Townsend Plan

The Townsend Plan, officially the Old-Age Revolving Pensions (OARP) plan, was a September 1933 proposal by California physician Francis Townsend for an old-age pension in response to the Great Depression, leading to a social and political movement. At its peak, the OARP advocacy group claimed more than 750,000 members.[1] The movement demonstrated nationwide demand for old-age pensions, leading Congress and President Franklin D. Roosevelt to adopt a national Social Security policy, though Townsend's original plan called for greater benefits to a greater number of people than Social Security provided.

Origins

The Townsend movement began in September 1933 when Dr. Francis Townsend, a California physician, first published his plan for an Old-Age Revolving Pension (OARP) in a letter to the editor of his local newspaper, the Long Beach Press-Telegram.[1][2][3] According to Townsend's 1943 memoir, his plan originated when he saw two old women, dressed in once-nice, tattered clothes, picking through his garbage cans looking for food.

Townsend's letter called for all Americans over the age of sixty to receive $200 ($4,707 in 2023) at the start of each month, if they refrained from work and spent the $200 by month's end.[1][4] According to Townsend, the pension was intended to decrease labor supply and competition by removing the aged from the workforce and would increase spending to stimulate economic recovery from the Depression.[1][4]

Besides the age and spending requirements, the plan had few restrictions. Recipients did not have to be poor or build up a long work record. There were no gender or racial restrictions, though the recipients had to be "free from habitual criminality."[4]

Organization

Townsend (right) talks with Senator Sheridan Downey of California

In January 1934, Townsend, his brother Walter, and his former employer, real estate agent Robert E. Clements, established Old Age Revolving Pensions, Ltd. The first local Townsend club was established in Huntington Beach, California in August 1934; local organizers, either volunteer or paid, would establish chapters once one hundred members had been secured.[1][a] The organization expanded beyond California and the western United States in the summer of 1935.[1]

Typically, a local club would meet weekly to hear speakers and advocate for the OARP plan. Membership dues were one quarter, of which ten cents went to the national organization and five cents to regional, state, and congressional district organizers.[1] Almost all club members were of old age.[1]

An exact membership size is difficult or impossible to identify because of lack of data, exaggeration by organization leaders, and unclear definition of membership.[1] In February 1935, the OARP national organization claimed that 20 million persons nationwide had signed petitions to promote the plan, but by the time these petitions were presented to Congress in 1936, Townsend claimed only 10 million signatures, which were never counted.[1] Evidence indicates that membership increased in late 1935, after the plan initially failed before Congress.[1]

After the failure of the 1935 bill and Townsend's refusal to answer certain questions before Congress, the movement was subject to thorough investigation on charges of contempt of Congress. A bipartisan House select committee was established, chiefly for the purpose of investigating the Townsend organization.[1] Though no additional charges were brought, the investigation revealed that the Townsend National Weekly was a for-profit publication and enormous commissions were given to some state organizers and Clements, who personally received upwards of $70,000 ($1.54 million in 2023).[1] As a result of the investigation, membership and income stalled, and Clements was forced to resign. The organization was renamed Townsend National Recovery Plan, Inc.[1]

Nevertheless, the organization quickly recovered and reached its peak recorded membership in 1939.[1]

1935 proposal

In January 1935, Representative John S. McGroarty of California proposed the OARP plan as a bill before Congress. Under McGroarty's bill, the plan's costs, which estimated at $24 million annually ($533 million in 2023), would be funded by a two-percent national tax on all transactions, a "multiple" sales tax.[1][4] The bill was subject to criticism from academic economists, who thought the plan unworkable, and opposed by politicians of all persuasions: leftists who opposed the tax as regressive, conservatives who opposed all further taxation and spending, and moderates who found alternative insurance and assistance programs more palatable.[1]

Dr. Townsend testified for the bill before Congress, but his testimony was ineffective. He admitted that the tax would likely not cover the cost of the program, that 75 years old was a more viable retirement age, and that the transactions tax was in effect a sales tax. At one point in his testimony, Townsend refused to testify by getting up from his seat and walking out while being questioned.[1] By contrast to the competing Economic Security bill, for which the Roosevelt administration prepared witnesses for deposition, the expert testimony for the McGroarty bill was a resounding failure.[1]

The McGroarty bill was subsequently amended to make payments only as the tax revenue allowed, but it was voted down 56 to 206, with many Western Democrats abstaining for fear of going on the record for or against the bill.[1] The Social Security Act passed in August 1935, temporarily suspending calls for OARP.

