My first wish is to see this plague to mankind [war] banished from off the earth, and the sons and daughters of this world employed in more pleasing and innocent amusements, than in preparing implements and exercising them for the destruction of mankind. Rather than quarrel about territory, let the poor, the needy, and oppressed of the earth, and those who want land, resort to the fertile plains of our western country, the second land of promise, and there dwell in peace, fulfilling the first and great commandment.
—George Washington, 17851
From the beginning Americans have been anticipating and projecting a better future. From the beginning the Land of Democracy has been figured as the Land of Promise.
—Herbert Croly, 19092
At the Great Falls of the Passaic River in New Jersey, two dozen miles from New York City, a torrent rushes over the rocks and plunges with a thunderous roar to the river seventy-seven feet below. Thirteen thousand years ago during the last Ice Age, the Passaic River followed a different course. When the glacier that had covered much of North America melted, it deposited a moraine of boulders that formed a dam, blocking the river’s course. Diverted along the Watchung Mountains of New Jersey, the river gouged a new course, bursting through layers of two-hundred-million-year-old basalt to create the largest waterfall in North America south of Niagara Falls.
It was here, on July 10, 1778, during the American War of Independence, that General George Washington of the Continental Army chose to rest and dine. Relaxing with him that day were the marquis de Lafayette, the aristocratic young French volunteer who would return home to fight for liberal constitutionalism in the French Revolution, Colonel William McHenry, later to be secretary of war of the United States, and Washington’s young aide-de-camp, Alexander Hamilton.3 The contents of the picnic are recorded by history—ham, tongue, and biscuits—but no record remains of the conversation.
It is certain, however, that Hamilton was impressed by the natural power of the falls. As the first Treasury secretary of the United States during the administration of President George Washington, Hamilton chose the Great Falls of the Passaic as the site for the Society for Establishing Useful Manufactures (SUM), an industrial corporation chartered in 1791 by the New Jersey legislature and Governor William Paterson, after whom the new factory town on the company’s land would be named.4 The creation of the SUM followed the Report on Manufactures delivered to Congress in 1791, in which Hamilton called for a variety of federal policies to promote industry in the young United States.
Hamilton’s grandiose plans for the “National Manufactory” were not realized. But the SUM survived until 1945, when it sold its assets to the city of Paterson, by leasing its land to a number of increasingly sophisticated manufacturing concerns.5 To create a system of raceways diverting water from the river through mills, the society hired the French engineer and urban planner Pierre L’Enfant, who later planned the city of Washington, DC, only to replace him with Peter Colt, who used a simpler plan.6
With the water-power infrastructure in place, Paterson became a flourishing center of industrial production. The township was soon the site of a cotton mill (1794), a candlewick mill (1800), and a paper mill (1804).7 As the new railroads spread across the continent, Paterson became a center of steam-powered locomotive production, leading the industry by the 1850s.8
Hamilton, like Washington, was a champion of American manufacturing in part because of the difficulty experienced by the Continental Army during the American Revolution in obtaining adequate supplies. The tradition of US military support for the development of new technologies, including radio, atomic power, and computers, shaped the growth of Paterson from its earliest days. A deputy director of SUM, John Colt, perfected a nonmildewing cotton cloth that the navy used for the sails of all its ships in order to free itself from foreign suppliers.9 When Samuel Colt, a relative of Peter and John Colt, invented the revolver, he opened his company in Paterson and found indispensable customers in the Texas Rangers and the US Army, whose procurement orders helped bankroll the development of the new technology. In the 1870s, an Irish American inventor in Paterson, John Philip Holland, experimented with submarine technology.10 In 1890, the US Navy named its first commissioned submarine the USS Holland in his honor.11
By the end of the nineteenth century, when the town was the source of almost half of the silk in the United States, Paterson was known as “Silk City.” A strike by Paterson silk workers in 1913 attracted worldwide attention and the support of bohemian intellectuals like the journalist John Reed and Mabel Dodge Luhan, who sponsored an avant-garde pageant at Madison Square Garden to publicize the strike.12 The pageant was a success but the workers were crushed and Paterson and other northern textile centers lost out to competitors in the American South.
But once again, Paterson reinvented itself by taking advantage of technological innovation. Two of the transformative technologies of what historians call the second industrial revolution were electricity and aviation. In the 1900s, the SUM enlisted Thomas Edison and his company to design one of the world’s first hydroelectric power plants.13 The mills switched from old-fashioned waterpower to electricity from the plant, which opened in 1914 and still generates energy for Paterson today.
