Ford, Carter, and the Economic Malaise: Crash Course US History #42 - YouTube

Channel: CrashCourse

[0]
Hi, I’m John Green, this is Crash Course U.S. History and today we are going to talk
[3]
about one of the most important periods in American history, the mid-to-late 1970s.
[8]
Stan why is there nothing on the chalkboard?
[10]
We can’t find a picture of Gerald Ford somewhere around here?
[12]
Don’t worry Crash Course fans we got one.
[14]
Thanks for your support through Subbable.
[16]
It paid for this 90 cent Gerald Ford photograph.
[18]
These really are the years where everything changed in the United States and amidst all
[22]
that turmoil something wonderful was born.
[25]
Mr. Green?
[26]
Mr. Green?
[27]
Strong with the force, this episode is.
[28]
No, me from the past, Yoda doesn’t show up until Empire Strikes Back which came out
[32]
in 1980.
[33]
I’m referring of course to the fact that we were born!
[34]
It’s the beginning of the John Green era!
[37]
From here on out, almost everything we discuss will have happened in my lifetime.
[40]
Or as most Crash Course viewers refer to it, “that century before I was born”.
[44]
But it wasn’t just the birth of me and the death of Elvis, the late 1970s were truly
[49]
a period of momentous change, and for most Americans it sucked.
[57]
Intro So how Americans reacted to those no good
[64]
very bad years really has shaped the world in which we find ourselves.
[68]
The big story of the 1970s is economics.
[70]
Twenty-five years of broad economic expansion and prosperity came to a grinding halt in
[76]
the 1970s meaning the our party was over.
[79]
And what did we get instead?
[81]
Inflation and extremely slow growth.
[83]
The worst hangover ever.
[84]
Just kidding, the worst hangover was The Depression.
[86]
The 2nd worst hangover was the 2008 recession, and then the 3rd worst hangover was Hangover
[91]
Part III.
[92]
It was the 4th worst hangover in American history.
[94]
Narrowly beating out America’s 5th worst hangover the Hangover Part II.
[97]
What happened to the American economy in the 1970s was the result both of long-term processes
[102]
and unexpected shocks.
[104]
The long-term process was the gradual decline of manufacturing in the U.S. in relation to
[109]
competing manufacturing in the rest of the world.
[110]
Part of this was due to American policy; after World War II, you’ll remember that we promoted
[115]
the economic growth of Japan, Germany, South Korea and Taiwan, ignoring the tariffs that
[120]
they set up to protect nascent industries, and effectively subsidizing them by providing
[125]
for their defense.
[126]
And not having to build nuclear arsenals of their own really allowed them to invest in
[130]
their domestic economies.
[131]
And then one day, a bunch of Toyotas and Mercedes showed up, and you could drive them up to
[135]
like 40 thousand miles before they would break down and we were like, “wait a second”.
[140]
In 1971, for the first time in the 20th century, America experienced an export trade deficit,
[146]
importing more goods than it exported, which is the same problem that my aunt has with
[149]
QVC.
[150]
I mean, they hardly import anything from her.
[152]
One reason for this deficit was because the dollar was linked to gold, making it a strong
[156]
currency but also making American products more expensive abroad.
[160]
So Nixon took the U.S. off the gold standard, hoping to make American goods cheaper overseas
[165]
and reduce imports, but that didn’t really work.
[168]
Because the U.S. was also competing against cheaper labor costs, and cheaper raw materials,
[172]
and more productive economies.
[174]
And in many cases this growing global competition put American firms that couldn’t compete
[178]
out of business.
[179]
This was especially true in manufacturing.
[181]
In 1960, 38% of Americans worked in manufacturing.
[186]
In 1980, it was 28%.
[188]
Today, it’s nine.
[190]
Not 9%, nine people.
[191]
Stan wants me to tell you that was a joke.
[193]
It actually is 9%.
[194]
Unionized workers were hit particularly hard.
[196]
In the 1940s and 1950s unions had won generous concessions from corporate employers including
[202]
paid vacation, and health benefits, and especially pensions, which employers would agree to as
[207]
a kind of deferred compensation so that they wouldn’t have to pay higher w ages to people
[211]
while they were working.
