Nixon's Economy
Booms, Busts, Dollars, and Votes
Allen J. Matusow
288 pages, 6 x 9
Cloth ISBN 978-0-7006-0888-1, $35.00
Though Richard Nixon came to office
preoccupied with foreign policy, he soon had to grapple with
an economy that threatened him with political defeat. Following
the advice of Milton Friedman, the president placed his initial
hopes for good times in the economics of caution. But when the
economy dipped into recession and cost the Republicans victory
in the congressional election of 1970, Nixon turned for rescue
not to his economists, but to a politician, the former Democratic
governor of Texas, John Connally, who became secretary of the
Treasury midway through the first term.
"I can play it round, I can play it flat, just tell me
how to play it," Connally liked to say. Together, Connally
and Nixon set out to save Nixon's presidency by any means necessary.
In a televised speech on August 15, 1971, Nixon stunned the world
and reversed his political fortunes by announcing a series of
measures that contradicted everything he was supposed to believe
in--wage and price controls, abandonment of the international
gold standard, depreciation of the dollar, and deficit spending.
"This will put the Democrats in a hell of a spot, this whole
speech," the president exulted. He was right. The economy
took off in 1972. Nixon took the credit. And his reelection by
a landslide was assured.
Historian Allen J. Matusow now presents the first comprehensive
history of Nixon's political economy. He depicts a president
who disliked the subject but was forced to pay attention or lose
his dream of effecting a historic realignment of the political
parties in America. The study derives its authority from extensive
archival research in Nixon's presidential papers, including notes
by Haldeman and Ehrlichman of crucial conversations in the Oval
Office. Matusow shows the poverty of contemporary economic theory,
Nixon's willingness to sacrifice the world economy for his domestic
political purposes, and his desperate attempts to find something,
anything, that might work. Lurching from one set of policies
to another, Matusow argues, Nixon achieved only illusory successes
that ultimately brought on a decade of economic disaster.
Nixon's Economy will contribute significantly to the
emerging reinterpretation of a pivotal presidency. For scholars
of the era, the book will be required reading. For students and
general readers, it will help explain in lucid prose the politics
and economics of our own time. Narrative history that tells a
good story, this book will reveal yet another Nixon, while offering
a compelling case history of how politicians shape and sometimes
misshape the performance of the American economy.
"A fascinating book. Matusow writes very well and manages
to make complicated economic ideas very clear. His portraits
of major players such as Herbert Stein, John Connally, and George
Shultz are extraordinarily shrewd. The result is a history of
presidential mismanagement that reveals a great deal, not only
about the Nixon years, but also about the formidable obstacles
that block the making of well-informed and coherent federal economic
policy."--James T. Patterson, author of Grand
Expectations: The United States, 19451974
"An important and stimulating book that contributes substantially
to the ongoing reinterpretation of Nixon's presidency, vividly
demonstrating how Nixon's quest for a new majority animated and
gave coherence to his economic policy choices."--Bruce
J. Schulman, author of Lyndon B. Johnson and American
Liberalism
ALLEN J. MATUSOW is William Gaines Twyman Professor
of History at Rice University. Among his many books are The
Unraveling of America: A History of Liberalism in the 1960s
and Farm Policy and Politics in the Truman Years.
|