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Wall Street and FDR

The True Story of How Franklin D. Roosevelt Colluded with Corporate America

Paperback
March 2014
9781905570713
More details
  • Publisher
    Clairview Books
  • Published
    6th March 2014
  • ISBN 9781905570713
  • Language English
  • Pages 200 pp.
  • Size 5.5" x 8.5"
$22.00

Franklin D. Roosevelt is frequently described as one of the greatest presidents in American history, remembered for his leadership during the Great Depression and World War II. Antony Sutton challenges this received wisdom, presenting a controversial but convincing analysis. Based on an extensive study of original documents, he concludes that:

• FDR was an elitist who influenced public policy in order to benefit special interests, including his own.
• FDR and his Wall Street colleagues were “corporate socialists,” who believed in making society work for their own benefit.
• FDR believed in business but not free market economics.

Sutton describes the genesis of “corporate socialism”—acquiring monopolies by means of political influence—which he characterizes as “making society work for the few.” He traces the historical links of the Delano and Roosevelt families to Wall Street, as well as FDR’s own political networks developed during his early career as a financial speculator and bond dealer.

The New Deal nearly destroyed free enterprise in America, but it didn’t adversely affect FDR’s circle of old friends ensconced in select financial institutions and federal regulatory agencies. Together with their corporate allies, this elite group profited from the decrees and programs generated by their old pal in the White House, while thousands of small businesses suffered and millions became unemployed.

Wall Street and FDR is much more than a fascinating historical and political study. Many contemporary parallels can be drawn to Sutton’s powerful presentation given the recent banking crises and worldwide governments’ bolstering of private institutions via the public purse.

This classic study—first published in 1975 as the conclusion of a key trilogy—is reproduced here in its original form.

The other volumes in the series are Wall Street and the Rise of Hitler and Wall Street and the Bolshevik Revolution.

“Sutton comes to conclusions that are uncomfortable for many businessmen and economists. For this reason, his work tends to be either dismissed out of hand as ‘extreme’ or, more often, simply ignored.”

C O N T E N T S:

Preface

PART ONE: FRANKLIN DELANO ROOSEVELT ON WALL STREET

1. Roosevelts and Delanos
2. Politics in the Bonding Business
3. FDR: International Speculator
4. FDR: Corporate Promoter

PART TWO: THE GENESIS OF CORPORATE SOCIALISM

5. Making Society Work for the Few
6. Prelude to the New Deal
7. Roosevelt, Hoover, and the Trade Councils
8. Wall Street Buys the New Deal

PART THREE: FDR AND THE CORPORATE SOCIALISTS

9. The Swope Plan
10. FDR: Man on the White Horse
11. The Corporate Socialists at 120 Broadway
12. FDR and the Corporate Socialists

Appendices:

A. The Swope Plan
B. Sponsors of Plans Presented for Economic Planning in the United States, April 1932

Selected Bibliography
Index

Antony C. Sutton

Antony C. Sutton (1925–2002) was born in London and educated at the universities of London, Gottingen and California. He was a Research Fellow at the Hoover Institution for War, Revolution, and Peace at Stanford, California, from 1968 to 1973, and later an Economics Professor at California State University, Los Angeles. He is the author of 25 books, including the major three-volume study Western Technology and Soviet Economic Development.