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Lauchlin Currie

Lauchlin Bernard Currie (October 8, 1902 – December 23, 1993) worked as White House economic adviser to President Franklin Roosevelt during World War II (1939–45). From 1949 to 1953, he directed a major World Bank mission to Colombia and related studies. Information from the Venona project, a counter-intelligence program undertaken by agencies of the United States government, references him in nine partially decrypted cables sent by agents of the Soviet Union. He became a Colombian citizen after the United States refused to renew his passport in 1954, due to doubts of his loyalty to the United States engendered by the testimony of former Communist agents and information in the Venona decrypts.

Lauchlin Currie
Lauchlin Currie on July 17, 1939
Born
Lauchlin Bernard Currie

(1902-10-08)October 8, 1902
Nova Scotia, Canada
DiedDecember 23, 1993(1993-12-23) (aged 91)
NationalityCanadian/Colombian
FieldEconomic adviser
Alma materLondon School of Economics
InfluencesAllyn Abbott Young
AwardsOrder of Boyacá

Formative years

He was born to Lauchlin Bernard Currie, an operator of a fleet of merchant ships, and Alice Eisenhauer Currie, a schoolteacher. After his father died in 1906, when Currie was four, his family moved to nearby Bridgewater, Nova Scotia where most of his schooling was done.

By the time his family moved to Massachusetts he had begun to demonstrate his studious habits and often read late into the night. For relaxation he drove automobiles "with his foot on the floor board."[1] He also attended school in California, where he had relatives. In 1922, after two years at Saint Francis Xavier University in Nova Scotia, Currie moved to the United Kingdom to study at the London School of Economics[2] under Edwin Cannan, Hugh Dalton, A. L. Bowley, and Harold Laski.

From the LSE, Currie moved to Harvard University, where his chief inspiration was Allyn Abbott Young, then president of the American Economic Association. At Harvard, he earned his Ph.D. in 1931 for a dissertation on banking theory.[3]

Early professional life

Currie remained at Harvard until 1934 as a lecturer and assistant to, successively, Ralph Hawtrey, John H. Williams, and Joseph Schumpeter. Paul Sweezy was one of his students in money and banking at Harvard.[citation needed] Among his associates in Cambridge was Abraham George Silverman, who would later be revealed as a Soviet spy for the Ware Group.

In a January, 1932 Harvard memorandum on antidepression policy, Currie and fellow instructors Harry Dexter White and Paul T. Ellsworth urged large fiscal deficits coupled with open market operations to expand bank reserves, as well as the lifting of tariffs and the relief of interallied debts.[4]

In 1934, Currie constructed the first money supply and income velocity series for the United States. He blamed the government's "commercial loan theory" of banking for monetary tightening in mid-1929, when the economy was already declining, and then for its passivity during the next four years in the face of mass liquidations and bank failures. Instead, he advocated control of the money supply to stabilize income and expenditures. Currie cited his colleague and Soviet agent Silverman for his "many helpful suggestions and criticisms" in the formation of this line of thinking.[5][6]

New Deal

Freshman brain trust

In 1934, Currie became a naturalized United States citizen and joined Jacob Viner's "freshman brain trust" at the U.S. Treasury where he outlined an ideal monetary system for the United States which included a 100-percent reserve banking plan to strengthen central bank control and prevent bank panics in the future by preventing member banks from lending out their demand deposit liabilities, while removing reserve requirements on savings deposits with low turnover. Later that year, Marriner Eccles moved from the Treasury to become governor of the Federal Reserve Board. He took Currie with him as his personal assistant. Harry Dexter White, another "freshman brain trust" recruit, became a top adviser to Secretary of the Treasury Henry Morgenthau, and for some years White and Currie worked closely in their respective roles at the Treasury and the Federal Reserve.[7]

Soon afterwards, Currie drafted the Banking Act of 1935 which reorganized the Federal Reserve and strengthened its powers. He also constructed a "net federal income-creating expenditure series" to show the strategic role of fiscal policy in complementing monetary policy to revive an economy in exceptionally acute, persisting depression. Currie's preferred 100-percent reserve banking idea, however, was not one of the reforms implemented. Alan Meltzer wrote in his history of the Federal Reserve that "Lauchlin Currie wrote a remarkable memo for a Treasury committee in 1934 emphasizing the role of money in cyclical fluctuations, at a time when virtually no one thought that money mattered."[8] After four years of recovery, the economy declined sharply in 1937. In a four-hour interview with President Roosevelt, he was able to explain that the declared aim of balancing the budget "to restore business confidence" had damaged the economy. This was part of the "struggle for the soul of FDR"[9] between the cautious Morgenthau and the expansionist Eccles. In April 1938, the president asked Congress for major appropriations for spending on relief and public works. In May 1939, the rationale was explained in theoretical and statistical detail by Currie ("Mr. Inside") and by Harvard's Alvin Hansen ("Mr. Outside") in testimony before the Temporary National Economic Committee to highlight the role of government deficits in the recovery process.

