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1. The Great Depression1929-1933 The Defining Moment
3. Rex Tugwell (advisor to Roosevelt)“The Cat is out of the Bag. There is no invisible hand. There never was. If the depression has not taught us that we are incapable of education…..We must now supply a real and visible guiding hand to do the task which that mythical, nonexistent, invisible agency was supposed to perform, but never did.”
4. The Prelude 1919-1929 U.S. enters the war late. (1917-1918) effects on U.S. economy relatively small compared to European economies.
Huge damage and disruption to European economies.
Real GDP = 100 in 1913. In 1919, UK=101 France=75 Germany=72 US = 116
Inflation! Price level = 100 in 1914. In 1918 UK=210 France=213 Germany304 US=164
Huge climb in Debt/GDP ratios.
5. Consequences World War I---9.5 million deaths. Loss of a generation (UK 1m, France 1.4m, Germany 2m, US 114,000)
Destruction of physical capital especially Belgium and northern France
Distortion of patterns of production, trade and consumption (e.g. high wartime prices for commodities—boom and collapse in U.S.
High cost of war. Estimated $208 billion.
Political and economic borders of Europe are redrawn.
Inter-allied war debts and German reparations.
6. Inter-Allied War Debts ($ billions) (Kindleberger,The World in Depression
7. German Reparations John Maynard Keynes (1919) Reparations were a “policy of reducing Germany to servitude for a generation, of degrading the lives of millions of human beings, and of depriving a whole nation of happiness.” They were “abhorrent and detestable.”
Étienne Mantoux (1946) Reparations not excessive, destructive or uncollectible.
The French paid in 1815 and 1871---”Le Boche Paiera”
8. The magnitude of reparations
9. Solution---the Dawes Loan 1924 German Hyperinflation.
Dawes Loan---begins series of loans---U.S. provides funds and funds for investment around the globe.
New York as central of global finance—not London
10. Return to Gold Standard“Status Quo Antebellum” No problem for U.S.—huge balance of payments surpluses and gold
U.K. deflates and returns to gold in 1925 at old parity Ł1 = $4.86. But overvalued. Depressed economy.
France with near hyperinflation returns to gold in 1926 at a new parity (old $1= 5FF now $1 = 25.5 FF) Undervalued currency. Booming economy.
Germany’s hyperinflation---returns to gold at near purchasing power 1925.
Major imbalances---brittle equilibrium.
11. Adjustment under restored gold standard more difficult International capital markets are revived---generally free.
International labor flows almost eliminated—immigration restrictions
Increased protectionism
Less wage flexibility. Wage now seem sticky even with high unemployment
12. U.S. Economic Prosperity in 1920s No trend inflation
High productivity growth
1922-1929, GNP grew at 4.7%,
Unemployment averaged 3.7%.
Fed accommodated seasonal demands for credit and attempted to smooth economic fluctuations. (2 brief recessions)
13. Some basic numbers Peak August 1929, Trough May 1933
Real GDP falls 39%
Real Consumption falls 29%
Prices (GDP deflator) falls 23%
Unemployment Jumps:
3.2% in 1929
25% in 1933 (21%Darby)
17% in 1939 (17% Darby)
Banking Collapse
July 1929, 24,504 banks, $49 billion deposits.
December 1932, 17,802 banks, with $36 billion.
After Bank Holiday March 1933, 11,878 banks with $23 billion deposits.
14. Key American Role in World Depression Based on industrial production GD starts in most countries at the same time
But it is larger and longer in the U.S. Romer (1993)
15. Worst in the U.S. For the U.S., Industrial Production
Biggest drop in first year
Biggest drop peak to trough
Biggest drop in the last year.
However, turning points are very similar
16. Understanding the Great Depression: Its Evolution by Phases Booming Strong Economy in 1920s
Beginning Shocks, 1928-1929
Aggravating Shocks, 1930-1933
Rock Bottom and Recovery, 1933-1936
The 1937-1938 Recession
The Recovery, 1939-1941
17. Understanding the Great Depression:Four Basic Questions Why it Began?
Why so Deep?
Duration?
Recovery?
18. Understanding the Great Depression: Its Evolution by Phases Booming Strong Economy in 1920s…but
It’s the Roaring Twenties!
No trend inflation
High productivity growth
1922-1929, GNP grew at 4.7%,
Unemployment averaged 3.7%.
Fed accommodated seasonal demands for credit and attempted to smooth economic fluctuations. (2 brief recessions)
BUT: Weak American Agriculture: low prices, high debt, weak banks
BUT: Weak Europe: reparations, debts to U.S., slow growth, gold standard fragile (overvalued Ł, UK slumps) and (undervalued FF, France booms)
BUT: U.S. Stock market boom halts foreign loans to Germany, Eastern Europe and Latin America
19. Understanding the Great Depression: Its Evolution by Phases Beginning Shocks, 1928-1929
Spring 1927 U.S. expansionary monetary policy to ease pressure on the British balance of payments. Critics assert policy too easy, and allows stock market boom to ignite
Fed tightens policy in 1928 (discount rate 3 ˝ to 5%, and there is little increase in total money or credit for 1928-1929.
