between 1908 and 1916, the unemployment rate fell below 5 percent in only two years. See Baran, Paul and Sweezy, Paul, Monopoly Capital (New York, 1966), 234Google Scholar; Lebergott, Stanley, Manpower in Economic Growth (New York, 1964), 169171Google Scholar.

Andrews, John B., “A Practical Program for the Prevention of Unemployment in America,” American Labor Legislation Review (ALLR), V (June, 1915), 173194Google Scholar, esp. 184–189; see also Regularization of Industry,” ALLR, V (November, 1915), 584Google Scholar; Commons, John R., “Investigation and Administration,” in Commons, Labor and Administration (New York, 1913), esp. 411Google Scholar. For additional background on prewar unemployment reform and regularization, see Metcalf, Evan B., “Economic Stabilization by American Business in the Twentieth Century” (Ph.D. dissertation, University of Wisconsin, Madison, 1972)Google Scholar, Ch. I; Yellowitz, Irwin, “The Origins of Unemployment Reform in the United States,” Labor History, IX (Fall, 1968), 338360CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Nelson, Daniel, Unemployment Insurance: The American Experience, 1915–1935 (Madison, Wise, 1969)Google Scholar, Ch. I.

4 See Creamer, Daniel et al. , Capital in Manufacturing and Mining (Princeton, 1960), 50–51, 265, 268CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Melman, Seymour, “The Rise of Administrative Overhead in the Manufacturing Industries of the United States, 1899–1947,” Oxford Economic Papers, n.s., III (February, 1951), 66Google Scholar; Alexander, Magnus W., “The Cost of Labor Turnover,” in Proceedings of Employment Managers' Conference, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Bulletin No. 227 (Washington, October, 1917), 21Google Scholar; Oi, Walter Y., “Labor as a Quasi-Fixed Factor,” Journal of Political Economy, LXX (December, 1962), 539542Google Scholar. See Metcalf, “Economic Stabilization,” Chs. II–III, for additional evidence.

5 See, e.g., Dennison, Henry S., “Irregular Employment, Costs and Causes,” American Society of Mechanical Engineers Journal, XXXVII (May, 1915), 280281Google Scholar; Reilly, Phillip J., “The Work of the Employment Department of Dennison Manufacturing Company. Framingham, Massachusetts,” Annals. LXV (May, 1916), 8793Google Scholar; Dennison, H. S., “The Applied Technique of Stabilization,” in Edie, Lionel D., ed., The Stabilization of Business (New York, 1923), 367396Google Scholar.

6 Louis D. Brandeis to Paul U. Kellogg, July 31, 1918, quoted in Mason, Alpheus T., Brandeis: A Free Man's Life (New York, 1946), 586Google Scholar. See also, e.g., Brandeis, “Coping with Irregular Employment: A Memorandum [1911],” journal of the Society for the Advancement of Management, IV (May, 1939), 58Google Scholar.

7 Minutes of the Executive Board of the American Engineering Council, November 20, 1920, American Engineering Council (AEC) — General file, Pre-1921 Papers, Herbert Hoover Papers, Herbert Hoover Presidential Library, West Branch, Iowa (henceforth cited as HHP). See also Layton, Edwin T. Jr, The Revolt of the Engineers: Social Responsibility and the Engineering Profession (Cleveland, 1971)Google Scholar, esp. Ch. 8; and Haber, Samuel, Efficiency and Uplift: Scientific Management in the Progressive Era, 1890–1920 (Chicago, 1964)Google Scholar.

8 Hoover to Dr. V. Verundac, April 12, 1926, Industrial Government file, Commerce Official Papers (COP), HHP; Herbert Hoover, “Industrial Waste,” Address before Executive Board of the American Engineering Council, February 14, 1921, in Bulletin of the Taylor Society (BTS), VI (April, 1921), 71Google Scholar; E. E. Hunt to Ordway Tead, January 23, 1922, Unemployment File (UF) — McGraw-Hill Book Co., COP, HHP.