White House

Named FDR's White House economist in July 1939, Currie advised on taxation, social security, and the speeding up of peacetime and wartime production plans.[10] In January 1941, he was sent on a mission to China for discussions with Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek and Chou En-lai, the Communist representative in the Chinese wartime capital of Chungking.[10] On his return in March, he recommended that China be added to the lend-lease program. He was put in charge of its administration under the overall direction of FDR's special assistant Harry Hopkins.[11]

Currie was also assigned to expedite the American Volunteer Group (Flying Tigers), which consisted largely of U.S. military pilots released for combat on behalf of China against Japan and technically part of the Chinese Air Force under the command of Claire Chennault. Currie also organized a large training program in the United States for Chinese pilots. In May 1941, he presented a paper on Chinese aircraft requirements to General George C. Marshall and the Joint War Board. The document, accepted by the Board, stressed the role of an air force in China could play in defending Singapore, the Burma Road, and the Philippines against Japanese attack. It pointed to its potential for strategic bombing of targets in Japan itself. These activities, together with Currie's work in helping to tighten sanctions against Japan, are said to have played a part in provoking Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor.[12]

Currie returned to Chungking in July 1942 to try to patch up the strained relations between Chiang and General Joseph W. Stilwell, commander of U.S. forces in China. Currie was one of several of FDR's envoys who recommended Stilwell's recall and reassignment. Back in Washington, Roosevelt asked Currie to put his case to General Marshall, but the General dismissed the idea. Only much later did Marshall concede that his protégé's continued presence in China was indeed a mistake. Stilwell was recalled in October 1944.[13]

From 1943 to 1944, Currie served as Deputy Administrator for the Foreign Economic Administration where he played a major role in recruiting or recommending economists and others throughout the Washington administration. Prominent examples are John Kenneth Galbraith, Richard Gilbert, Adlai Stevenson, and William O'Dwyer. While at the FEA, Currie became a founding member of the War Agencies Employees Protective Association, an organization created to help civilian Federal employees acquire life insurance while serving in war zones. Currie served as WAEPA's first president from May 1943 until his retirement in June 1945.[14] In 1944–1945, he was involved in loan negotiations between the United States, British and Soviet allies, and in preparations for the 1944 Bretton Woods conference (staged mainly by Harry Dexter White), which led to the creation of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank. In early 1945, Currie headed a tripartite (U.S., British, and French) mission to Bern to persuade the Swiss to freeze Nazi bank balances and stop further shipments of German supplies through Switzerland to the Italian front.

In July 1949, Currie headed a nine-man mission (popularly known as the Currie Mission) to Colombia on behalf of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD). The mission was tasked with assessing the country's economic potentialities and subsequently recommending an integrated program for economic development.

Soviet agent

After the war, Currie was one of those blamed for losing China to the control of Communists. In 1939, Currie had been identified by Communist defector Whittaker Chambers in a meeting with Roosevelt security chief Adolf Berle, as a Soviet agent.[15] Spring of 1944, Currie informed Soviet contacts that the United States VENONA program was about to break the Soviet signals code.[16]

Elizabeth Bentley, like Chambers, a former Soviet espionage agent, later claimed in Congressional testimony in 1948 that Currie and Harry Dexter White had been part of the Silvermaster ring.[17] Although she had never met Currie or White in person, Bentley testified to receiving information through cutouts (couriers) who were other Washington economists (later determined to be Soviet agents).[17][18]

White and Currie appeared before the House Committee on Un-American Activities in August 1948 to rebut her charges. White, who was also implicated as a source of Soviet intelligence (later confirmed in Venona intercepts and review of Soviet KGB notes of NKVD official Gaik Ovakimian) had a serious heart problem, and died three days after his appearance at the hearings.

Currie was not prosecuted and in 1949 he was appointed to head the first of the World Bank's comprehensive country surveys in Colombia. After his report was published in Washington in September 1950, he was invited by the Colombian government to return to Bogotá as adviser to a commission established to implement the report's recommendations. In December 1952, Currie gave evidence in New York to a grand jury investigating Owen Lattimore's role in the publication of secret State Department documents in Amerasia magazine.

However, when Currie, as a U.S. citizen, tried to renew his passport in 1954, he was refused, ostensibly on the grounds that he was now residing abroad and married to a Colombian. However, he may have in fact been identified with the then-secret Venona project, which had decrypted wartime Soviet cables where Currie was identified as a source of Soviet intelligence.

He appears in the Venona cables under the cover name 'PAGE', and in Soviet intelligence archives as 'VIM' and as a source for the Golos and Bentley spy networks.[19][20]

According to John Earl Haynes and Harvey Klehr, evidence that Currie cooperated with Soviet espionage is convincing and substantial.[21][22]

Historians Allen Weinstein[23] and Christopher Andrew[24] also conclude Currie was a Soviet asset.

Colombia

After a military coup in Colombia in 1953, Currie retired from economic advisory work and devoted himself to raising Holstein cattle on a farm outside Bogotá, and developed the highest-yielding dairy herd in the country. With the return of civilian government in 1958, President Alberto Lleras personally conferred Colombian citizenship upon him, and Currie returned to advisory work for a succession of Colombian presidents.

Between 1966 and 1971, he traveled abroad as a visiting professor in North American and British universities: Michigan State (1966), Simon Fraser (1967–1968 and 1969–1971),[25] Glasgow (1968–1969)[26] and Oxford (1969). He returned permanently to Colombia in May 1971 at the behest of President Misael Pastrana Borrero to be the architect of a new "Plan of the Four Strategies", with focus on urban housing and export diversification. The plan was implemented, with new institutions playing a major role in accelerating Colombia's urbanization.

Currie was chief economist at the Colombian National Planning Department from 1971 to 1981, followed by twelve years at the Colombian Institute of Savings and Housing until his death in 1993. There he doggedly defended the unique housing finance system (based on "units of constant purchasing power" for both savers and borrowers) established in 1972. The system significantly boosted Colombia's growth.

