Great Depression Economic history Timing and severity

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Great Depression Worldwide economic downturn that began in 1929 and lasted until about 1939. It was the longest and most severe depression ever experienced by the industrialized Western world. Although the Depression originated in the United States, it resulted in drastic declines in output, severe unemployment, and acute deflation in almost every country of the globe. But its social and cultural effects were no less staggering, especially in the United States, where the Great Depression ranks second only to the Civil War as the gravest crisis in American history. Economic history The timing and severity of the Great Depression varied substantially across countries. The Depression was particularly long and severe in the United States and Europe; it was milder in Japan and much of Latin America. Perhaps not surprisingly, the worst depression ever experienced stemmed from a multitude of causes. The Great Depression brought about fundamental changes in economic institutions, macroeconomic policy, and economic theory. Timing and severity In the United States, the Great Depression began in the summer of 1929. The downturn became markedly worse in late 1929 and continued until early 1933. During the Depression, industrial production in the United States declined 47 percent and GDP fell 30 percent. The wholesale price index declined 33 percent (such declines in the price level are referred to as deflation ). 2

The unemployment rate nearly reached 25 % (13 million) percent at its highest point. The severity of these declines is evident when they are compared with America s next worst recession (which we are currently experiencing). The unemployment rate now sits around 9.1 %. (it sits at around 16% when adjusted for the underemployed). The U.S. recovery began in the spring of 1933, but in 1937 38 the United States suffered another severe downturn, but after mid-1938 the American economy grew even more rapidly than in the mid- 1930s. U.S. output finally returned to its long-run trend level in 1942. 2

Causes of the Great Depression The fundamental cause of the Great Depression in the United States was a decline in spending, which led to a decline in production and a rise in inventories (which essentially means that goods were made, but people weren t able to purchase, so they collected dust, and therefore less goods were made). Stock market crash By the fall of 1929, U.S. stock prices had reached levels that could not be justified by reasonable anticipations of future earnings. As a result, when a variety of minor events led to gradual price declines in October 1929, investors lost confidence and the stock market bubble burst. Panic selling began on Black Thursday, October 24, 1929. Many stocks had been purchased on margin, that is, using loans secured by only a small fraction of the stocks value. As a result, the price declines forced some investors to liquidate (sell out) their holdings, thus exacerbating (helping to cause/worsen) the fall in prices. The stock market crash reduced American consumer purchases substantially. Consumer purchases of durable goods and business investment fell sharply after the crash. A likely explanation is that the financial crisis generated considerable uncertainty about future income, which in turn led consumers and firms to put off purchases. Thus, while the Great Crash of the stock market and the Great Depression are two quite separate events, the decline in stock prices was one factor causing the decline in production and employment in the United States. Margin using the shares as collateral, and borrowing the rest from the broker, who borrowed it from a bank or a large corporation (investment firm). Loans could be called in if prices fell enough, but that seemed impossible. 3

Only 3% of Americans actually owned stock and only about 10% own it now 4

Left the rich feeling less rich Wiped out savings of hundreds of thousands of middle class households Did not cause the depression Serious downturn had begun months before the crash accelerated it 5

2 - In 1920's U.S. Economy. was based on the productivity and purchasing power of the masses i.e we made it, and bought it - employment cycle for many goods to be produced, purchasing demand had to be there: this resulted in high employment b/n 1924-27, U.S. productive capacity doubled but it was b/c of technological innovation electricity and mechanical advances made for better production, but no new jobs were added to the economy so more consumer goods were available, but there weren't nec. more people to buy them (OVERPRODUCTION) 3 - Great Imbalance in Wealth The majority of the wealth became even more concentrated in the wealthy throughout the 1920s. This inequality reinforced the downturn by concentrating resources in the hands of the wealthy, who did not need to spend or invest the money they had, rather than in the hands of the average consumer. As a result spending that could have stimulated the economy was more limited than it might have been. 6

i 6

International lending and trade Foreign lending to Germany and Latin America had expanded greatly in the mid- 1920s. U.S. lending abroad then fell in 1928 and 1929 as a result of high interest rates and the booming stock market in the United States. The 1930 enactment of the Smoot-Hawley tariff in the United States and the worldwide rise in protectionist trade policies created complications. The Smoot- Hawley tariff was meant to boost farm incomes by reducing foreign competition in agricultural products. But other countries followed suit, both in retaliation and in an attempt to force a correction of trade imbalances. 7

5 - Insistence on Balanced Budgets Throughout the nation public officials reacted to the downturn by trying to balance their budgets. To achieve that goal, city and state governments cut expenditures or raised taxes, or both. But the effect was counterproductive they slowed the economy further by reducing the amount of money available to consumers to spend. 6 - Banking panics and monetary contraction The next blow to demand occurred in the fall of 1930, when the first of four waves of banking panics gripped the United States. A banking panic arises when many depositors lose confidence in the solvency (ability to cover withdrawals) of banks and simultaneously demand their deposits be paid to them in cash. Banks, which typically hold only a fraction of deposits as cash reserves, must liquidate loans (i.e. call in their margins) in order to raise the required cash. This process of hasty liquidation can cause even a previously solvent bank to fail. 7 there was also an agricultural depression throughout the 1920s (which, if you think about it, means that farmers were feeling the Depression almost 10 years before non-farmers). There was also a very large real estate investment bubble in Florida that burst. Does that sound familiar? 8

9

Hoover - progressive - engineer - scientific fetishism - not conservative (as Calvin Coolidge, Warren Harding his presidential predecessors in the 20s) - New Individualism Drew the line with government forcing business to do things (i.e. standardization, organization, certain industry standards/rules and behaviors, benign labor relations (that means be nice to your labor force, a way to avoid the fascism/comm. Of Europe) Becomes a problem: Voluntary nature (Hoover didn t force businesses to adopt rules and regulations, and didn t force them to not lay off hundreds of thousands of workers) Businessmen helped him write this stuff -- when businessmen get together, collude, screw people Hoover rejects the laissez faire advice of Andrew Mellon (his secretary of Treasury) So Hoover does these things: Recon. Finance Corporation Hoover told employers to not cut wages Hoover in favor of a national sales tax Hoover nominates 3 somewhat liberal (FDRish) Progressive Justices to Supreme Court (2 rep, 1 Dem) - so Hoover moves court to the left When Dems took congress in 1930, began prodding Hoover for more than he was willing to do 10

(Dems promise to cut spending in 1932 election) 10

11

12

1932 election Democrats not that much different from Hoover, but they knew they would win Hoover couldn t defend laissez faire ideas (didn t believe them), but also unwilling to offer direct help to people, or to force business to do things to remedy Depression FDR also afraid of eroding the rugged individualism but Commonwealth Club Speech 1932 - FDR hints at what Democrats will attempt to do 13