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Office of Price Administration

The Office of Price Administration (OPA) was established within the Office for Emergency Management of the United States government by Executive Order 8875 on August 28, 1941. The functions of the OPA were originally to control money (price controls) and rents after the outbreak of World War II.[3]

Office of Price Administration

An OPA
Agency overview
FormedAugust 28, 1941 (1941-08-28)
Preceding
DissolvedMay 29, 1947 (1947-05-29)
Superseding agencies
JurisdictionUnited States Government
HeadquartersWashington, D.C.
Agency executives
Parent agencyOffice for Emergency Management

History

President Franklin D. Roosevelt inaugurated the Council of National Defense Advisory Commission on May 29, 1940,[4] to include Price Stabilization and Consumer Protection Divisions. Both divisions merged to become the Office of Price Administration and Civilian Supply (OPACS) within the Office for Emergency Management by Executive Order 8734, on April 11, 1941. Civil supply functions were transferred to the Office of Production Management.[1]

It became an independent agency under the Emergency Price Control Act, January 30, 1942. The OPA had the power to place ceilings on all prices except agricultural commodities, and to ration scarce supplies of other items, including tires, automobiles, shoes, nylon, sugar, gasoline, fuel oil, coffee, meats and processed foods. At the peak, almost 90% of retail food prices were frozen. It could also authorize subsidies for production of some of those commodities.[5]

Dissolution

As early as 1944, in its annual debate about price control extension, Congress discussed limiting the power of the OPA as World War II drew to a close and the necessity of price controls was called into question. While some argued for the continuation of price controls to hold post war inflation in check, there was widespread support among conservatives and businessmen for the rapid deregulation of the economy as it reconverted to a civilian footing.[6] Groups such as the National Association of Manufacturers and the National Retail Dry Good Association sought to guarantee companies a minimum amount of profits, thereby effectively limiting the price control measures.[7] However, the OPA still enjoyed widespread popular support and the agency was renewed in 1944 and again in 1945.[7][8] While these renewals were considerable successes for many consumer advocacy groups, they also marked the height of the OPA, from which the agency's power and popularity would decline in the next two years.[7]

By June 1946, significant opposition by NAM and NRDA had been mounted to sway Congress, which, only two days before the existing legislation was set to expire, passed a bill that would have left the OPA a much-weakened version of its past self.[7][8] President Harry S. Truman vetoed this bill in hopes of forcing Congress to create a stronger one, but as the month of June came to an end, the OPA shut down, and its price and rent controls went with it.[8] The result was a sharp jump in prices, with food increasing by 14 percent and the cost of overall living rising by 6 percent, an equivalent to more than 100 percent per year.[7][8] Consumers all over the nation turned out in varying numbers to protest these increases, with labor unions forming a major part of the participants.[7][8]

By the end of July, Congress had reversed course and passed legislation reinstating the OPA and price controls, though this bill was no stronger than what President Truman had vetoed earlier.[7][8] This much-weakened version of the OPA did not last long, as meat packers launched their own form of protest against the agency, slowing slaughtering rates and withholding meat from market.[7][8] The resulting widespread shortages did much to damage the public faith in the OPA, which was now seen as ineffective, and the Democrat-led Congress.[7][8] When faced with the choices of higher prices or no meat, the consumers chose the latter. Although President Truman ended price controls on meat, on October 14, just two weeks before the election, in a rejection of price controls and as a sign of the changing attitude of the American public towards a control-free re-conversion, many Democratic incumbents were defeated, and Republicans gained control of Congress.[6][7][8] Following this defeat, Truman lifted almost all price and wage controls and, while the OPA was authorized to exist through June 30, 1947, its range of tasks and ability to effectively regulate prices was curtailed severely, being reduced to rent control and some price control over a very limited number of goods.[8] Most functions of the OPA were transferred to the newly established Office of Temporary Controls (OTC) by Executive Order 9809, December 12, 1946. The Financial Reporting Division was transferred to the Federal Trade Commission. By the end of December 1946, many of OPA's local offices and price boards were closed, and the OPA did not survive until its authorized June 30 extension.[8]

The OPA was abolished effective May 29, 1947 by the General Liquidation Order, issued March 14, 1947, by the OPA Administrator.[9] Some of its functions were taken up by successor agencies:

  • Sugar and sugar products distribution by the Sugar Rationing Administration in the Department of Agriculture pursuant to the Sugar Control Extension Act (61 Stat. 36), March 31, 1947
  • Price controls over rice by the Department of Agriculture by Executive Order 9841, on April 23, 1947, effective May 4, 1947
  • Food subsidies by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, effective May 4, 1947
  • Rent control by the Office of the Housing Expediter, effective May 4, 1947
  • Price violation litigation by the Department of Justice, effective June 1, 1947
  • All other OPA functions by the Division of Liquidation, Department of Commerce, effective June 1, 1947.