[212]
And this worked great, until people started to retire.
[214]
So by 1970, competition led employers to either eliminate high-paying manufacturing jobs,
[219]
or else to increase automation, or to shift workers to lower wage regions of the U.S.
[225]
or even overseas.
[226]
The American South benefitted from this trend because its anti-union stance was attractive
[227]
to manufacturers.
[228]
But then, non-union industries that were already in the South found that they had no way to
[229]
find new workers so the only way to survive was to move production overseas.
[230]
And also as industries moved production to the Sunbelt that increased the political influence
[231]
of the region, and because the South and Southwest are generally conservative politically, the
[232]
nation’s politics continued to move to the right.
[233]
Meanwhile the northern industrial cities, particularly the Rust Belt of the Midwest,
[234]
were becoming the empty urban playgrounds that we know and love today.
[235]
Detroit and Chicago had lost half of their manufacturing jobs by 1980 and smaller cities
[238]
fared even worse.
[239]
As industry moved away, they found their tax bases dried up, and they were unable to provide
[243]
even basic services to their citizens.
[245]
I mean with the world of Wall Street fat cats this is hard to imagine today, but in 1975
[250]
New York City faced bankruptcy.
[251]
In addition to these long term structural changes to the American economy and our demographics,
[257]
the 1970s saw two oil shocks that sent the economy into a tailspin.
[261]
In 1973, in response to Western support of Israel, Middle Eastern Arab states suspended
[266]
oil exports to the U.S which led to the price of oil quadrupling.
[270]
This resulted in long lines for gasoline, dramatically higher oil prices, and Americans
[275]
deciding to purchase smaller, more fuel efficient cars, which is to say Japanese cars.
[280]
Also, prices of everything else went up because oil is either used for the production of or
[284]
transportation of just about everything.
[287]
I mean with 70’s inflation, this 90 cent portrait of Gerald Ford would have cost at
[291]
least $1.10.
[292]
The paint that covers the green parts of not-America, oil based.
[295]
The plastic that comprises the DVD’s of Crash Course World History, available now
[299]
at DFTBA.com, oil based.
[301]
Those were a fantastic bargain and they would have been way more expensive if the price
[304]
of oil was higher.
[305]
And then, in 1979, a second oil shock hit the United States after the Iranian revolution.
[309]
Wait Stan, did we say 1979?
[311]
We’ve got to put up a picture of Jimmy Carter.
[313]
Bam!
[314]
Sorry, Gerald Ford there’s a peanut farmer in town.
[316]
So during the 1970s inflation soared to 10% a year and economic growth slowed to 2.4%,
[322]
resulting in what came to be known as stagflation.
[325]
Unemployment rose, and a new economic statistic was born: the misery index, the combination
[330]
of unemployment and inflation.
[332]
At the beginning of the decade it was 10.8, by 1980 it had doubled.
[336]
If you’re looking for the roots of America’s contemporary economic inequality, the 1970s
[341]
are a good milestone, since according to our old friend Eric Foner, “beginning in 1973,
[346]
real wages essentially did not rise for twenty years.”
[350]
[1] Americans got to experience the joy of two
[351]
years of Gerald Ford before poor Jimmy Carter had a chance to fail at improving the economy.
[356]
The only president never to have been elected even to the vice presidency, Gerald Ford was
[360]
so insignificant to American history that we already replaced him on the chalkboard.
[364]
One of Ford’s first acts was to pardon Nixon making him immune from prosecution for obstruction
[369]
of justice.
[370]
That very unpopular decision probably made it impossible for Ford to win in 1976.
[374]
Coincidentally, WIN was the only memorable domestic program that Ford proposed.
[379]
It stood for Whip Inflation Now and it was basically a plea for Americans to be better
[385]
shoppers, spend less, and wear WIN buttons.
[387]
Thirty-five years later Charlie Sheen would turn winning into an incredibly successful
[391]
social media campaign, but sadly at the time there was no Twitter.
[394]
Inflation did drop, but unemployment went up, especially during the recession of 1974-75
[400]
where it topped 9%.
