Herbert Hoover's Fiscal Policy Reform During The Great Depression

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Fiscal policy, the responsibility of government and congress, is enacted through changes in government spending and taxes. The question about how effectively fiscal policy promoted recovery during the great depression has been a point of discussion among economists for several decades.
The great depression began with collapse of the stock market in 1929. Herbert Hoover served as the President of United States from 1929-1933. The general belief before the great depression was that the peacetime budget should always be in surplus, so that the federal government can maintain its outstanding debt at a minimum. Before 1930, the only time the federal budget was in significant deficit was the war years. Hoover’s fiscal policy was centered on making sure that the government budget remained in surplus and he was a staunch advocate of balanced budget. Hoover increased government spending considerably by expanding existing programs like doubling federal highway spending and increasing the spending of Army Corps of Engineers by over 40 percent. Hoover dam also contributed a significant amount to public works spending. Congress nearly doubled real federal spending and ramped up federal lending through the Reconstruction Finance Corporation. Nominal federal expenditures were increased by greater than 50 percent from 3.1 billion in fiscal year 1929 to 4.6 billion in fiscal year 1933 (Figure 8).
Increased government spending resulted in falling tax revenues which resulted in federal budget running deficits for the first time since World War 1. This prompted Hoover to bring about a tax increase through the Revenue Act of 6 June 1932. It raised individual tax rates with the top rate increasing from 23.1 percent to 57 percent and raised co...

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... Hoover’s era, since US was maintaining Gold standard (fixed exchange rate), expansionary Fiscal policy would have had a large impact on the GDP. But, the fiscal policy was negligible relative to the size of the problem. The fiscal policy that was put in place was not sustained; the rise in deficit in 1934 was equal to the decline in deficit in 1935. The focus on maintaining a balanced budget should have been put on the back burner to help the economy recover faster.

The market crash of 1929 caused the overall wealth in households and businesses to drop drastically. This shifted the aggregate demand curve to the left from AD0 to AD1 (figure 10). Price level decreased which resulted in deflation and also aggregate output decreased. Fiscal policies that increase Government spending and decrease taxes should have been adopted to shift the AD curve to the right.

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