Soon the former Silk City became Aviation City, hosting the Wright Aeronautical Corporation, which was established by the inventors of the airplane, Orville and Wilbur Wright. Wright Aeronautical manufactured the custom-made engine that Charles Lindbergh used in his epochal solo flight across the Atlantic in 1927. The successor to Wright Aeronautical, the Curtiss-Wright Corporation, went on to play a major role in aircraft production during World War II, contributing to the Allied victory against the Axis powers in Europe and Asia.14
In the second half of the twentieth century, Paterson declined because of competition first from the low-wage American South and then from the state-sponsored industries of Asia and Europe. Symbolizing the rising importance of real estate and financial interests in the US economy, realtors sought to destroy much of the old industrial neighborhoods, which were plagued by dereliction and crime. The federal government, however, turned the Great Falls and their environs into a national park, reflecting another trend in deindustrializing America: nostalgic historic preservation. It remained to be seen whether the alternatives proposed for the once-great manufacturing city of Paterson, New Jersey—speculator-built condos and apartments or relic-filled museums of a lost industrial past?—represented local decline or a prophetic vision of a future American economy that had completely ceded high-value-added manufacturing to its military and economic rivals.
For generations, Paterson was what Detroit and Silicon Valley would be later: a dynamic center of enterprise and innovation that brought together investors, inventors, engineers, merchants, and a large and competent workforce. Hamilton’s vision of an industrial city, after initial failures and delays, ultimately was realized. So was his vision of an industrial America. The opposition of the planter oligarchy of the South, which culminated in the Civil War, delayed but did not prevent the emergence of the United States as the greatest economic power of the world by the 1870s. Despite competition from Europe and East Asia, including newly industrializing China, the United States maintained its economic primacy into the early twenty-first century, with the third largest population in the world, an economy accounting for a quarter of global gross domestic product (GDP), and the privilege of having the dollar serve as the global reserve currency. In a little more than two centuries, a nation of four million people, mostly farmers and slaves, inhabiting a miscellany of former British colonies along the Atlantic rim of North America had grown into an economic and military colossus with a continental territory inhabited by a population that was predicted to grow to as much as half a billion by 2050.
INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTIONS AND AMERICAN REPUBLICS
Beginning with the Austrian American economist Joseph Schumpeter in the 1920s and 1930s, many students of economic history have argued that technological innovation comes in bursts of change, followed by long periods in which the implications of the latest innovations are worked out. Some economic historians have distinguished as many as five major waves of technological change since the industrial era began. Many identify three, based on radically new “general purpose technologies”: the first industrial revolution of the late 1700s, based on the steam engine; the second industrial revolution of the late nineteenth century, based on electricity, automobiles, and science-based chemical industries; and the third industrial revolution of the mid- and late twentieth century, based on the computer.15
Students of American political history have argued that, despite the formal continuity of its political institutions, the United States has gone through two or three regimes or informal “republics.” In earlier works, I have made the case for three American republics, each originating in a prolonged crisis—the American Revolution and its aftermath, the Civil War and Reconstruction, and the Great Depression and World War II.16 It remains to be seen whether the global economic crisis that began in 2008 will mark the end of the Third American Republic and the gradual construction of a fourth republic by the 2020s or 2030s.
What is the connection, if any, between successive industrial revolutions and successive American republics? As many scholars have observed, there tends to be a time lag of a generation or two between the invention of a general-purpose technology and its widespread adoption in ways that revolutionize the economy and society. For example, the steam engine was developed in Britain roughly at the time of the American War of Independence of 1775 to 1783, but it was only in the 1830s that many American industries began using steam power and railroads and steamboats began reshaping society. Electricity, telephony, and the internal combustion engine were developed in the 1860s and 1870s, but these technologies of the second industrial revolution began to spread widely only in the early twentieth century and achieved their full potential only after 1945. Similarly, the groundwork for the information revolution was laid in the 1940s and 1950s, but widespread adoption of computer technology had to wait until the 1980s and 1990s and the full maturation of the information technology (IT) revolution may still be in the future.
This means that, while the invention phase of each industrial revolution has coincided roughly with the foundation of each American republic—in the 1770s and 1780s, the 1860s and 1870s, and the 1930s and 1940s, respectively—the disruptive deployment phase of the new technology has generally come midway through the seventy- to-eighty-year lifespan of each successive American republic. The result is a lag of several decades between technology-driven change in America’s economy and society and the adaptation to the change of America’s political and legal institutions.