Currie advised on urban planning and played a major part in the first United Nations Habitat conference in Vancouver in 1976. His "cities-within-the-city" urban design and financing proposals (including the public recapture of land's socially created "valorización" or "unearned land value increments" as cities grow) were explained in Taming the Megalopolis published in 1976. He was also a professor at the National University of Colombia, the Javeriana University, and the University of the Andes.

His writings were heavily influenced by his Harvard mentor Allyn Young. An important paper on Youngian endogenous growth theory was published posthumously in History of Political Economy (1997).

President César Gaviria awarded Currie Colombia's highest peacetime decoration, the Order of Boyaca, on the day before Garviria's death.[citation needed]

Death

Currie died on December 23, 1993, aged 91, of a heart attack in Bogota, Colombia.[27]

Publications

Books

  • The Supply and Control of Money in the United States. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press (1934). OCLC 310482019.
His influential early work on monetary theory and policy, based on his 1931 PhD thesis, Bank Assets and Banking Theory. Included an essay on Currie's contribution to monetary theory, by Karl Brunner.[12]

Articles

Conferences

Personal papers

  • Duke University's Special Collections Library, 1931-1994. OCLC 39100493.
Emphasis on Currie's own life and career.
Emphasis on papers related to China and military operations in the China-Burma-India Theater.

References

  1. ^ Staff writer. "Apostle of Spending." Nation's Business, vol. 29, no. 8 (August 1941), pp. 48. ProQuest 231589459.
  2. ^ "Lauchlin Currie, 91; New Deal Economist Was Roosevelt Aide". New York Times. Retrieved 14 June 2018.
  3. ^ Currie, Lauchlin B. (1931). Bank Assets and Banking Theory (PhD thesis). Harvard University. ProQuest 301837025.
  4. ^ Roger Sandilands, 2008. "Currie, Lauchlin (1902–1993)," The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics, 2nd Edition. Abstract, dictionaryofeconomics.com; accessed 21 March 2016.
  5. ^ Currie, Lauchlin. "The Failure of Monetary Policy to Prevent the Depression of 1929–32." Journal of Political Economy, Vol. 42, No. 2, April 1934, pp. 145–177. JSTOR 1823261.
    "I am also indebted to ... A. G. Silverman for many helpful suggestions and criticisms." (p. 145)
  6. ^ Beckhart, Benjamin Haggot. Review of The Supply and Control of Money in the United States by Laughlin Currie. Political Science Quarterly, Vol. 50, No. 3, September 1935, pp. 432-435. doi:10.2307/2143702. JSTOR 2143702.
  7. ^ Conti-Brown, Peter (2 Mar 2015). "The Twelve Federal Reserve Banks: Governance and Accountability in the 21st Century." Hutchins Center Working Paper #10. Brookings Institute.
  8. ^ "A History of the Federal Reserve, Volume 1: 1913-1951 | Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis". minneapolisfed.org. Retrieved 14 June 2018.
  9. ^ Stein, 1969
  10. ^ a b "Lauchlin Currie Papers | Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library & Museum". www.fdrlibrary.marist.edu. Retrieved 14 June 2018.
  11. ^ Sandilands, Rodger James (May 24, 1990). "Chapter 4: In the White House: Peace and War, 1939-45". The Life and Political Economy of Lauchlin Currie: New Dealer, Presidential Advisor, and Development Economist. pp. 96–112. ISBN 0822310309.
  12. ^ a b Ford, Daniel. "Lauchlin Currie: A Spy at the Heart of the AVG?" The Warbird's Forum. Archived from the original. Retrieved 10 March 2021.
  13. ^ Jiange, Arnold Xiangze (April 6, 1988). "Chapter 7: Aid to Chiang Against Japan". The United States and China. pp. 107–112. ISBN 0226399478.
  14. ^ Lauchlin Currie, being presented with a silver cigarette case by two men, on his retirement as president of the War Agencies Employees Protective Association. [Photograph]. 28 June 1945. Retrieved from the Library of Congress.
  15. ^ Allen Weinstein (1978) Perjury: The Hiss-Chambers Case, New York, Ballantine Books, p. 292
  16. ^ . CIA. 19 March 2007. Archived from the original on 20 October 2020. Retrieved 17 January 2020. See paragraph with footnote 22.
  17. ^ a b Jerrold and Leona Schecter, Sacred Secrets: How Soviet Intelligence Operations Changed American History, Potomac Press, 2002
  18. ^ John E. Haynes and Harvey Klehr, Venona: Decoding Soviet Espionage in America, Yale University Press (2000)
  19. ^ Vassiliev notes on Soviet KGB archival material 2007-07-21 at the Wayback Machine
  20. ^ Allen Weinstein and Alexander Vassiliev, The Haunted Wood: Soviet Espionage in America: The Stalin Era, Modern Library Press (2000)
  21. ^ John E. Haynes and Harvey Klehr, In Denial: Historians, Communism, & Espionage, Encounter Books (2003) p. 191
  22. ^ John E. Haynes and Harvey Klehr, "Venona: Decoding Soviet Espionage in America", Yale University Press (2000) p. 43, pp. 145-150, p. 161
  23. ^ Allen Weinstein and Alexander Vassiliev, "The Haunted Wood: Soviet Espionage in America", Random House (1999) pp. 161-163
  24. ^ Christopher Andrew, "The Sword and the Shield: The Mitrokhin Archive and the Secret History of the KGB", Basic Books (1999) p. 130
  25. ^ Simon Fraser conferred an honorary doctorate to Currie in 1980 2008-05-31 at the Wayback Machine
  26. ^ Staff writer. "Information Section." Bulletin of the Society for Latin American Studies, no. 10, 1968, pp. 6–10; JSTOR 44746630.
  27. ^ "Lauchlin Currie, 91. "New Deal Economist Was Roosevelt Aide"". New York Times. December 30, 1993. Retrieved 2008-05-31. Lauchlin Currie, an economist who helped shape the New Deal during the Administration of Franklin D. Roosevelt, died last Thursday at his home in Bogota, Colombia. He was 91. The cause was a heart attack, said Juan Carlos Guerrero, an associate.