Famous employees include economist John Kenneth Galbraith, legal scholar William Prosser, President Richard Nixon, and law professor John Honnold.[7]

The OPA is featured, in fictionalized form as the Bureau of Price Regulation, in Rex Stout's Nero Wolfe mystery novel The Silent Speaker.

The OPA unsuccessfully tried to revoke the car dealer license of unorthodox businessman Madman Muntz for violating used car regulations, subject to price control. Muntz was acquitted in Los Angeles Superior Court on 1 August 1945.[10]

During the Korean War, similar functions were performed by the Office of Price Stabilization (OPS).

Women and the OPA

The success of the OPA’s price controls and rationing policies depended on the support of women who acted as the main shoppers of their households, especially during wartime. Local community organizations, governments, and OPA boards held educational seminars aimed at women, targeted women to join local price and rationing boards, and recruited women for volunteer programs.[7] Many women led local volunteer War Price and Rationing Boards that ensured adherence to stabilization policies through check-ins with stores to report businesses breaking the rules. Women involved with the OPA largely fell into two broad categories: those who were part of already organized groups, such as labor unions, women’s groups, and consumer groups, among others, often with agendas that aligned with OPA’s goals of price stabilization; and women not already part of organized groups, who came from diverse backgrounds. They used the OPA as a legally established and legitimate framework for organizing themselves.[7]

The OPA’s enlistment of women to ensure that local businesses were complying with federal policies extended the public sphere into the private sphere and the effective growth of “state supervision.”[7] This resulted in a pseudo-militant attitude toward regulation and made it more difficult for politicians to curb the power of the OPA.

The OPA worked with consumer activists in a “mutually empowering” and mutually reliant fashion to ensure the effectiveness of its policies and activists’ interests.[7] Thus, a large swathe of consumer activists helped to ensure that businesses were compliant with its policies. Widespread support of the OPA came from the belief that the agency could help establish postwar prosperity.

African Americans and the OPA

Black consumer activists also were among those who supported the OPA, which gave them support from the federal government in fighting market discrimination.[7]

The OPA had a base of consumer support that included different socioeconomic classes and racial groups who supported the agency because of their belief it would bring about a postwar vision of “broad popular participation and consumer rights."[7] The OPA worked to defend consumers from exploitation by businesses while also acting as a space for citizens to become involved in politics.

Administrators of the office

OPA points

OPA points are small vulcanized fibre red and blue ration tokens issued during World War II to make change for ration coupons. Approximately 1.1 billion red and 0.9 billion blue were produced, and even though many were collected and destroyed after the war, they are still quite common today. The red OPA points are a bit more common than the blue. Each token has two letters on it, and some people collect them by letter combination.[11]

Gallery

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Herman, Arthur. Freedom's Forge: How American Business Produced Victory in World War II, pp. 127, 137–139, Random House, New York, 2012. ISBN 978-1-4000-6964-4.
  2. ^ a b http://www.encyclopedia.com/topic/Wage_and_Price_Controls.aspx[bare URL]
  3. ^ Video: Baby Bonds For Defense, 1941/04/17 (1941). Universal Newsreel. 1941. Retrieved February 20, 2012.
  4. ^ Herman, Arthur. Freedom's Forge: How American Business Produced Victory in World War II, pp. 69–71, Random House, New York, 2012. ISBN 978-1-4000-6964-4.
  5. ^ Herman, Arthur. Freedom's Forge: How American Business Produced Victory in World War II, pp. 153, 162–165, 171, Random House, New York, 2012. ISBN 978-1-4000-6964-4.
  6. ^ a b Bartels, Andrew H. (July 1983). "The Office of Price Administration and the Legacy of the New Deal, 1939–1946". The Public Historian. 5 (3): 5–29. doi:10.2307/3377026. ISSN 0272-3433. JSTOR 3377026.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Jacobs, Meg (December 1997). ""How About Some Meat?": The Office of Price Administration, Consumption Politics, and State Building from the Bottom Up, 1941–1946". The Journal of American History. 84 (3): 910–941. doi:10.2307/2953088. JSTOR 2953088.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Cohen, Lizabeth. (2008). Consumers' Republic: The Politics of Mass Consumption in Postwar America. Random House US. ISBN 978-0-375-70737-7. OCLC 1031966746.
  9. ^ "Records of the Office of Price Administration [OPA]". National Archives. 2016-08-15. Retrieved 2020-04-25.
  10. ^ Associated Press, "'Mad Man' Muntz Foils O.P.A. Charge", The San Bernardino Daily Sun, San Bernardino, California, Thursday 2 August 1945, Vol. 51, p. 2.
  11. ^ "Forrest's Token Page: Sales Tax Tokens". Retrieved 2014-02-28.

