RangerDave wrote:
I don't doubt that the general public's understanding of the connection between the gold standard and the Great Depression is almost certainly flawed, but I find it hard to believe that so many actual economists and professors of economics would continue to espouse the connection if it was so fundamentally and obviously flawed. Anyway, though, thanks for the response. I'll answer your questions now.
Why do you find it hard to believe that people hold on to what they are taught, even when evidence to the contrary is presented?
RangerDave wrote:
Q1: What was the worst economic down turn of the 20th Century?In the developed world, I'd say the Great Depression.
Actually, the sharpest and largest economic down turn of the 20th Century occurred between 1919 and 1921, but you rarely hear about it. The Post World War I recession was brutal and shrank most economies able to be tracked in excess of 30% within 6 months. By comparison, the Great Depression was a 18-21% in the worst places.
RangerDave wrote:
Q2: What ended the Great Depression?Obviously a complex combination of factors, but my understanding is that stabilization of the banking sector, increased money supply, rising commodity prices, and production growth thanks to WWII (some of it domestic deficit spending, some of it foreign purchases) were the biggies.
Except, what happened immediately following World War II? In 1929 dollars, what year posted the first real quarter's growth in the United States in production, consumer spending, and employment relative to the Black Friday Collapse? The history books will tell you that there were years of growth between the New Deal and World War II, but that's not really the case. Unemployment continued to rise; money continued to be problematic; and the poor continued to be poor. We did shift to a Fiat currency in full as a result, but that only caused more problems.
So, obviously, the answer you've been taught is wrong. Everything that happened between 1929 and 1939, policy wise, made the situation worse and actually created a depression out of what would have been a Slow-U caused by a liquidity crisis in the U.S.
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Corolinth wrote:
Facism is not a school of thought, it is a racial slur.