To put it another way, each American republic has been destabilized by a wave of technology-driven change. The gap between a rapidly evolving society and an outmoded political order grows for several decades. Finally, during a war or depression or both, the outmoded political order crumbles and a new American republic is constructed, built on the ruins of its predecessor.
THE FIRST AMERICAN REPUBLIC
The First Republic of the United States was founded on water and undermined by steam. James Watt radically improved the steam engine around the time of the American Revolution, and delegates to the Constitutional Convention in 1787 witnessed a demonstration by John Fitch of a steam-powered boat in the Delaware River. But there is often a gap of a generation or two between the invention of a new technology and its widespread diffusion and adoption. So it was with the steam engine. From the 1790s until the 1830s, the energy sources in the United States that augmented human and animal power were still water and wind. Sailing ships transported people and cargo more easily than overland forms of transportation like horses, carriages, and wagons. The population crowded along the Atlantic coastline and rivers, up to the north-south “fall line” beyond which ships powered by the wind could no longer sail. The first great achievements of US transportation infrastructure building were canals like the transformative Erie Canal that linked the Atlantic at New York City with that inland sea, the Great Lakes. The first factories in the United States were mills powered by waterwheels. Most towns were small and limited by the distance that people could walk, while counties were often defined by the distance that a horse could travel in a day.
It was only in the 1830s and the 1840s that the first industrial revolution began to change the nature of production, travel, and commerce in America. Steam engines began to replace waterwheels to provide the motive power of mills. The age of canal building came to an end and railroads sprang up, linking cities, regions, and then, just after the Civil War, the Atlantic and the Pacific edges of what by then was a continental nation. The first suburbs appeared, as the affluent began commuting from sylvan homes to urban businesses.
And in the South, the new technological power spawned a new political power that threatened to destroy the country. The cotton gin, along with the steamship, enabled southern slaveowners to switch from tobacco and rice and other crops and to specialize in producing cotton for the machine-powered textile mills of Britain. By the mid-nineteenth century, the cotton South was to industrial Britain what Saudi Arabia and the other oil-producing nations became in the late twentieth century to the industrial nations of the West and East Asia—the source of the key industrial raw material, ruled by an elite as reactionary as it was rich. Appeased by the cotton-mill capitalists of New England, the southern planters used their domination of the federal government to thwart plans for the state-sponsored industrialization and modernization of the United States, preferring a regime with a weak center and powerful states.
Then the Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854 created the possibility that slavery would be extended throughout the country and provoked the formation of a northern antislavery party, the Republicans. When the Republicans elected their first president in 1860, the planters pulled the southern states out of the Union. The cotton South had long been an informal economic colony of Britain, even though it was part of the United States. Now the planters sought to make the Confederate States of America into an independent country that would specialize in commodity exports to Britain as part of Britain’s informal economic empire, like the postcolonial countries of Latin America in the nineteenth century. But the South’s bid for independence depended on British intervention and, when that did not occur, it was inevitable that the forces of the Union, strengthened by modern industry and modern finance, would conquer a renegade region that had boasted of its rejection of both.
THE SECOND AMERICAN REPUBLIC
The reign of cotton gave way to the rule of rail. The Second Republic of the United States, forged by Lincoln and Congress during the Civil War and Reconstruction between 1861 and 1877, ensured that the United States would be a continental nation-state with an industrial economy, not a decentralized federation with an agrarian economy. The Republicans implemented a version of the American System that Henry Clay had promoted between the 1820s and the 1850s. After decades in which southerners and their northern allies blocked federal aid for internal improvements, Congress, liberated by the withdrawal of its southern members, lavished subsidies in the form of land and money on railroads, including the first transcontinental lines. Andrew Jackson had destroyed the second Bank of the United States, plunging the United States into monetary chaos; Abraham Lincoln signed the bill creating a national banking system. The southern planters had prevented the use of high tariffs to protect infant industries. Under Lincoln and his successors, the United States had the highest tariffs of any major nation in the world until World War II.