Further reading

  • Auerbach, Alfred. The OPA and Its Pricing Policies. New York: Fairchild, 1945.
  • Bartels, Andrew H. The Office of Price Administration and the Legacy of the New Deal, 1939-1946. Public Historian, (1983) 5:3 pp. 5–29. JSTOR
  • Bartels, Andrew H. The Politics of Price Control: The Office of Price Administration and the Dilemmas of Economic Stabilization, 1940-1946. (Ph.D. dissertation, The Johns Hopkins University, 1980.)
  • Galbraith, J. K. The Selection and Timing of Inflation Controls. Review of Economics and Statistics, (1941) 23:2 pp. 82–85. JSTOR
  • Galbraith, John Kenneth. A Theory of Price Control. Boston, Harvard University Press, 1952.
  • Galbraith, John Kenneth. A Life in Our Times: Memoirs. 1981.
  • Hirsch, Julius. Price Control in the War Economy. New York: Harper and Brothers, 1943.
  • Mansfield, Harvey. A Short History of OPA. Washington, 1947.
  • Office of Temporary Controls. The Beginnings of OPA. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1947.
  • Thompson, Victor A. The Regulatory Process in OPA Rationing. New York: King's Crown Press, 1950.
  • Wilson, William Jerome, and Mabel Randolph. OPA Bibliography, 1940–1947. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1948.

External links

  • Records of the Office of Price Administration (OPA)

