Great depression 1

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David C. Wheelock September 20, 2007 An Overview of the Great Depression
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Transcript of Great depression 1

Page 1: Great depression 1

David C. Wheelock

September 20, 2007

An Overview of the Great Depression

Page 2: Great depression 1

What makes a Depression Great?

• Recession: When your neighbor loses his or her job.

• Depression: When you lose your job.

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Why study the Great Depression?

• Worst economic disaster of the 20th century.

• Cause or causes are still debated.

• A defining event, especially for the government’s involvement in the economy.

• Useful for learning important macroeconomic concepts.

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Some Concepts

• Gross Domestic Product (GDP): Comprehensive measure of the nation’s output of final goods and services.

• Real GDP: GDP measured at a fixed price level (i.e., inflation adjusted).

• Nominal GDP: GDP measured at current prices.

• Recession: Sustained decline in real GDP (approximately two quarters). Officially declared by NBER committee.

• Depression: Very severe recession.

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More Concepts

• Inflation: A sustained increase in the general price level (often calculated in terms of the Consumer Price Index (CPI)).

• Deflation: A sustained decrease in the general price level.

• Money Stock: The stock of assets that serve as media of exchange (e.g., coin, currency, checking accounts).

• Real Interest Rate: Measure of the cost of borrowing adjusted for inflation/deflation.

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• Real output (GDP) fell 29% from 1929 to 1933.

• Unemployment increased to 25% of labor force.

• Consumer prices fell 25%; wholesale prices 32%.

• Some 7000 banks failed.

How Great was the Great Depression?

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Why Did It Happen? Some Suggested Causes

• The stock market crash – end of the party

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Stock Market Boom and Bust

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5

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35

Jan-21 Jan-23 Jan-25 Jan-27 Jan-29 Jan-31 Jan-33 Jan-35 Jan-37 Jan-39

Sept. 1929

July 1932

S&P Composite Index

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The Stock Market Crash

The timing of the crash (Oct. 1929) is suggestive.

Possible channels:

• Destruction of wealth

• Increased uncertainty

• Role of banks

Conclusion: Probably had some effect, but not big enough by itself.

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Why Did It Happen? Some Suggested Causes

• The stock market crash – end of the party

• Collapse of world trade – globalization in reverse

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The Collapse of World Trade

$ value imports of 75 countries

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Why Did It Happen? Some Suggested Causes

• The stock market crash – end of the party

• Collapse of world trade – globalization in reverse

• Monetary collapse

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Bank Failures

• 7000 banks failed -- many during “panics”

• Number of banks fell from 25,000 in 1929 to 15,000 by 1934

Possible Channels:

• Loss of deposits decline in expenditures

• Customer relationships broken harder to borrow

• Money supply contraction

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Commercial Bank Failures, 1920-2004

0

500

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19201925193019351940194519501955196019651970197519801985199019952000

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Banking Panics

• Bank depositors lost confidence bank runs

• Banks lost gold, currency and other reserve assets

• Loss of reserves caused banks to reduce loans and deposits (causing money stock to fall)

• Contracting money stock reduced spending

• Reduced spending led to lay-offs (increased unemployment), falling prices (deflation) and lower output.

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• Fed officials did not watch (or even measure) the money supply. But, why didn’t they respond to bank panics?

• Most failed banks were small, nonmember banks.

• Interest rates were falling and few banks borrowed at the discount window.

The Fed’s Monetary Policy

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Nominal Interest Rate, 1922-33

Percent

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But Were Interest Rates Really Falling?

• Deflation caused the real interest rate (i.e., the real cost of borrowing) to rise sharply: i(nominal) – inflation rate = i(real)

e.g., 2% (10%) = 2% + 10% = 12%

Firms stopped investing in new buildings, equipment, etc.

Bankruptcies increased as borrowers lacked the incomes to repay their debts.

Banks failed because borrowers defaulted on their loans.

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Nominal and Real Interest Rates, 1922-33

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1922 1923 1924 1925 1926 1927 1928 1929 1930 1931 1932 1933

Percent

Nominal

Real

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Recovery

• Rapid money supply growth (end of banking panic, gold inflows)

rising price level

falling real interest rate

and increased spending.

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Money and the Price Level

20000

25000

30000

35000

40000

45000

50000

55000

1929 1930 1931 1932 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939

$ millions

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consumer price index (1982-84 = 100)

money stock(left scale)

price level(right scale)

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The Real Interest Rate and Business Investment

0.0

2.0

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1929 1930 1931 1932 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939 1940 1941

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-1

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11

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Real Interest Rate

Business Investment

Business Investment, Billions of Dollars; Annual Data Treasury bill yield minus inflation rate

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Money (M2) and Output Growth, 1929-41

percent change: fourth quarter to fourth quarter

-30

-20

-10

0

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40

1929 1930 1931 1932 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939 1940 1941

GNP

M2

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Recovery

• Rapid money supply growth (end of banking panics, gold inflows) rising price level, falling real interest rate and increased spending.

• FDR and the New Deal?– Restored confidence in banking system (FDIC)– Early years marked by regulation/reform, little

new spending (alphabet programs, e.g., NRA, WPA, PWA, CCC, etc.)

– Later years saw increased spending

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Recovery

• Rapid money supply growth (end of banking panics, gold inflows) rising price level, falling real interest rate and increased spending.

• FDR and the New Deal?– Restored confidence in banking system (FDIC)– Early years marked by regulation/reform, little

new spending (alphabet programs, e.g., NRA, WPA, PWA, CCC, etc.)

– Later years saw increased spending

• World War II (when unemployment finally fell below 10%)

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• The Depression was not a failure of capitalism or markets, but rather a failure of the Federal Reserve.

• Monetary policy should maintain price stability – avoid deflation and inflation.

• The Fed should respond to financial crises that increase the demand for money or threaten to disrupt the payments system.

Could It Happen Again?