9 Federated American Engineering Societies (FAES), Waste in Industry (New York, 1921), 16Google Scholar; Hoover, “Industrial Waste,” 78–79; Hunt memo to Hoover, “A.E.C. Committee Meeting,” December 3, 1920, AEC — General file, Pre-1921 Papers, HHP; Hunt to Ernest Greenwood, December 21, 1920, Committee on Elimination of Waste (CEW) — G file, Pre-1921 Papers, HHP. See also Robert B. Wolf to Samuel Gompers, March 22, 1921, CEW — Finance file, Pre-1921 Papers, HHP; Cooke, Morris L., “Labor, Management, and Production — Editor's Preface,” Annals, XCI (September, 1920), vii–ixGoogle Scholar; Nadworny, Milton J., Scientific Management and the Unions, 1900–1932 (Cambridge, Mass., 1955)Google Scholar.

10 See FAES, Waste in Industry, 12–13, 98, 108–111, 133, 164; see also Cooke, Morris L., “Unemployment within Employment,” American Federationist, XXVI (November, 1919), 10341036Google Scholar.

11 Chandler, Alfred D. Jr., Strategy and Structure: Chapters in the History of the Industrial Enterprise (Cambridge, Mass., 1962), 383Google Scholar, cf. 383–396 passim; FAES, Waste in Industry, 25, 45, 149, 219. Cf. Crockett, Charles B., Percy, Charles E., and Urquhart, John A., “Discussion of Coordination of Sales with Scientific Production,” BTS, V (October, 1920), 212–214, 218Google Scholar.

12 E. E. Hunt to Ordway Tead, January 23, 1922, UF — McGraw-Hill Book Co., COP, HHP; FAES, Waste in Industry, v, vii; see also Layton, Revolt of the Engineers, Ch. 9.

13 Hoover to James H. Brookmire, February 9, 1925, UF — Business Cycles, COP, HHP.

14 Chamber of Commerece of the U.S., “Resolution to CongressNation's Business, III (February 15, 1915), 33Google Scholar; Mitchell, Wesley C., Business Cycles (Berkeley, Cal., 1913), 596Google Scholar; Hoover, “Industrial Waste,” 78; FAES, Waste in Industry, 25, 30, 31, 33, 274. See also Hull, George, Industrial Depressions (New York, 1911) 30–40, 218Google Scholar.

15 Frederick, J. G., Business Research and Statistics (New York, 1920), 295, cf. 296 298, 325Google Scholar; Rorty, M. C. [chairman], “A Continuous Census of Production: A Round Table Discussion,” Journal of the American Statistical Association (JASA), XVII (March, 1920), 6775Google Scholar; Acting Solicitor memo to Secretary of Commerce William Redfield, January 9, 1919, File 76850, Record Group (RG) 40; Records of the Department of Commerce, National Archives (NA).

16 Stone, N. I., “The Beginnings of the National Bureau of Economic Research: A Tribute to the Memory of Its Founder, Malcolm C. Rorty,” in The National Bureau's First Quarter Century; Twenty-Fifth Annual Report, ed. by Mitchell, W. C. (New York, 1945), 510Google Scholar; Heaton, Herbert, Scholar in Action: E. F. Gay (Cambridge, 1952)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Eakins, David, “The Development of Corporate Liberal Policy Research in the United States, 1885–1965” (Ph.D. dissertation, University of Wisconsin, Madison, 1966), 107–111, 135, 140Google Scholar.

17 Hoover to W. S. Rossiter, April 14, 1921, Commerce — Bureau of Census — Advisory Committee to the Director file, COP, HHP; Hoover to W. C. Mitchell, March 16, 1921, ibid.; M. C. Brock in advertising proof for Survey of Current Business, c. December 24, 1921, File 76850/1, part 2, RG 40, NA. Cf. New York Times (NYT), March 15, 1921, 10; Robert Brookings to A. W. Shaw, May 13, 1921, Brookings file, COP, HHP; Mitchell, Lucy S., Two Lives: The Story of Wesley Clair Mitchell and Myself (New York, 1953), 364Google Scholar; Joint Committee of the American Statistical and the American Economic Associations, “Final Report … to the Director of the Census, 1922,” JASA, XVIII (March, 1923), 644Google Scholar.