Sources

Biography

On Currie and the New Deal

In defense of Currie

  • Roger Sandilands (2000). "Guilt by Association? Lauchlin Currie's Alleged Involvement with Washington Economists in Soviet Espionage." History of Political Economy, vol. 32, no. 4. doi:10.1215/00182702-32-3-473.
  • James Boughton and Roger Sandilands (Sep. 2003). "Politics and the Attack on FDR's Economists: From Grand Alliance to Cold War." Intelligence and National Security, vol. 18, no. 3. pp. 73-99. doi:10.1080/02684520412331306930.

On allegation that Currie was a Soviet spy

Further reading

  • NACIC [National Counterintelligence Center], Vol. 3, Ch. 1, p. 31.
  • Anonymous Russian letter to Hoover, 7 August 1943, reproduced in , edited by Robert Louis Benson and Michael Warner. Washington, D.C.: National Security Agency, Central Intelligence Agency, 1996, pp. 51–54.
  • File card of Patterson contacts in regard Silvermaster. box 203, Robert P. Patterson papers, box 203, Library of Congress.
  • General Bissell to General Strong, 3 June 1942; Silvermaster reply to Bissell memo, 9 June 1942; Robert P. Patterson to Milo Perkins of Board of Economic Warfare, 3 July 1942. Interlocking Subversion in Government Departments, 30 August 1955, 84th Cong., 1st sess., part 30, pp. 2562–2567.
  • Hanyok, Robert J. "Eavesdropping on Hell: Historical Guide to Western Communications Intelligence and the Holocaust, 1939–1945. Ft. Meade, MD: National Security Agency, Center for Cryptologic History, 2005.
"Currie, known as PAZh (Page) and White, whose cover names were YuRIST (Jurist) and changed later to LAJER (Lawyer), had been used as sources of information by Soviet agents since the 1930s, though there has been much dispute as to whether their involvement was witting or otherwise. They had been identified as Soviet sources in Venona translations and by other agents turned witnesses or informants for the FBI and Justice Department. From the Venona translations, both were known to have been sources of information for their so-called "handlers", notably the Silvermaster network."
  • Haynes, John E. and Harvey Klehr. Venona: Decoding Soviet Espionage in America. Yale University Press, 2000.
  • Haynes, John E. and Harvey Klehr. In Denial: Historians, Communism, & Espionage. Encounter Press, 2003.
  • Schecter, Jerrold and Leona. Sacred Secrets: How Soviet Intelligence Operations Changed American History. Potomac Press, 2002.
  • Laidler, David, and Roger Sandilands. "An Early Harvard Memorandum on Anti-Depression Policies: An Introductory Note." History of Political Economy, Vol. 34, No. 3, 2002, pp. 515–532. doi:10.1215/00182702-34-3-515.
  • Lauchlin Currie testimony, 13 August 1948, U.S. Congress, House of Representatives, Committee on Un-American Activities, 80th Cong., 2d sess., 851–877.
  • Report on Currie Interview, 31 July 1947. FBI Silvermaster file, serial 2794.
  • Underground Soviet Espionage Organization (NKVD) in Agencies of the United States Government, 21 February 1946. FBI Silvermaster file, serial 573.
  • Vassiliev, Alexander.
  • Warner, Michael, and Robert Louis Benson. "Venona and Beyond: Thoughts on Work Undone." Intelligence and National Security, Vol. 12, No. 3, July 1997, pp. 10–11.
  • Weinstein, Allen, and Alexander Vassiliev. The Haunted Wood: Soviet Espionage in America—The Stalin Era. Modern Library, 2000.