office, price, administration, established, within, office, emergency, management, united, states, government, executive, order, 8875, august, 1941, functions, were, originally, control, money, price, controls, rents, after, outbreak, world, opaagency, overvie. The Office of Price Administration OPA was established within the Office for Emergency Management of the United States government by Executive Order 8875 on August 28 1941 The functions of the OPA were originally to control money price controls and rents after the outbreak of World War II 3 Office of Price AdministrationAn OPAAgency overviewFormedAugust 28 1941 1941 08 28 PrecedingCouncil of National Defense World War I 1 DissolvedMay 29 1947 1947 05 29 Superseding agencies1942 siblings Office of Economic Stabilization Office of Production Managementliquidated in 1947 to Agriculture Justice Commerce RFC and othersSimilar functions later performed by Office of Price Stabilization Korean War era price board Council of Economic Advisors Kennedy era price board 2 Pay Board and Price Commission Nixon era price board 2 JurisdictionUnited States GovernmentHeadquartersWashington D C Agency executivesLeon Henderson 1941 1942Prentiss Marsh Brown 1943Chester Bliss Bowles 1943 1946Parent agencyOffice for Emergency Management Contents 1 History 1 1 Dissolution 2 Women and the OPA 3 African Americans and the OPA 4 Administrators of the office 5 OPA points 6 Gallery 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory EditPresident Franklin D Roosevelt inaugurated the Council of National Defense Advisory Commission on May 29 1940 4 to include Price Stabilization and Consumer Protection Divisions Both divisions merged to become the Office of Price Administration and Civilian Supply OPACS within the Office for Emergency Management by Executive Order 8734 on April 11 1941 Civil supply functions were transferred to the Office of Production Management 1 It became an independent agency under the Emergency Price Control Act January 30 1942 The OPA had the power to place ceilings on all prices except agricultural commodities and to ration scarce supplies of other items including tires automobiles shoes nylon sugar gasoline fuel oil coffee meats and processed foods At the peak almost 90 of retail food prices were frozen It could also authorize subsidies for production of some of those commodities 5 Dissolution Edit As early as 1944 in its annual debate about price control extension Congress discussed limiting the power of the OPA as World War II drew to a close and the necessity of price controls was called into question While some argued for the continuation of price controls to hold post war inflation in check there was widespread support among conservatives and businessmen for the rapid deregulation of the economy as it reconverted to a civilian footing 6 Groups such as the National Association of Manufacturers and the National Retail Dry Good Association sought to guarantee companies a minimum amount of profits thereby effectively limiting the price control measures 7 However the OPA still enjoyed widespread popular support and the agency was renewed in 1944 and again in 1945 7 8 While these renewals were considerable successes for many consumer advocacy groups they also marked the height of the OPA from which the agency s power and popularity would decline in the next two years 7 By June 1946 significant opposition by NAM and NRDA had been mounted to sway Congress which only two days before the existing legislation was set to expire passed a bill that would have left the OPA a much weakened version of its past self 7 8 President Harry S Truman vetoed this bill in hopes of forcing Congress to create a stronger one but as the month of June came to an end the OPA shut down and its price and rent controls went with it 8 The result was a sharp jump in prices with food increasing by 14 percent and the cost of overall living rising by 6 percent an equivalent to more than 100 percent per year 7 8 Consumers all over the nation turned out in varying numbers to protest these increases with labor unions forming a major part of the participants 7 8 By the end of July Congress had reversed course and passed legislation reinstating the OPA and price controls though this bill was no stronger than what President Truman had vetoed earlier 7 8 This much weakened version of the OPA did not last long as meat packers launched their own form of protest against the agency slowing slaughtering rates and withholding meat from market 7 8 The resulting widespread shortages did much to damage the public faith in the OPA which was now seen as ineffective and the Democrat led Congress 7 8 When faced with the choices of higher prices or no meat the consumers chose the latter Although President Truman ended price controls on meat on October 14 just two weeks before the election in a rejection of price controls and as a sign of the changing attitude of the American public towards a control free re conversion many Democratic incumbents were defeated and Republicans gained control of Congress 6 7 8 Following this defeat Truman lifted almost all price and wage controls and while the OPA was authorized to exist through June 30 1947 its range of tasks and ability to effectively regulate prices was curtailed severely being reduced to rent control and some price control over a very limited number of goods 8 Most functions of the OPA were transferred to the newly established Office of Temporary Controls OTC by Executive Order 9809 December 12 1946 The Financial Reporting Division was transferred to the Federal Trade Commission By the end of December 1946 many of OPA s local offices and price boards were closed and the OPA did not survive until its authorized June 30 extension 8 The OPA was abolished effective May 29 1947 by the General Liquidation Order issued March 14 1947 by the OPA Administrator 9 Some of its functions were taken up by successor agencies Sugar and sugar products distribution by the Sugar Rationing Administration in the Department of Agriculture pursuant to the Sugar Control Extension Act 61 Stat 36 March 31 1947 Price controls over rice by the Department of Agriculture by Executive Order 9841 on April 23 1947 effective May 4 1947 Food subsidies by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation effective May 4 1947 Rent control by the Office of the Housing Expediter effective May 4 1947 Price violation litigation by the Department of Justice effective June 1 1947 All other OPA functions by the Division of Liquidation Department of Commerce effective June 1 1947 Famous employees include economist John Kenneth Galbraith legal scholar