18 Hoover address to Chamber of Commerce, NYT, May 9, 1923; Hoover address to PCU, Report, 29; cf. Hoover, “A Plea for Cooperation,” 37; Hoover, American Individualism (Garden City, N.Y., 1922)Google Scholar. See also Williams, William Appleman, The Contours of American History (Chicago, 1961), 425438Google Scholar; Peri E. Arnold, “Herbert Hoover and the Continuity of American Public Policy,” Public Policy (Fall, 1972), 529–540, for a discussion of Hoover's “planning” which fails to note its critical macroeconomic perspective.

19 Roosevelt, Franklin D., “The Task Ahead for Building,” Nation's Business, XI (January, 1923), 3537Google Scholar; Fusfeld, Daniel R., The Economic Thought of Franklin D. Roosevelt and the Origins of the New Deal (New York, 1954), 101106Google Scholar; Business Conditions in the U.S.,” Federal Reserve Bulletin, IX (June, 1923), 658Google Scholar.

20 See F. M. Feiker to Edward S. Babcox, June 1, 1921, File 76850/1, part 1, RG 40, NA; Feiker to A. L. Ford, June 2, 1921, ibid.; Feiker to William J. Matthews, August 25, 1921, ibid.; Walker S. Buel, “Hoover Initiates Business Confabs,” Cleveland Plain Dealer, May 25, 1921, clipping in ibid.; NYT, June 3, 1921, p. 27; February 16, 1922. Cf. Lane, Mortimer B., “The Statistical Work of the Federal Government in Relation to Price Stabilization,” Annals, vol. 139 (September, 1928), 65Google Scholar; U.S. Federal Trade Commission, Open Price Trade Associations (Sen. Doc. No. 226, 70th Cong., 2nd Sess., 1929); Carrott, M. Browning, “The Supreme Court and American Trade Associations, 1921–1925,” Business History Review, XLIV (Autumn, 1970), 320338CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Himmelberg, Robert F., “Relaxation of the Federal Anti-Trust Policy as a Goal of the Business Community During the Period 1918–1933” (Ph.D. dissertation, Pennsylvania State University, 1963), 92–108, 116 124Google Scholar.

21 PCU, Committee on Unemployment and Business Cycles, Business Cycles and Unemployment (BC&U) (New York, 1923), xviGoogle Scholar; see “Production Statistics,” Memorandum for the Secretary of Commerce from the Advisory Committee on the Census, May 7, 1921, Commerce — Bureau of the Census — Advisory Committee to the Director file, COP, HHP; Hoover, , “What Government Can Do,” Nation's Business, IX (June, 1921), 12Google Scholar; NYT, June 11, 1921, p. 6.

22 “Notes for a History of the President's Unemployment Conference,” n.d., Unemployment Conference — Plans and Purposes file, COP, HHP; see also Harding to Hoover, August 24, 1921, UF — President, COP, HHP; Lebergott, Manpower in Economic Growth, 512.

23 Hunt, E. E., “Unemployment and the Business Cycle,” JASA, XVIII (March, 1922), 111Google Scholar; Woods, Arthur, “The Unemployment Emergency,” The North American Review, CCXV (April, 1922), 450, 452Google Scholar.