External links

lauchlin, currie, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, august, 2. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Lauchlin Currie news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message For the Nova Scotia judge and politician see Lauchlin Daniel Currie Lauchlin Bernard Currie October 8 1902 December 23 1993 worked as White House economic adviser to President Franklin Roosevelt during World War II 1939 45 From 1949 to 1953 he directed a major World Bank mission to Colombia and related studies Information from the Venona project a counter intelligence program undertaken by agencies of the United States government references him in nine partially decrypted cables sent by agents of the Soviet Union He became a Colombian citizen after the United States refused to renew his passport in 1954 due to doubts of his loyalty to the United States engendered by the testimony of former Communist agents and information in the Venona decrypts Lauchlin CurrieLauchlin Currie on July 17 1939BornLauchlin Bernard Currie 1902 10 08 October 8 1902Nova Scotia CanadaDiedDecember 23 1993 1993 12 23 aged 91 Bogota ColombiaNationalityCanadian ColombianFieldEconomic adviserAlma materLondon School of EconomicsInfluencesAllyn Abbott YoungAwardsOrder of Boyaca Contents 1 Formative years 2 Early professional life 3 New Deal 3 1 Freshman brain trust 3 2 White House 4 Soviet agent 5 Colombia 6 Death 7 Publications 8 References 9 Sources 9 1 Biography 9 2 On Currie and the New Deal 9 3 In defense of Currie 9 4 On allegation that Currie was a Soviet spy 10 Further reading 11 External linksFormative years EditHe was born to Lauchlin Bernard Currie an operator of a fleet of merchant ships and Alice Eisenhauer Currie a schoolteacher After his father died in 1906 when Currie was four his family moved to nearby Bridgewater Nova Scotia where most of his schooling was done By the time his family moved to Massachusetts he had begun to demonstrate his studious habits and often read late into the night For relaxation he drove automobiles with his foot on the floor board 1 He also attended school in California where he had relatives In 1922 after two years at Saint Francis Xavier University in Nova Scotia Currie moved to the United Kingdom to study at the London School of Economics 2 under Edwin Cannan Hugh Dalton A L Bowley and Harold Laski From the LSE Currie moved to Harvard University where his chief inspiration was Allyn Abbott Young then president of the American Economic Association At Harvard he earned his Ph D in 1931 for a dissertation on banking theory 3 Early professional life EditCurrie remained at Harvard until 1934 as a lecturer and assistant to successively Ralph Hawtrey John H Williams and Joseph Schumpeter Paul Sweezy was one of his students in money and banking at Harvard citation needed Among his associates in Cambridge was Abraham George Silverman who would later be revealed as a Soviet spy for the Ware Group In a January 1932 Harvard memorandum on antidepression policy Currie and fellow instructors Harry Dexter White and Paul T Ellsworth urged large fiscal deficits coupled with open market operations to expand bank reserves as well as the lifting of tariffs and the relief of interallied debts 4 In 1934 Currie constructed the first money supply and income velocity series for the United States He blamed the government s commercial loan theory of banking for monetary tightening in mid 1929 when the economy was already declining and then for its passivity during the next four years in the face of mass liquidations and bank failures Instead he advocated control of the money supply to stabilize income and expenditures Currie cited his colleague and Soviet agent Silverman for his many helpful suggestions and criticisms in the formation of this line of thinking 5 6 New Deal EditFreshman brain trust Edit In 1934 Currie became a naturalized United States citizen and joined Jacob Viner s freshman brain trust at the U S Treasury where he outlined an ideal monetary system for the United States which included a 100 percent reserve banking plan to strengthen central bank control and prevent bank panics in the future by preventing member banks from lending out their demand deposit liabilities while removing reserve requirements on savings deposits with low turnover Later that year Marriner Eccles moved from the Treasury to become governor of the Federal Reserve Board He took Currie with him as his personal assistant Harry Dexter White another freshman brain trust recruit became a top adviser to Secretary of the Treasury Henry Morgenthau and for some years White and Currie worked closely in their respective roles at the Treasury and the Federal Reserve 7 Soon afterwards Currie drafted the Banking Act of 1935 which reorganized the Federal Reserve and strengthened its powers He also constructed a net federal income creating expenditure series to show the strategic role of fiscal policy in complementing monetary policy to revive an economy in exceptionally acute persisting depression Currie s preferred 100 percent reserve banking idea however was not one of the reforms implemented Alan Meltzer wrote in his history of the Federal Reserve that Lauchlin Currie wrote a remarkable memo for a Treasury committee in 1934 emphasizing the role of money in cyclical fluctuations at a time when virtually no one thought that money mattered 8 After four years of recovery the economy declined sharply in 1937 In a four hour interview with President Roosevelt he was able to explain that the declared aim of balancing the budget to restore business confidence had damaged the economy This was part of the struggle for the soul of FDR 9 between the cautious Morgenthau and the expansionist Eccles In April 1938 the president asked Congress for major appropriations for spending on relief and public works In May 1939 the rationale was explained in theoretical and statistical detail by Currie Mr Inside and by Harvard s Alvin Hansen Mr Outside in testimony before the Temporary National Economic Committee to highlight the role of government deficits in the recovery process White House Edit Named FDR s White House economist in July 1939 Currie advised on taxation social security and the speeding up of peacetime and wartime production plans 10 In January 1941 he was sent on a mission to China for discussions with Generalissimo