U.S. stock market boom begins March 1928.
Commercial paper market vanishes
No new lending to Germany, Austria and rest of work in 1928….Germany slides into a recession.
Fed tries to “jaw-bone” market down. Criticizes brokers loans.
July 1929 raises discount rate from 5 to 6%.
But July-August is peak of business cycle. Recession begins Summer 1929
October 1929 U.S. Stock market crash: wealth effect—lowers consumption and investment, credit effect—reduces value of collateral and hence lending
Smoot-Hawley tariff 1929 by U.S. induces retaliatory tariffs by other countries, international trade declines
20. Understanding the Great Depression: Its Evolution by Phases Aggravating Shocks, 1930-1933
Banking Panics, 1930, 1931, 1933
Failure of the Fed to Pursue Expansionary Policy
Collapse of Gold Standard: Austria, Germany leave the gold standard, Britain departs after a run on the pound in September 1931
U.S. begins losing gold, trade deficits and capital flight.
From Rock Bottom to Recovery, 1933-1936
Bank Holiday March 1933
U.S. abandons the Gold Standard March 1933
New Deal Banking and Securities Legislation
Monetary Expansion
Minimal Fiscal Policy
National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA)
The 1937-1938 Recession
The Fed Raises Reserve Requirements
The Recovery, 1939-1941
Monetary Expansion
Fiscal Expansion in preparation for war.
21. Four Basic Questions:1. Why It Began? 2. Why So Deep and 3. So Long? Friedman and Schwartz (and others), the economy is entering a recession in late 1929
The economy is beginning to recover in 1931 like a normal business cycle
BUT what makes the recession worse?
What turns the recession into a depression?
22. The Worsening Depression Slight recovery early 1931,then plunge.
Why?
Romer (1993) “The source of the continued decline in production in the United States was almost surely a series of banking panics.”
Friedman and Schwartz (1963) document four panics
Fall of 1930
Spring 1931
Fall 1931---Britain abandons the Gold Standard
First Quarter 1933
9000 Banks suspend operations. Depositors and stockholders lose $2.5 billion = 2.4% of GDP…...not the whole story
24. Why Banking Panics? There were no banking panics in Canada.
Fragmented unit banking system
Undiversified bank portfolios with high regional concentration of loans. Large number of bank closures in the agricultural states when agricultural prices fall. In addition, many hold bonds whose value collapsed.
Many banks become insolvent
Fear of insolvency feeds the liquidity crises?panics.
25. Effects of Banking Panics Money Supply Declines and there is a massive rise in realized real interest rates, over 10%.
Friedman and Schwartz blame inaction of the Fed for this decline---and hence for the depression.
26. How do Friedman and Schwartz explain why the Fed did not act? Up to end of 1930
What is the Fed concerned about?
How does it react to banking failures?
Who was Benjamin Strong?
New York Fed v. Board of Governors?
What could the Fed have done 1930-1931?
What does Congress do?
27. Why didn’t the Fed act? Beginning in 1931, Friedman and Schwartz argue that Fed could have expanded but chose not to.
In diary of Charles S. Hamlin member of the FR Board, he wrote during August 1931 that Open market committee voted 11 to 1 against $300 million open market purchase of bonds---reduce it to $120 million.
Governor Mayer of the Board worried about inflation.
Members of the regional banks did not grasp the extent of the crisis.
Pressure from Congress---open market operations of $1 billion. Until Congress adjourns.
After Britain leaves gold in September 1931, gold drain starts. Dollars exchanged for gold---Fed’s reserves fall, it is afraid that further expansion will lead to greater loss of gold----constrained by the gold standard. Reserves falling after UK goes off gold in 1931, must retain high interest rates.
28. Understanding the Great Depression:Four Basic Questions Why it Began?
Why so Deep?
Duration?
Recovery?
29. Understanding the Great Depression:Four Basic Questions Why it Began?
Business Cycle Peak 7/8-1929, Federal Reserve’s tight policy
Why so Deep?
Banking Panics. Inaction of the Federal Reserve
Duration?
Recovery?
30. How is the economy driven into a severe depression by the declining money supply?
31. Romer (1993) basic argument is simple Depression is the result of a series of aggregate demand (monetary) shocks that moved economy down an upward sloping aggregate supply curve.
32. Romer (1993) basic argument is simple Depression is the result of a series of aggregate demand (monetary) shocks that moved economy down an upward sloping aggregate supply curve.
Result is two problems: (1) unemployment and (2) deflation.
Unemployment:
Key point is the upward sloping supply curve. Wages and prices not perfectly flexible in 1920s and 1930s.
Why did they become less flexible? Some studies point to turn-of-the-century change in labor contracts, World War I or desire of business to keep demand strong.
Wage and price stickiness means that aggregate demand shocks will have real effects.
34. How did deflationary shocks affect the economy? Conventional 19th century view: fall in wages and prices raises stimulate investment, countering shock….but not in sticky price world.
How did the monetary shocks hurt the economy?