[401]
Now, Ford would have liked to cut taxes and reduce government regulation, but the Democratic
[406]
Congress wouldn’t let him.
[407]
So that’s Ford, probably best known today as the first president to be satirized on
[410]
Saturday Night Live.
[412]
Then, in 1976, we got a new president: Jimmy Carter.
[415]
Now Jimmy Carter is generally considered by historians to have been a failure as president.
[419]
Although, he is often seen as a really good ex-president.
[422]
He tried to fight the inflation part of stagflation, but to do it he acted in some rather un-New
[428]
Deal Democrat ways.
[429]
He cut government spending, deregulated the trucking and airline industries, and he supported
[433]
the Fed’s decision to raise interest rates.
[436]
Oh, it’s time for the mystery document?
[438]
The rules here are simple...
[441]
I read the mystery document, I guess the author, and if I’m wrong I get shocked.
[444]
Alright, let’s see what we’ve got today.
[446]
“I want to speak to you first tonight about a subject even more serious than energy or
[450]
inflation.
[451]
I want to talk to you right now about a fundamental threat to American democracy.
[454]
I do not mean our political and civil liberties.
[457]
They will endure.
[458]
And I do not refer to the outward strength of America, a nation that is at peace tonight
[462]
everywhere in the world, with unmatched economic power and military might.
[467]
The threat is nearly invisible in ordinary ways.
[470]
It is a crisis of confidence.
[472]
It is a crisis that strikes at the very heart and soul and spirit of our national will.
[477]
We can see this crisis in the growing doubt about the meaning of our own lives and in
[481]
the loss of a unity of purpose for our nation.
[484]
The erosion of our confidence in the future is threatening to destroy the social and political
[488]
fabric of America.”
[490]
It’s Jimmy Carter’s “Crisis of Confidence” speech, my favorite speech ever made that
[494]
also cost a president 20 points of approval rating.
[497]
So Carter says that Americans have lost their ability to face the future and some of their
[501]
can-do spirit.
[503]
The rest of the speech talks about how Americans’ values are out of whack, how Americans are
[507]
wasteful, and need a new more vibrant approach to the energy crisis.
[510]
Let me tell you a lesson from history Jimmy Carter, you don’t get reelected by telling
[514]
Americans how to do more with less.
[516]
You get reelected by telling Americans, “more, more, always more, more for you.
[520]
More.
[521]
More.
[522]
More.
[523]
I promise.”
[524]
The speech ultimately called for a renewal of spirit, but all people remember is the
[526]
part where Jimmy Carter was criticizing them, and it’s gone down as a great example of
[530]
Carter’s political ineptitude.
[531]
Domestically, Carter paid lip-service to liberal ideas like energy conservation, even installing
[535]
solar panels on the White House, but his bigger plan to solve the energy crises was investment
[540]
in nuclear power.
[541]
And nuclear power did grow, although never to the extent we saw in certain European countries,
[545]
partly because of the accident at Three Mile Island in 1979 when radioactive vapor was
[550]
released into the air.
[551]
This of course spurred public fears of a nuclear meltdown and drove a huge anti-nuclear energy
[557]
movement.
[558]
But some of Carter’s more conservative policies did ultimately have an impact, like his support
[559]
for deregulation of the airlines.
[560]
Before airline deregulation, prices were fixed, so airlines had to compete by offering better
[561]
service.
[562]
Now, of course, flights are much cheaper and also so much more miserable.
[563]
In many ways, Carter was more important as a foreign policy president, but as with his
[564]
energy initiatives, he’s mostly remembered for his failures.
[565]
Aiming to make Human Rights a cornerstone of America’s foreign policy, Jimmy Carter
[568]
tried to turn away from the Cold War framework and focus instead on combatting 3rd world
[573]
poverty and reducing the spread of nuclear weapons.
[575]
Let’s go to the Thought Bubble.
[577]
Carter’s notable changes included cutting off aid to Argentina during its “Dirty War”
[581]
and signing a treaty in 1978 that would transfer the Panama Canal back to Panama.
[586]
His greatest accomplishment was probably brokering the Camp David Accords.