Chiang Kai shek and Chou En lai the Communist representative in the Chinese wartime capital of Chungking 10 On his return in March he recommended that China be added to the lend lease program He was put in charge of its administration under the overall direction of FDR s special assistant Harry Hopkins 11 Currie was also assigned to expedite the American Volunteer Group Flying Tigers which consisted largely of U S military pilots released for combat on behalf of China against Japan and technically part of the Chinese Air Force under the command of Claire Chennault Currie also organized a large training program in the United States for Chinese pilots In May 1941 he presented a paper on Chinese aircraft requirements to General George C Marshall and the Joint War Board The document accepted by the Board stressed the role of an air force in China could play in defending Singapore the Burma Road and the Philippines against Japanese attack It pointed to its potential for strategic bombing of targets in Japan itself These activities together with Currie s work in helping to tighten sanctions against Japan are said to have played a part in provoking Japan s attack on Pearl Harbor 12 Currie returned to Chungking in July 1942 to try to patch up the strained relations between Chiang and General Joseph W Stilwell commander of U S forces in China Currie was one of several of FDR s envoys who recommended Stilwell s recall and reassignment Back in Washington Roosevelt asked Currie to put his case to General Marshall but the General dismissed the idea Only much later did Marshall concede that his protege s continued presence in China was indeed a mistake Stilwell was recalled in October 1944 13 From 1943 to 1944 Currie served as Deputy Administrator for the Foreign Economic Administration where he played a major role in recruiting or recommending economists and others throughout the Washington administration Prominent examples are John Kenneth Galbraith Richard Gilbert Adlai Stevenson and William O Dwyer While at the FEA Currie became a founding member of the War Agencies Employees Protective Association an organization created to help civilian Federal employees acquire life insurance while serving in war zones Currie served as WAEPA s first president from May 1943 until his retirement in June 1945 14 In 1944 1945 he was involved in loan negotiations between the United States British and Soviet allies and in preparations for the 1944 Bretton Woods conference staged mainly by Harry Dexter White which led to the creation of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank In early 1945 Currie headed a tripartite U S British and French mission to Bern to persuade the Swiss to freeze Nazi bank balances and stop further shipments of German supplies through Switzerland to the Italian front In July 1949 Currie headed a nine man mission popularly known as the Currie Mission to Colombia on behalf of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development IBRD The mission was tasked with assessing the country s economic potentialities and subsequently recommending an integrated program for economic development Soviet agent EditAfter the war Currie was one of those blamed for losing China to the control of Communists In 1939 Currie had been identified by Communist defector Whittaker Chambers in a meeting with Roosevelt security chief Adolf Berle as a Soviet agent 15 Spring of 1944 Currie informed Soviet contacts that the United States VENONA program was about to break the Soviet signals code 16 Elizabeth Bentley like Chambers a former Soviet espionage agent later claimed in Congressional testimony in 1948 that Currie and Harry Dexter White had been part of the Silvermaster ring 17 Although she had never met Currie or White in person Bentley testified to receiving information through cutouts couriers who were other Washington economists later determined to be Soviet agents 17 18 White and Currie appeared before the House Committee on Un American Activities in August 1948 to rebut her charges White who was also implicated as a source of Soviet intelligence later confirmed in Venona intercepts and review of Soviet KGB notes of NKVD official Gaik Ovakimian had a serious heart problem and died three days after his appearance at the hearings Currie was not prosecuted and in 1949 he was appointed to head the first of the World Bank s comprehensive country surveys in Colombia After his report was published in Washington in September 1950 he was invited by the Colombian government to return to Bogota as adviser to a commission established to implement the report s recommendations In December 1952 Currie gave evidence in New York to a grand jury investigating Owen Lattimore s role in the publication of secret State Department documents in Amerasia magazine However when Currie as a U S citizen tried to renew his passport in 1954 he was refused ostensibly on the grounds that he was now residing abroad and married to a Colombian However he may have in fact been identified with the then secret Venona project which had decrypted wartime Soviet cables where Currie was identified as a source of Soviet intelligence He appears in the Venona cables under the cover name PAGE and in Soviet intelligence archives as VIM and as a source for the Golos and Bentley spy networks 19 20 According to John Earl Haynes and Harvey Klehr evidence that Currie cooperated with Soviet espionage is convincing and substantial 21 22 Historians Allen Weinstein 23 and Christopher Andrew 24 also conclude Currie was a Soviet asset Colombia EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Lauchlin Currie news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message After a military coup in Colombia in 1953 Currie retired from economic advisory work and devoted himself to raising Holstein cattle on a farm outside Bogota and developed the highest yielding dairy herd in the country With the return of civilian government in 1958 President Alberto Lleras personally conferred Colombian citizenship upon him and Currie returned to advisory work for a succession of Colombian presidents Between 1966 and 1971 he traveled abroad as a visiting professor in North American and British universities Michigan State 1966 Simon Fraser 1967 1968 and 1969 1971 25 Glasgow 1968 1969 26 and Oxford 1969 He returned permanently to Colombia in May 1971 at the