Explanation 1: High real interest rate hypothesis: Deflation affects expectations. Deflation generates expectations of higher real rate of interest, raising real rates and driving down investment
Explanation 2: Debt-Deflation hypothesis: Unanticipated inflation increased real debt, increasing defaults and thus depressing supply of credit
35. Rising Real Interest Rates—Did the Fed understand? Nominal commercial paper rate 1927.4 to 1928.4 rises from 4.0% to 5.5% and the realized real rate from 5.6% to 9.5%.
Rational expectations estimates by Romer of the expected real interest rate are shown to rise----implying higher anticipated interest rates.
Interest sensitive industries begin to slow in 1929: building permits and automobile registrations.
36. Sources of the onset—1929-1930/1931 contrasts previous experience
The decline in consumer spending and fixed investment that are the key elements that need to be explained.
37. Romer (1992)
38. The Risk Premium during the Depression
40. Klug, Landon-Lane and White looked at the forecasts of Railroad Shippers and found huge cumulating errors in forecasts of carloadings---businessmen keep thinking that recovery is around the bend.
41. Bernanke’s Contribution—a Third Factor In addition to monetary collapse, there was a disruption of intermediation.
Bernanke (1983): banks play special role for firms that cannot issue bonds and stocks. When banks fail the information and relationships are lost and the cost of credit intermediation rises. Costs include screening, monitoring, and accounting costs as well as expected losses from bad borrowers.
Major contribution to economic decline 1931 and 1932.
44. Understanding the Great Depression:Four Basic Questions Why it Began?
Business Cycle Peak 7/8-1929, Federal Reserve’s tight policy
Why so Deep?
Banking Panics. Inaction of the Federal Reserve—prolonged monetary contraction
Duration?----Clearly inaction plays a role—what else?
Recovery?
45. What about Fiscal Policy—Deficit Spending?
46. Fiscal Policy?—Deficit Spending?
47. Industrial Policy? Specific Intervention in industry?
National Industry Recovery Act (NIRA) of 1933 created the National Recovery Administration (NRA). (Declared unconstitutional May 1935)
National Labor Relations Act (1935) that promoted unions and Fair Labor Standards Act (1938) that set minimum wages in certain industries and regulates working conditions.
NRA established guidelines that raised nominal wages and prices and encouraged higher levels of employment by work-sharing reductions in the length of the work week.
48. Industrial Policy Weinstein (1980), using aggregate monthly data on hourly earnings in manufacturing, he found that the NIRA raised nominal wages directly and indirectly by raising prices. Econometric estimates that average hourly earnings would have been 35 cents not 60 cents.
Result----higher wages create more unemployment and increase the duration of the depression because of higher costs to producers---counterproductive
Shift in the Aggregate Supply Curve
49. Did the Duration have something to do with bad monetary policy? After 1929-1933, had the Fed learned its lesson?
50. Recession of 1937-1938 Did the Fed learn its lesson?
Rising excess reserves held by banks—Fed worries about inflation potential and wants to induce lending.
Uses new tool of required reserves. Required reserve ratio doubled.
Result? Banks raise their excess reserves and huge monetary contraction.
51. Understanding the Great Depression:Four Basic Questions Why it Began?
Business Cycle Peak 7/8-1929, Federal Reserve’s tight policy
Why so Deep?
Banking Panics. Inaction of the Federal Reserve. Prolonged Monetary Contraction
Duration?
Continued Monetary Policy Mistakes, Fiscal Policy not tried. Industrial Policy makes things worse.
Recovery? Why?
52. Recovery, 1934-1937….why? Real GDP grows at 10% p.a. 1934-1937.
But real GDP on reaches 1929 peak in 1937 and trend path in 1942.
What drove the recovery.
Friedman and Schwartz (1963) and Romer (1992): huge increases in the money supply.
54. What Increased the Money Supply?
55. How was the money supply increased? F.D. Roosevelt takes emergency powers granted by Congress in the 100 days.
FDR allows the dollar to depreciate—sets new value for gold in 1934: from $20.36 per ounce to $35 per ounce.
Huge revaluation of big U.S. gold stocks. Treasury issues gold certificates equal in value to increase and deposits them with the Fed. As government spends them, they enter the monetary base. High powered money increased 12% between April 1933 and April 1934.
Devaluation also improved the competitiveness of U.S. goods—rise in the trade balance.
Devaluation attracted capital flows from Europe, especially with Hitler’s rise to power. High powered money rises 40% from April 1934 to April 1937.
Result: real interest rates fall and recovery of investment and consumer durable spending.
58. Understanding the Great Depression:Four Basic Questions Why it Began?
Business Cycle Peak 7/8-1929, Federal Reserve’s tight policy
Why so Deep?
Banking Panics. Inaction of the Federal Reserve
Prolonged Monetary Contraction.
Duration?
Continued Monetary Policy Mistakes, Fiscal Policy not tried. Industrial Policy makes things worse.
Recovery?
Monetary Expansion
59. Some Effects of the Great Depression Activist Monetary Policy
Activist Fiscal Policy---idea of cyclically balanced budget
Insurance and Regulation of the Financial Sector
Agricultural Regulation
Growth of Government and shift in Federalism
Growth of Unions
Genesis of Social Security
Smoot-Hawley Tariff of 1929 to the WTO
The IMF and World Bank