William Prosser President Richard Nixon and law professor John Honnold 7 The OPA is featured in fictionalized form as the Bureau of Price Regulation in Rex Stout s Nero Wolfe mystery novel The Silent Speaker The OPA unsuccessfully tried to revoke the car dealer license of unorthodox businessman Madman Muntz for violating used car regulations subject to price control Muntz was acquitted in Los Angeles Superior Court on 1 August 1945 10 During the Korean War similar functions were performed by the Office of Price Stabilization OPS Women and the OPA EditThe success of the OPA s price controls and rationing policies depended on the support of women who acted as the main shoppers of their households especially during wartime Local community organizations governments and OPA boards held educational seminars aimed at women targeted women to join local price and rationing boards and recruited women for volunteer programs 7 Many women led local volunteer War Price and Rationing Boards that ensured adherence to stabilization policies through check ins with stores to report businesses breaking the rules Women involved with the OPA largely fell into two broad categories those who were part of already organized groups such as labor unions women s groups and consumer groups among others often with agendas that aligned with OPA s goals of price stabilization and women not already part of organized groups who came from diverse backgrounds They used the OPA as a legally established and legitimate framework for organizing themselves 7 The OPA s enlistment of women to ensure that local businesses were complying with federal policies extended the public sphere into the private sphere and the effective growth of state supervision 7 This resulted in a pseudo militant attitude toward regulation and made it more difficult for politicians to curb the power of the OPA The OPA worked with consumer activists in a mutually empowering and mutually reliant fashion to ensure the effectiveness of its policies and activists interests 7 Thus a large swathe of consumer activists helped to ensure that businesses were compliant with its policies Widespread support of the OPA came from the belief that the agency could help establish postwar prosperity African Americans and the OPA EditBlack consumer activists also were among those who supported the OPA which gave them support from the federal government in fighting market discrimination 7 The OPA had a base of consumer support that included different socioeconomic classes and racial groups who supported the agency because of their belief it would bring about a postwar vision of broad popular participation and consumer rights 7 The OPA worked to defend consumers from exploitation by businesses while also acting as a space for citizens to become involved in politics Administrators of the office EditLeon Henderson 1941 1942 Prentiss Marsh Brown 1943 Chester Bliss Bowles 1943 1946OPA points EditOPA points are small vulcanized fibre red and blue ration tokens issued during World War II to make change for ration coupons Approximately 1 1 billion red and 0 9 billion blue were produced and even though many were collected and destroyed after the war they are still quite common today The red OPA points are a bit more common than the blue Each token has two letters on it and some people collect them by letter combination 11 Gallery Edit An OPA menu with ceiling prices A mileage ration book issued by the OPA Red and blue OPA points See also Edit World War II portal Economics portalOffice of Economic Stabilization Stabilization Act of 1942 United States home front during World War IIReferences Edit a b Herman Arthur Freedom s Forge How American Business Produced Victory in World War II pp 127 137 139 Random House New York 2012 ISBN 978 1 4000 6964 4 a b http www encyclopedia com topic Wage and Price Controls aspx bare URL Video Baby Bonds For Defense 1941 04 17 1941 Universal Newsreel 1941 Retrieved February 20 2012 Herman Arthur Freedom s Forge How American Business Produced Victory in World War II pp 69 71 Random House New York 2012 ISBN 978 1 4000 6964 4 Herman Arthur Freedom s Forge How American Business Produced Victory in World War II pp 153 162 165 171 Random House New York 2012 ISBN 978 1 4000 6964 4 a b Bartels Andrew H July 1983 The Office of Price Administration and the Legacy of the New Deal 1939 1946 The Public Historian 5 3 5 29 doi 10 2307 3377026 ISSN 0272 3433 JSTOR 3377026 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Jacobs Meg December 1997 How About Some Meat The Office of Price Administration Consumption Politics and State Building from the Bottom Up 1941 1946 The Journal of American History 84 3 910 941 doi 10 2307 2953088 JSTOR 2953088 a b c d e f g h i j k Cohen Lizabeth 2008 Consumers Republic The Politics of Mass Consumption in Postwar America Random House US ISBN 978 0 375 70737 7 OCLC 1031966746 Records of the Office of Price Administration OPA National Archives 2016 08 15 Retrieved 2020 04 25 Associated Press Mad Man Muntz Foils O P A Charge The San Bernardino Daily Sun San Bernardino California Thursday 2 August 1945 Vol 51 p 2 Forrest s Token Page Sales Tax Tokens Retrieved 2014 02 28 Further reading EditAuerbach Alfred The OPA and Its Pricing Policies New York Fairchild 1945 Bartels Andrew H The Office of Price Administration and the Legacy of the New Deal 1939 1946 Public Historian 1983 5 3 pp 5 29 JSTOR Bartels Andrew H The Politics of Price Control The Office of Price Administration and the Dilemmas of Economic Stabilization 1940 1946 Ph D dissertation The Johns Hopkins University 1980 Galbraith J K The Selection and Timing of Inflation Controls Review of Economics and Statistics 1941 23 2 pp 82 85 JSTOR Galbraith John Kenneth A Theory of Price Control Boston Harvard University Press 1952 Galbraith John Kenneth A Life in Our Times Memoirs 1981 Hirsch Julius Price Control in the War Economy New York Harper and Brothers 1943 Mansfield Harvey A Short History of OPA Washington 1947 Office of Temporary Controls The Beginnings of OPA Washington D C U S Government Printing Office 1947 Thompson Victor A The Regulatory Process in OPA Rationing New York King s Crown Press 1950 Wilson William Jerome and Mabel Randolph OPA Bibliography 1940 1947 Washington D C U S Government Printing Office 1948 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Office of Price Administration Records of the Office of Price Administration OPA Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Office of Price Administration amp oldid 1146434386, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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