behest of President Misael Pastrana Borrero to be the architect of a new Plan of the Four Strategies with focus on urban housing and export diversification The plan was implemented with new institutions playing a major role in accelerating Colombia s urbanization Currie was chief economist at the Colombian National Planning Department from 1971 to 1981 followed by twelve years at the Colombian Institute of Savings and Housing until his death in 1993 There he doggedly defended the unique housing finance system based on units of constant purchasing power for both savers and borrowers established in 1972 The system significantly boosted Colombia s growth Currie advised on urban planning and played a major part in the first United Nations Habitat conference in Vancouver in 1976 His cities within the city urban design and financing proposals including the public recapture of land s socially created valorizacion or unearned land value increments as cities grow were explained in Taming the Megalopolis published in 1976 He was also a professor at the National University of Colombia the Javeriana University and the University of the Andes His writings were heavily influenced by his Harvard mentor Allyn Young An important paper on Youngian endogenous growth theory was published posthumously in History of Political Economy 1997 President Cesar Gaviria awarded Currie Colombia s highest peacetime decoration the Order of Boyaca on the day before Garviria s death citation needed Death EditCurrie died on December 23 1993 aged 91 of a heart attack in Bogota Colombia 27 Publications EditBooks The Supply and Control of Money in the United States Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press 1934 OCLC 310482019 His influential early work on monetary theory and policy based on his 1931 PhD thesis Bank Assets and Banking Theory Included an essay on Currie s contribution to monetary theory by Karl Brunner 12 dd Operacion Colombia un programa nacional de desarrollo economico y social Bogota Colombia Sociedad de Economistas 1961 Accelerating Development The Necessity and the Means New York McGraw Hill 1966 OCLC 1145809188 Obstacles to Development East Lansing Michigan State University Press 1967 Governmental Planning and Political Economy with by Yngve Larsson and Pieter deWolff Berkeley University of California Berkeley 1967 OCLC 1149349716 Taming the Megalopolis A Design for Urban Growth New York Pergamon Press with the United Nations 1976 ISBN 978 0080209807 The Role of Economic Advisers in Developing Countries Santa Barbara Calif Greenwood Press 1981 ISBN 978 0313230646 Articles Federal Reserve Policy 1921 1930 A Rejoinder American Economic Review vol 21 no 3 1931 pp 502 502 JSTOR 1811810 Treatment of Credit in Contemporary Monetary Theory Journal of Political Economy vol 41 no 1 Feb 1933 pp 58 79 JSTOR 1822874 Money Gold and Income in the United States 1921 32 Quarterly Journal of Economics vol 48 no 1 Nov 1933 pp 77 95 doi 10 2307 1884797 JSTOR 1884797 A Note on Income Velocities Quarterly Journal of Economics vol 48 no 2 Feb 1934 pp 353 354 doi 10 2307 1885614 JSTOR 1885614 The Failure of Monetary Policy to Prevent the Depression of 1929 32 Journal of Political Economy vol 42 No 2 Apr 1934 pp 145 177 JSTOR 1823261 The Supply and Control of Money A Reply to Dr B M Anderson Jr Quarterly Journal of Economics vol 49 No 4 Aug 1935 pp 694 704 doi 10 2307 1885406 JSTOR 1885406 Some Prerequisites for Success of the Point Four Program The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science vol 270 no 1 1950 pp 102 108 doi 10 1177 000271625027000114 The Interrelations of Urban and National Economic Planning Urban Studies vol 12 no 1 Feb 1975 pp 37 46 doi 10 1080 00420987520080031 JSTOR 43080826 Conferences Urbanization Some Basic Issues In Habitat United Nations Conference on Human Settlements Vancouver Canada 31 May 11 June 1976 New York United Nations OCLC 6978054 Personal papers Duke University s Special Collections Library 1931 1994 OCLC 39100493 Emphasis on Currie s own life and career dd Hoover Institution Stanford University 1941 1993 OCLC 754871087 Emphasis on papers related to China and military operations in the China Burma India Theater dd References Edit Staff writer Apostle of Spending Nation s Business vol 29 no 8 August 1941 pp 48 ProQuest 231589459 Lauchlin Currie 91 New Deal Economist Was Roosevelt Aide New York Times Retrieved 14 June 2018 Currie Lauchlin B 1931 Bank Assets and Banking Theory PhD thesis Harvard University ProQuest 301837025 Roger Sandilands 2008 Currie Lauchlin 1902 1993 The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics 2nd Edition Abstract dictionaryofeconomics com accessed 21 March 2016 Currie Lauchlin The Failure of Monetary Policy to Prevent the Depression of 1929 32 Journal of Political Economy Vol 42 No 2 April 1934 pp 145 177 JSTOR 1823261 I am also indebted to A G Silverman for many helpful suggestions and criticisms p 145 dd Beckhart Benjamin Haggot Review of The Supply and Control of Money in the United States by Laughlin Currie Political Science Quarterly Vol 50 No 3 September 1935 pp 432 435 doi 10 2307 2143702 JSTOR 2143702 Conti Brown Peter 2 Mar 2015 The Twelve Federal Reserve Banks Governance and Accountability in the 21st Century Hutchins Center Working Paper 10 Brookings Institute A History of the Federal Reserve Volume 1 1913 1951 Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis minneapolisfed org Retrieved 14 June 2018 Stein 1969 a b Lauchlin Currie Papers Franklin D Roosevelt Presidential Library amp Museum www fdrlibrary marist edu Retrieved 14 June 2018 Sandilands Rodger James May 24 1990 Chapter 4 In the White House Peace and War 1939 45 The Life and Political Economy of Lauchlin Currie New Dealer Presidential Advisor and Development Economist pp 96 112 ISBN 0822310309 a b Ford Daniel Lauchlin Currie A Spy at the Heart of the AVG The Warbird s Forum Archived from the original Retrieved 10 March 2021 Jiange Arnold Xiangze April 6 1988 Chapter 7 Aid to Chiang Against Japan The United States and China pp 107 112 ISBN 0226399478 Lauchlin Currie being presented with a silver cigarette case by two men on his retirement as president of the War Agencies Employees Protective Association Photograph 28 June 1945 Retrieved from the Library of Congress Allen Weinstein 1978 Perjury The Hiss Chambers Case New York Ballantine Books p 292 Venona