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Published by EH.NET (February 2001)
Patrick D. Reagan, _Designing a New America: the Origins of New Deal
Planning, 1890-1943 _. University of Massachusetts Press, 1999. Pp.
xii + 362. ISBN 1-55849-230-5.
Reviewed for EH.NET by Jim Tomlinson, Brunel University, London.
This book provides a detailed account of the evolution of the
movement for national planning in the US between 1890 and 1943, when
Congress ended funding for the National Resources Planning Board.
Much of the account is woven around the careers and ideas of five key
participants: Frederic A. Delano, Charles E. Merriam, Wesley C.
Mitchell, Henry. S. Denison and Beardsley Ruml. During the 1920s and
1930s, these five, Patrick Reagan argues, evolved a distinctive
version of planning, sharply contrasted with the plans of the
contemporary authoritarian states of Europe and Japan. The impetus
for this American form of planning came partly from the experience of
state intervention to support the American participation in the First
World War and partly from the Hoover-led attempts to deal with the
unemployment problem of the immediate post-war years. New Deal
planning is seen as closely following these precedents, though
receiving new impetus from the great depression, and moving in a more
statist direction under the stimulus of Roosevelt's actions to
counteract the great depression.
The key characteristic of this planning was its attempt to find a way
between nineteenth-century liberalism, and especially its sharp
distinction between the public and private sectors, and twentieth
century collectivism. This third way embodied voluntary co-operation
between organised business and government (with a token role for
unions and others) guided by experts working in close co-operation
with political leaders. These experts would bring to bear the
knowledge created by the nascent social sciences, and in so doing
would prevent the economic and social breakdown which in so many
parts of the world was creating dictatorships of the right and left.
This version of planning was unambiguously elitist, excluded the
unorganised, and showed little concern for issues around the
distribution of income and wealth. Nevertheless, it provided the
foundations for much of the discussion of planning that became an
important element in post World War II politics, at least down to the
1960s.
The biographical approach to the evolution of planning proves an
effective way of bringing into focus both the convergence of concerns
and themes which underlay these ideas of planning, and the informal
networks which transformed the ideas into policy initiatives.
Equally, the author's aim to place planning in the mainstream of
inter-war American politics (rather than an 'extremist' response to
the great depression) is successfully attained. The contingencies of
history are also nicely brought out in the account of the abolition
of the NRPB, which was based on a combination of Congressional
manoeuvrings for power, absurd ideological posturing by Republicans,
and political maladroitness (and bad faith?) on the part of the
President.
The author is repetitive in his claims for American exceptionalism
with regard to planning. (Indeed there is rather a lot of repetition
even of minor points: we are told at least six times that Congress in
1943 mandated the sending of the NRPB records to the National
Archives). This claim for a peculiarly American version of planning
is sound where the contrast is made with authoritarian regimes like
the Soviet Union, Nazi Germany or Japan. But it is less persuasive if
the comparison is made with other democracies that faced economic and
social crisis in the 1920s and 1930s. In Britain, for example, as
Daniel Ritschel in his The Politics of Planning (Oxford, 1997) has
recently emphasised, the ideology of planning was widely embraced
across the political spectrum. Many of the ideas articulated at that
time had close affinity with the contemporary American version of
planning, though what was also striking in Britain was the wide
diversity of ideas that could come under that umbrella term. In this
comparative light America appears less unique, more in a common mould
of democracies where, many felt, 'planning' would provide a route to
economic stability which free market policies seemed no longer to
secure.
Jim Tomlinson is Professor of Economic History, and Head of
Department of Government, Brunel University, London. He has published
widely in the field of macro-economic policy, industrial development
and economic history, principally on Britain. His most recent
publication is _The Politics of Decline: Understanding Post-War
Britain_, Longmans 2000.
Copyright (c) 2001 by EH.Net and H-Net. All rights reserved. This
work may be copied for non-profit educational uses if proper credit
is given to the author and the list. For other permission, please
contact the EH.Net Administrator ([log in to unmask]; Telephone:
513-529-2850; Fax: 513-529-3308). Published by EH.Net (February
2001). All EH.Net reviews are archived at http://www.eh.net/BookReview
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