[589]
This historic peace agreement between Egypt and Israel has, as we all know, led to a lasting
[594]
peace in the Middle East, just kidding, but it has been a step in the right direction
[597]
and one that’s lasted.
[599]
But the U.S. continued to support dictatorial regimes in Guatemala, the Philippines and
[603]
South Korea.
[604]
Carter’s most significant failure in terms of supporting international bad guys, though,
[607]
is the Shah of Iran.
[609]
Iran had oil and was a major buyer of American arms, but the Shah was really unpopular and
[614]
our support of him fuelled anti-American sentiments in Iran.
[617]
Those boiled over in the 1979 Iranian Revolution, especially after Carter allowed the Shah to
[622]
get cancer treatments in America, which in turn prompted the storming of the American
[626]
embassy in Tehran and the capture of 53 American hostages.
[630]
The Iranian hostage crisis lasted 444 days and although Carter’s secretary of state
[635]
did negotiate their release, it didn’t happen until the day Carter’s successor Ronald
[640]
Reagan was inaugurated.
[641]
The inability to free the hostages and the botched rescue attempt -- Affleck’s ARGO
[646]
notwithstanding -- added to the impression that Carter was weak.
[649]
Events in the Middle East also increased Cold War tensions especially after 1979, when the
[654]
USSR invaded Afghanistan.
[656]
Carter claimed that the invasion of Afghanistan was the greatest threat to freedom since World
[660]
War II and proclaimed the Carter Doctrine, which was basically said that the U.S. would
[665]
use force, if necessary, to protect its interests in the Persian Gulf region.
[669]
In direct response to the Soviets, the U.S. put an embargo on grain shipments and organized
[673]
the boycott of the 1980 Olympics in Moscow.
[676]
Thanks for another dose of good news Thought Bubble.
[678]
So despite focusing on Carter, I’ll again stress that the real story of the 1970s was
[683]
the economy.
[684]
High inflation and high unemployment had monumental effects in shaping America.
[688]
And no president could have dealt with it effectively.
[690]
Not Carter, not Gerald Ford, not anyone.
[693]
The truth is, history isn’t about individuals.
[697]
Oil shocks and inevitable systemic changes led to the poor economy and that weakened
[701]
support for New Deal liberalism and increased the appeal of conservative ideas like lower
[706]
taxes, reduced regulation, and cuts in social spending.
[709]
All of which, for the record, started under the Democrat Jimmy Carter, not the Republican
[713]
Ronald Reagan.
[714]
More abstractly, the economic crisis of the 1970’s dealt a serious blow to the Keynesian
[719]
consensus that Government action could actually solve macro-economic problems.
[723]
I mean according to the economic theory that had prevailed for the previous 50 years, unemployment
[728]
and inflation were supposed to be inversely proportional, the so-called Phillips Curve.
[732]
When that relationship broke down and we had both high inflation and high unemployment
[737]
it undermined the entire idea of government intervention.
[739]
And that opened the door for a different way of thinking about economics that emphasized
[743]
the economy as an aggregate of individual economic decisions.
[747]
Now that might sound like a small thing, but whether you think of individual choices or
[750]
governmental policies really make economies work or not work turns out to be pretty freaking
[756]
important.
[757]
And this has come to really shape the contemporary American political landscape especially when
[761]
it comes to taxes.
[762]
Which we’ll talk about more next week.
[764]
Thanks for watching.
[765]
Crash Course is made with all the help from these nice people and it exists because of
[768]
your support through Subbable and also because so many of you are buying Crash Course World
[773]
History on DVD.
[774]
Thank you!
[775]
Our mission here at Crash Course is to make educational content freely available to everyone
[779]
forever and you can help us in that mission, if you’re able, by subscribing at Subbable.
[783]
Subbable is a voluntary subscription platform where you can get amazing perks liked signed
[787]
posters and lots of other stuff so check it out.
[789]
Thank you for supporting Crash Course, thanks for watching, and as we say in my hometown,
[792]
“don’t forget to be awesome.”
[793]
________________ [1] Foner.
[794]
Give me Liberty ebook version p. 1097