Soviet Espionage and The American Response 1939 1957 CIA 19 March 2007 Archived from the original on 20 October 2020 Retrieved 17 January 2020 See paragraph with footnote 22 a b Jerrold and Leona Schecter Sacred Secrets How Soviet Intelligence Operations Changed American History Potomac Press 2002 John E Haynes and Harvey Klehr Venona Decoding Soviet Espionage in America Yale University Press 2000 Vassiliev notes on Soviet KGB archival material Archived 2007 07 21 at the Wayback Machine Allen Weinstein and Alexander Vassiliev The Haunted Wood Soviet Espionage in America The Stalin Era Modern Library Press 2000 John E Haynes and Harvey Klehr In Denial Historians Communism amp Espionage Encounter Books 2003 p 191 John E Haynes and Harvey Klehr Venona Decoding Soviet Espionage in America Yale University Press 2000 p 43 pp 145 150 p 161 Allen Weinstein and Alexander Vassiliev The Haunted Wood Soviet Espionage in America Random House 1999 pp 161 163 Christopher Andrew The Sword and the Shield The Mitrokhin Archive and the Secret History of the KGB Basic Books 1999 p 130 Simon Fraser conferred an honorary doctorate to Currie in 1980 Archived 2008 05 31 at the Wayback Machine Staff writer Information Section Bulletin of the Society for Latin American Studies no 10 1968 pp 6 10 JSTOR 44746630 Lauchlin Currie 91 New Deal Economist Was Roosevelt Aide New York Times December 30 1993 Retrieved 2008 05 31 Lauchlin Currie an economist who helped shape the New Deal during the Administration of Franklin D Roosevelt died last Thursday at his home in Bogota Colombia He was 91 The cause was a heart attack said Juan Carlos Guerrero an associate Sources EditBiography Edit Roger Sandilands 1990 The Life and Political Economy of Lauchlin Currie New Dealer Presidential Adviser and Development Economist with preface Durham NC Duke University Press ISBN 978 0822310303 doi 10 1215 9780822379751 Obituaries in The New York Times 30 Dec 1993 and The Times of London 10 Jan 1994 On Currie and the New Deal Edit Herbert Stein 1969 The Fiscal Revolution in America Chicago University of Chicago Press LCCN 69 14828 Ronnie J Phillips 1995 The Chicago Plan and New Deal Banking Reform New York M E Sharpe ISBN 978 1563244698 Special issue of the Journal of Economic Studies vol 31 2004 Contains some of his hitherto unpublished FRB and White House memoranda In defense of Currie Edit Roger Sandilands 2000 Guilt by Association Lauchlin Currie s Alleged Involvement with Washington Economists in Soviet Espionage History of Political Economy vol 32 no 4 doi 10 1215 00182702 32 3 473 James Boughton and Roger Sandilands Sep 2003 Politics and the Attack on FDR s Economists From Grand Alliance to Cold War Intelligence and National Security vol 18 no 3 pp 73 99 doi 10 1080 02684520412331306930 On allegation that Currie was a Soviet spy Edit John Earl Haynes and Harvey Klehr 1999 Venona Soviet Espionage in America in the Stalin Era New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 978 0300084627 Further reading EditA Counterintelligence Reader NACIC National Counterintelligence Center Vol 3 Ch 1 p 31 Anonymous Russian letter to Hoover 7 August 1943 reproduced in Venona Soviet Espionage and the American Response 1939 1957 edited by Robert Louis Benson and Michael Warner Washington D C National Security Agency Central Intelligence Agency 1996 pp 51 54 File card of Patterson contacts in regard Silvermaster box 203 Robert P Patterson papers box 203 Library of Congress General Bissell to General Strong 3 June 1942 Silvermaster reply to Bissell memo 9 June 1942 Robert P Patterson to Milo Perkins of Board of Economic Warfare 3 July 1942 Interlocking Subversion in Government Departments 30 August 1955 84th Cong 1st sess part 30 pp 2562 2567 Hanyok Robert J Eavesdropping on Hell Historical Guide to Western Communications Intelligence and the Holocaust 1939 1945 Ft Meade MD National Security Agency Center for Cryptologic History 2005 Currie known as PAZh Page and White whose cover names were YuRIST Jurist and changed later to LAJER Lawyer had been used as sources of information by Soviet agents since the 1930s though there has been much dispute as to whether their involvement was witting or otherwise They had been identified as Soviet sources in Venona translations and by other agents turned witnesses or informants for the FBI and Justice Department From the Venona translations both were known to have been sources of information for their so called handlers notably the Silvermaster network dd Haynes John E and Harvey Klehr Venona Decoding Soviet Espionage in America Yale University Press 2000 Haynes John E and Harvey Klehr In Denial Historians Communism amp Espionage Encounter Press 2003 Schecter Jerrold and Leona Sacred Secrets How Soviet Intelligence Operations Changed American History Potomac Press 2002 Laidler David and Roger Sandilands An Early Harvard Memorandum on Anti Depression Policies An Introductory Note History of Political Economy Vol 34 No 3 2002 pp 515 532 doi 10 1215 00182702 34 3 515 Lauchlin Currie testimony 13 August 1948 U S Congress House of Representatives Committee on Un American Activities 80th Cong 2d sess 851 877 Report on Currie Interview 31 July 1947 FBI Silvermaster file serial 2794 Underground Soviet Espionage Organization NKVD in Agencies of the United States Government 21 February 1946 FBI Silvermaster file serial 573 Vassiliev Alexander Notes on Soviet SVR archives Warner Michael and Robert Louis Benson Venona and Beyond Thoughts on Work Undone Intelligence and National Security Vol 12 No 3 July 1997 pp 10 11 Weinstein Allen and Alexander Vassiliev The Haunted Wood Soviet Espionage in America The Stalin Era Modern Library 2000 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lauchlin Currie Lauchlin Currie at Enciclopedia Banrepcultural Venona Soviet Espionage and the American Response 1939 1957 Politics and the Attack on FDR s Economists Annals of the Flying Tigers Lauchlin Bernard Currie Papers 1931 1994 and undated bulk 1950 1990 at Rubenstein Library Duke University FBI file on Currie in four parts released under the Freedom of Information Act Collection of works by Lauchlin Currie in the FRASER digital archive Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lauchlin Currie amp oldid 1145098778, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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