24 Hoover in PCU, Report, 34; Otto T. Mallery memo to E. E. Hunt, “Unemployment in the Family,” March 20, 1930, File 81560/3, RG 40, NA. Cf. Horace B. Drory to Hunt, September 3, 1921, UF — FAES, COP, HHP; Unemployment Prevention Program of the Association for Labor Legislation,” ALLR, XIII (March, 1923), 69Google Scholar; Hoover to John B. Andrews, September 8, 1921, UF — Advisory Committee — Andrews, COP, HHP; but see Hunt to Otto T. Mallery, August 18, 1922, UF — Mallery, COP, HHP. For a detailed history of the Unemployment Conference, see Grin, Carolyn, “The Unemployment Conference of 1921: An Experiment in National Cooperative Planning,” Mid-America, LV (April, 1973), 83107Google Scholar; on the continuity of Hoover with the Progressives, see also Glad, Paul W., “Progressives and the Business Culture of the 1920's,” Journal of American History, LIII (June, 1966), 175189Google Scholar.

25 PCU, Report, 17, 18, 63–65; Activities of Mayors' Unemployment Committees,” Monthly Labor Review, XIII (December, 1921)Google Scholar; Grin, “Unemployment Conference,” 92–97. On war analogy, see e.g., Chenery, William, “Mr. Hoover's Hand,” Survey, XLVII (October 22, 1921), 107Google Scholar; “Cycle of Unemployment” (editorial), NYT, April 3, 1922. p. 14.

26 PCU, Report, 65, 134; Chenery, William, “Unemployment at Washington,” Surrey, XLVII (October 8, 1921), 42Google Scholar; cf. Dickinson, Roy, “Lower Prices and Better Selling as the Key to Normal Times,” Printers' Ink, CXVII (October 6, 1921), 34Google Scholar; “Report of Advisory Committee to Unemployment Conference,” 11, Unemployment Statistics (2) file, COP, HHP; Advisory Committee, “Emergency Measures Adopted by Employers to Mitigate Unemployment Due to the Present Situation,” 10–12, UF — Reports of Committees to Unemployment Conference (1), COP, HHP; NYT, October 12, 1921, 1; October 14, 1921, 1.

27 PCU, Report, 159–161; Hoover, Herbert, The Memoirs of Herbert Hoover, Vol. 2: The Cabinet and the Presidency, 1920–1933 (New York, 1952), 44Google Scholar; PCU, Seasonal Operation in the Construction Industries (New York, 1924)Google Scholar; U.S. Coal Commission, Report (Sen. Doc. 195, 68th Cong., 2nd Sess., 1925), ix; E. E. Hunt to William M. Leiserson, November 25, 1921, W. M. Leiserson Papers, State Historical Society of Wisconsin, Madison; Hunt to E. F. Gay, January 25, 1922, UF — Miscellaneous — Gay, COP, HHP.

28 Hoover to Edgar Rickard, November 14, 1921, Unemployment Conference — PCU (2) file, COP, HHP; cf. Julius H. Barnes to Edgar Rickard, October 12, 1921, ibid. For a general discussion of Hoover's use of research committees, see Karl, Barry D., “Presidential Planning and Social Science Research: Mr. Hoover's Experts,” Perspectives in American History, III (1969), 347409Google Scholar.

29 PCU, Business Cycles and Unemployment; cf. Hunt to W. C. Mitchell, October 18, 1921, UF — Mitchell (NBER) (1), COP, HHP; Mitchell to Hunt, February 28, 1922. ibid.

30 See “Minutes of Meeting for Business Cycle Committee and Staff,” March 3, 1922, UF — NBER, COP, HHP; Hunt to Mitchell, August 10, 1922, UF — Mitchell (NBER) (2), COP, HHP; Minutes of Meeting of Economists with Members of Committee on Business Cycles, October 2, 1922, UF — Chicago Meeting, COP, HHP; and Meeting of Economists, December 28, 1922, ibid., for a partial record of the committee's deliberations.

31 BC&U, xxiv–xxvi; cf. Mitchell, Wesley C., “The Crisis of 1920 and the Problem of Controlling Business Cycles,” American Economic Review, Supplement, XII (March, 1922), 2123Google Scholar; U.S. Department of Commerce, Annual Report, 1922, 32; Otto T. Mallery, “The Long-Range Planning of Public Works,” in BC&U, Ch. XIV; Howenstine, E. Jay Jr., “Public Works Policy in the Twenties,” Social Research, XIII (December, 1946), 479500Google Scholar; Stein, Herbert, The Fiscal Revolution in America (Chicago, 1969)Google Scholar, Ch. 2.

