(left) and
Reed Smoot in April 1929, shortly before the Smoot–Hawley Tariff Act passed the House of Representatives In 1927, the
League of Nations held a
World Economic Conference in Geneva. Their final report concluded that "the time has come to put an end to
tariffs, and to move in the opposite direction". Vast debts and reparations from World War I could be repaid only through gold, services, or goods, but the only items available on that scale were goods. Many of the governments represented by the delegates to the conference did the opposite. In 1928, France was the first, enacting a new tariff law and quota system. By the late 1920s, the U.S. economy had made exceptional gains in productivity because of
electrification, which was a critical factor in
mass production. Further factors in economic growth were
US oil refineries, replacing horses and mules with
motor vehicles. One-sixth to one-quarter of farmland that had been devoted to feeding horses and mules was freed up, contributing to a surplus in farm produce. Nominal and real wages increased, but did not keep up with the
productivity gains. Senator Smoot contended that raising the tariff on imports would alleviate the overproduction problem, but the market reality was that the United States had been running a
trade account surplus. Although manufactured goods imports were rising, manufactured exports were rising even faster. Food exports had been falling and were in a trade account deficit, but the approximate values of food imports only amounted to half the value of manufactured imports. In late 1929, as the global economy entered the first stages of the
Great Depression, the main policy goal of the United States federal government was to protect its jobs and farmers from foreign competition. In 1929, Smoot championed another tariff increase within the United States, which became the Smoot–Hawley Tariff Bill. In his memoirs, Smoot made it abundantly clear: "The world is paying for its ruthless destruction of life and property in the
World War and for its failure to adjust purchasing power to productive capacity during the
Industrial Revolution of the
decade following the war." Smoot was a
Republican from
Utah and chairman of the
Senate Finance Committee.
Willis C. Hawley, a Republican from
Oregon, was chairman of the
House Committee on Ways and Means. During the
1928 United States presidential election, one of
Herbert Hoover's campaign promises was to help beleaguered farmers by increasing tariffs on agricultural products. Hoover won, and Republicans maintained comfortable majorities
in the House and
the Senate in 1928. The Senate debated its bill until March 1930, with many members trading votes based on industries in their states. The Senate bill passed on a vote of 44 to 42, with 39 Republicans and 5 Democrats voting in favor of the bill. The House passed the conference bill on a vote of 222 to 153, with the support of 208 Republicans and 14 Democrats. == Opponents ==