But even as America was being adapted to the demands of the first industrial era, a second industrial revolution was taking place in the mid- and late nineteenth century. On the basis of scientific research carried out chiefly in Britain, Germany, and other European countries, Thomas Edison, Nikola Tesla, and others on both sides of the Atlantic developed electrical technologies to power everything from appliances to cities. German researchers invented the gasoline-powered and diesel-powered engines, which, put into bicycle-like frames, produced the earliest automobiles and airplanes. German researchers also led the world in pharmaceuticals and innovative chemistry, including chemical fertilizers that transformed world agriculture. In the second industrial revolution, as in the first, Americans mostly adopted and adapted the innovations of others.
By the 1900s, the second industrial revolution was transforming the economy. Electric motors replaced steam engines, making factories far more productive. Exploiting the economies of scale made possible by America’s continental protected market, giant manufacturing corporations like Ford and national retail chains like A&P emerged. Investment bankers, led by J. P. Morgan, specialized in corporate mergers and raising the vast amounts of capital needed by the behemoths that the mergers created.
Just as the first industrial-era economy strained and finally burst the First American Republic, so the second industrial economy grew increasingly misaligned with the Second American Republic that had been built during the Civil War and Reconstruction. A motor-age economy strained against steam-age government.
Two rival schools of reform emerged. Theodore Roosevelt and like-minded reformers who shared what Roosevelt called the New Nationalism thought that giant industrial and retail enterprises could be valuable if they were based on efficiency, but should be regulated by the federal government, not the states. The rival school of reform, led by the lawyer and later Supreme Court justice Louis Brandeis and called the New Freedom by Woodrow Wilson, was suspicious of big business and concentrated financial power. Their solution was to use antitrust policies to protect small and medium-size businesses, anti–chain-store laws to protect small stores, and anti–branch-banking laws to protect small banks.
THE THIRD AMERICAN REPUBLIC
The crisis of the Great Depression, followed by World War II, marked the collapse of the Second American Republic and the founding of the Third. Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal established the basic outlines, which were ratified by the three “Modern Republican” presidents: Dwight D. Eisenhower, Richard M. Nixon, and Gerald R. Ford. Under Roosevelt, rural electrification completed the continental electric grid. Under Eisenhower, the road grid was completed with the interstate highway system.
The Third Republic of the United States was a blend of institutions inspired by the New Nationalism and the New Freedom. The New Nationalism gave rise to the attempt of the National Industry Recovery Act (NIRA) to organize industry into self-governing associations that stabilized sectoral markets and provided for minimum wages. The Supreme Court struck down the NIRA as unconstitutional in 1935, but the equivalents of NIRA-code authorities were created in many sectors of the economy, from aviation to coal and oil production, and lasted until the late 1970s and 1980s. The quite different logic of the New Freedom inspired financial reforms that prevented the emergence in the United States of a few large, universal banks by maintaining anti–branch-banking laws and separating investment banking from commercial banking. The result in the 1950s and 1960s was a uniquely American version of the postwar settlements in other industrial democracies, characterized by a small number of giant corporations and thousands of tiny banks.
Even as the foundations of the Third American Republic were being laid, however, research funded by the US Defense Department during World War II and the early Cold War was inventing the technologies of the next industrial revolution, of which the most important for the economy was computer technology. Combined with the global physical infrastructure made possible by another military invention, the jet, and the container ship, the computer made possible the emergence of industrial production on a global scale. New global corporations, most of them former national corporations like Toyota and Boeing that began by dominating their home markets, coalesced in one industry after another. By the end of the twentieth century, nearly half of all international trade consisted of transfers within global corporations from one production site to another. At the same time, computerization and satellite-based communications transformed the nature of commerce and finance.
While the third industrial economy was slowly taking shape, the older economy of the second industrial era, based on mass production by national corporations, was reaching its limits. By the 1970s, automobile manufacturers had wrung as much innovation as possible out of the mature technologies invented nearly a century earlier. The slowing of technological innovation in the older industrial sectors and the global gluts in the same sectors produced by direct or indirect government backing of their “national champions” may have contributed both to the sharp slowdown of growth in the industrial economies that took place between the 1970s and the 1990s and the rise of inflation.
The New Deal in the United States and social democracy in Europe were erroneously accused of causing the slowdown by conservatives and libertarians, who came to power in one democracy after another, beginning in 1979 with Margaret Thatcher in Britain and in 1981 with Ronald Reagan—who followed Jimmy Carter, a conservative Democrat elected in 1976. Their program of checking inflation by crushing organized labor and radical deregulation failed to ignite a return to the high levels of productivity-driven economic growth. Instead, without intending to do so, the conservative reformers who came to be known as neoliberals triggered a series of debt-driven asset bubbles, causing ever bigger crashes, from the stock market crash of 1987 to the tech-bubble crash of 2001, ending in the catastrophic crash of 2008. The global economic collapse that began with the demise of Lehman Brothers in September 2008 brought to an end the Third Republic of the United States and inaugurated what in time may be seen as a prolonged and turbulent transition to a yet-undefined Fourth Republic.