32 BC&U, xxvii; Mitchell in Minutes of Meeting of Economists with Members of Committee on Business Cycles, October 2, 1922, UF — Chicago Meeting, COP, HHP.

33 Hoover to Edgar Rickard, November 18, 1921, Unemployment Conference — President's Conference on Unemployment (2), COP, HHP; see Hunt to Owen D. Young, February 13, 1922, UF — NBER, COP, HHP; Hoover to Young, May 14, 1923, Hoover Personal — O. D. Young file, Hoover Personal Papers, HHP; Hunt to Hoover, April 6, 1922, Hunt 1921–22 file, COP, HHP; Proceedings of “Business Cycle Meeting,” April 13, 1922, UF — 1922, COP, HHP; Woolley, Clarence, “Getting Customers to Buy Steadily,” System, XLIV (September, 1923), 297301Google Scholar; Young, Owen D., “Interpreting the Weather Signs of Business,” System, XLVI (September, 1924), 263–267, 338340Google Scholar.

34 See Economic Advisory Committee, “Permanent Preventive Measures,” 13, UF — Reports of Committees to Unemployment Conference (2), COP, HHP; PCU, Report, 162–163, 168–169; BC&U, 116–117, 174–199, 378–388; Feldman, H., The Regularization of Employment (New York, 1925)Google Scholar. See Metcalf, “Economic Stabilization,” 239–251, for further discussion of the regularization literature of the 1920s.

35 See Feldman, Regularization; Smith, Edwin S., Reducing Seasonal Unemployment (New York, 1931)Google Scholar; and New York Governor's Commission on Unemployment Problems, Less Unemployment Through Stabilization of Operations (Albany, 1931)Google Scholar, for most comprehensive collections of case studies; National Industrial Conference Board (NICB), Personnel Activities in American Business,” Studies in Personnel Policy, No. 20 (March, 1940), 23Google Scholar. See Metcalf, “Economic Stabilization,” 251–278, for further discussion of the extent of regularization.

36 See, e.g., Willis, H. Parker, “Ten Years' Experience in Business Statistics,” JASA, XIX (June, 1924), 206217CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Oswald Knauth, “Statistical Indexes of Business Conditions and Their Uses,” in BC&U, Ch. XX; Cox, Garfield V., “Forecasting, Business,” Encyclopaedia of the Social Sciences (New York, 1934), VI, 348353Google Scholar; Manufacturers' Research Association, “Report of Committee on Regularization of Industry,” January 18, 1926, File 42 — Regularization of Industry, Case 2, Manufacturers' Research Association Papers, Baker Library, Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration; Rogers, Clyde L. and Thayer, Jarvis M. Jr., “Economic and Statistical Research in Private Enterprise,” The Conference Board Economic Record, II (March 5, 1940), 6166Google Scholar.

37 See NBER, Income in the United States, Its Amount and Distribution, 1909–1919 (New York, 1921)Google Scholar; White, Charles P., “Industrial Forecasting,” Annals, vol. 139 (September, 1928), 116Google Scholar; Nathan, Robert R., “National Income Increased Four Billion Dollars in 1934,” Survey of Current Business, XV (August, 1935), 1618Google Scholar.

38 Hoover memo to Dr. Gries, Dr. Durand, et al., March 17, 1924, UF — 1923–1928, COP, HHP; Hunt memo to Hoover, September 15, 1927, UF — Business Cycles, COP, HHP; Hoover to F.P. Keppel (Carnegie Corp.), October 26, 1927, ibid.

39 President's Conference on Unemployment, Committee on Recent Economic Changes, Recent Economic Changes in the United States (New York, 1929), x, xx, xxi, 910Google Scholar.