Later years

The Townsend Plan continued for four decades, but did not really have much influence after 1950.[5] In 1978, the national Townsend Plan was shut down, with only state chapters surviving, and that by then it had a "dwindling and aging membership."[5]

Frances Perkins, President Roosevelt's Secretary of Labor, in her memoir, The Roosevelt I Knew (p. 294) says that Roosevelt told her, "We have to have it [Social Security]. Congress can't stand the pressure of the Townsend Plan unless we have a real old-age insurance system." As Roosevelt said, Social Security was passed by Congress substituting a pay-as-you-go "insurance" scheme for Townsend's far more generous pension plan, but as he told Perkins, it was the Townsend Clubs that forced Congress to act at all.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The membership requirement was lowered to thirty members later in the 1930s.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Amenta, Edwin; Zylan, Yvonne (Apr 1991). "It Happened Here: Political Opportunity, the New Institutionalism, and the Townsend Movement". American Sociological Review. 56 (2): 250. doi:10.2307/2095783. ISSN 0003-1224.
  2. ^ David Dayen (October 29, 2013). "How a Frustrated Blogger Made Expanding Social Security a Respectable Idea". Pacific Standard. Archived from the original on May 24, 2017. Retrieved January 13, 2014.
  3. ^ Amenta, Edwin (2006). When Movements Matter: The Townsend Plan and the Rise of Social Security. Princeton University Press. pp. 36–38. ISBN 0691124736. Archived from the original on December 13, 2020. Retrieved May 26, 2012.
  4. ^ a b c d Larry Dewitt (December 2001). "Research Note #17: The Townsend Plan's Pension Scheme". Research Notes & Special Studies by the Historian's Office, Social Security Administration. Archived from the original on October 9, 2014. Retrieved October 26, 2014.
  5. ^ a b "Townsend Plan, Once the Hope Of Thousands, Is Near Death". The New York Times. New York. The Associated Press. February 23, 1978. Archived from the original on January 19, 2019. Retrieved January 19, 2019.

Further reading

  • Amenta, Edwin. “Political Contexts, Challenger Strategies, and Mobilization: Explaining the Impact of the Townsend Plan.” in Routing the Opposition: Social Movements, Public Policy and Democracy, edited by David S. Meyer et al. (University of Minnesota Press, 2005). online
  • Amenta, Edwin, Bruce Carruthers, and Yvonne Zylan. “A Hero for the Aged? The Townsend Movement, the Political Mediation Model, and U.S. Old‐Age Policy, 1934-1950.” American Journal of Sociology (1992) 98: 308–339. online
  • Amenta, Edwin, and Yvonne Zylan. "It happened here: Political opportunity, the new institutionalism, and the Townsend movement." American Sociological Review (1991): 250-265. online
  • Amenta, Edwin. When movements matter: The Townsend plan and the rise of social security (Princeton University Press, 2008). online review
  • Bennett, David H. "The Year of the Old Folks' Revolt," American Heritage (Dec 1964), 16#1 pp 48+ popular history.
  • Gaydowski, John Duffy. "Eight Letters to the Editor: The Genesis of the Townsend National Recovery Plan." Southern California Quarterly 52.4 (1970): 365-382. online
  • Lubove, Roy. "Economic Security and Social Conflict in America: The Early Twentieth Century, Part I." Journal of Social History (1967): 61-87. online part 1 also online part 2
  • Messinger, Sheldon L. "Organizational transformation: A case study of a declining social movement." American Sociological Review 20.1 (1955): 3-10. online
  • Mitchell, Daniel JB. "Townsend and Roosevelt: Lessons from the Struggle for Elderly Income Support." Labor History 42.3 (2001): 255-276. online
  • Schlesinger, Jr. Arthur Meier. The Politics of Upheaval: 1935-1936, the Age of Roosevelt, Volume III (Houghton Mifflin, 1957) online, pp. 29–42.

Primary sources

  • Dorman, Morgan J. Age before booty; an explanation of the Townsend plan (1936) online
  • Gideonese, Harry, ed. The economic meaning of the Townsend plan (U of Chicago Press, 1936) online
  • "The Townsend Crusade: An Impartial Review of the Townsend Movement and the Probable Effects of the Townsend Plan" Journal of the American Medical Association vol 107 (Oct. 1936) 10.1001/jama.1936.02770420068035