“OPPOSED IN DEATH AS IN LIFE”: HAMILTONIANS VERSUS JEFFERSONIANS
“Opposed in death as in life.” With those words Thomas Jefferson explained why he placed a bust of his lifelong rival Alexander Hamilton opposite his own in his home, Monticello.17 In the generations since, Americans in the Hamiltonian tradition, of right, left, and center, have continued to debate their Jeffersonian opponents, who come in liberal, centrist, and conservative versions as well.
The debates in America have been family squabbles. At issue was not the validity of the Lockean liberal ideals of the American Revolution—nearly everyone agreed on those—but rather the question of whether the United States would be a New Britain or an Anti-Britain.
Those who thought of America as a New Britain, like Hamilton, drew on the tradition of mercantilism, which dominated British practice before its unilateral adoption of free trade in the 1840s, when its industrial supremacy was secure. Beginning with Adam Smith, mercantilism has received a hostile press, although John Maynard Keynes tried to rehabilitate the reputation of mercantilist thinkers in The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money (1936).18 Instead of being dismissed as a delusion of early-modern monarchs trying to maximize their gold supplies, mercantilism is properly viewed as an early-modern European variant of developmentalism, an approach to economics that continues to flourish not only in the industrial nations of East Asia and Europe but also to some degree in the contemporary United States.19
Developmental economics holds that the basic unit of the world economy is not the individual or the firm, but the polity—typically an empire or city-state in premodern times and a nation-state today. Competition or collaboration among countries, rather than among households or companies, is considered to be the central fact of economics. Developmental states, whether democratic or authoritarian, have usually encouraged private property and private enterprise. But they have viewed the private and public sectors as collaborators in a single national project of maximizing the military security and well-being of the community by means of technological modernization, while minimizing dependence on other political communities. The market is good to the extent that it helps necessary national industries and bad to the extent that it hurts them. The government is not the enemy of the private economy, but its sponsor and partner. Developmental capitalism looks at the economy from the point of view of the manufacturer and the engineer, rather than that of the merchant or banker.
A version of the developmental vision of economic growth as the result of a creative partnership among government, business, the nonprofit sector, and labor was set forth by Andrew Carnegie. In his 1889 essay “Wealth,” Carnegie, without naming names, described an iron and steel magnate (himself), a railroad magnate (the Vanderbilts), a mining magnate (William Clark of Montana), and a meatpacking magnate (Gustavus Swift or Philip Armour).20 Observing how they benefited from the creation of prosperous consumers in national and global markets made possible by railroads, Carnegie declared: “In the work and its profits the Nation was an essential partner and equally entitled with the individual to share in the dividends.” Even the wealth of inventors—Carnegie mentioned “Graham Bell of the telephone, Edison of numerous inventions, Westinghouse of the air-brake”—was always “in great part dependent upon the community which uses his productions.”21
THE PRODUCERIST VISION
The alternative in America to the Hamiltonian version of the developmental state is the antistatist tradition associated with Thomas Jefferson and his philosophical descendants. The term “liberal” is misleading, because developmental economics comes in liberal forms as well, so I will use a term that many historians use for the political economy of Jefferson and Smith: “producerism.”
In this tradition, the implications of economic power for military power, which are central to developmental economics, are ignored. In the utopia of producerism, competition in free markets among great numbers of producers who lack the power to manipulate prices to their own benefit is assumed to minimize the cost of goods and services. The central role of government-sponsored technological innovation in reducing prices over time, even in monopolistic and oligopolistic markets, is ignored in producerist thought and its offspring, the academic school of neoclassical economics. Market-driven price reduction is equated with the interests of individuals as consumers. Other than a government with minimal defense and police functions, there is no public good or national interest distinct from the short-term interest of consumers in the lowest possible prices.
This vision of the economy translates into an adversarial vision of relations among governments and businesses. The purpose of the state is to remove barriers to free exchange among individuals and firms, and then, once those barriers have been removed, to limit its activities to enforcing the rules of competition, as a “nightwatchman” or “umpire.” Cooperation by firms or their merger into large entities is viewed with suspicion and seen as a proper object of antitrust prosecutions. Producerist economics is hostile as well to collaboration between business and government.
Producerists have often been willing to sacrifice free markets, if by doing so they can protect small producers. In a producerist republic, government may protect small farms, small manufacturers, small retailers and distributors, and small banks from larger competitors, whose size, producerists suspect, is based on political favoritism and other forms of corruption rather than on legitimate efficiencies resulting from economies of scale.
HAMILTONIAN PROGRESS AND JEFFERSONIAN REGRESSION
In a spirit of philosophical bipartisanship, it would be pleasant to conclude that each of these traditions of political economy has made its own valuable contribution to the success of the American economy and that the vector created by these opposing forces has been more beneficial than the complete victory of either would have been. But that would not be true.
What is good about the American economy is largely the result of the Hamiltonian developmental tradition, and what is bad about it is largely the result of the Jeffersonian producerist school. To the developmental tradition of Hamilton, Washington and Roosevelt, Lincoln and Clay, we owe the Internet and the national rail and highway and aviation systems, the single continental market that allows increasing returns to scale to be exploited by globally competitive corporations, the unmatched military that defeated the Axis powers and the Soviet empire and has generated one technological spin-off after another, and, not least, the federally enforced civil rights laws and minimum-wage laws that have eradicated the slavery and serfdom that once existed in the South and elsewhere.
To the Jeffersonian tradition, even if it is exempted from blame for slavery and segregation, the United States owes the balkanization of the economy by states’ rights and localism, underinvestment in infrastructure, irrational antitrust laws and anti–chain store laws designed to privilege small producers, exemptions from regulations and subsidies for small businesses (defined for many purposes as those with fewer than five hundred employees), the neglect of manufacturing in favor of overinvestment in single-family housing, and a panic-prone system of tiny, government-protected small banks and savings and loans.
At key moments in American history, forces invoking the rhetoric of producerist capitalism have defeated proponents of developmental capitalism. One turning point came in the 1830s, when Andrew Jackson and his followers thwarted Henry Clay’s American System of national economic development based on protective tariffs for infant industries, national banking, and national infrastructure investment. Another less dramatic but equally significant turning point occurred in the late nineteenth century, when federal court interpretations of the Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890 prevented small and medium-size firms from collaborating in cartels. The unintended result was a wave of mergers before World War I that created a peculiarly American kind of giant, oligopolistic corporation that exists to this day, in place of cartels and cooperatives of small- and medium-size firms of the kind that exist in Germany and other nations.
Developmental capitalism in America suffered another blow in the early years of the New Deal in the 1930s, with the collapse and widespread repudiation of the National Recovery Administration—an experiment in business-labor-government collaboration of a kind practiced successfully in other industrial democracies. Yet another opportunity for developmental capitalism was missed in the 1980s and 1990s, when advocates of a manufacturing-centered, government-fostered American industrial policy were marginalized. Singing the praises of small entrepreneurs and free markets from the Jeffersonian hymnal, Republicans and Democrats alike complacently presided over the decline of American manufacturing and the inflation of the bubble economy that collapsed in 2008, bringing down the American and global economies in the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression.
There is a place in Hamiltonian developmentalism for state and local governments and small start-ups and suppliers. But unlike Jeffersonian producerism, the developmental school of economics identifies the wealth of nations not with small enterprises in lightly regulated markets, but with large-scale industrial production based on scientific and engineering breakthroughs that have usually originated directly or indirectly in government-sponsored research.
HISTORY IS NOT BUNK
In 1916, one of America’s great innovators, Henry Ford, declared: “History is more or less bunk. It’s tradition. We don’t want tradition. We want to live in the present, and the only history that is worth a tinker’s damn is the history that we make today.”22
The purpose of this book is to prove him wrong. The history that we make today is illuminated by the history of our country and the world and the tradition of the values that we seek to preserve through time and change. Just as the American republic was not created as a perfect and unalterable system by a generation of demigods at the Founding, so the American economy is not a timeless and perfect market to be revealed in its natural splendor by stripping away distorting regulations. The American economy, like the American republic, exists to serve the American people, not vice versa. And economies and republics alike are created by human beings for human purposes.
From the generations of Americans who have struggled to master the tools of their time to create an economy worthy of the citizens of a democratic nation, those who continue that never-ceasing struggle in the United States and other lands have much to learn.