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Thread: Help with response about the Great Depression

  1. #1

    Help with response about the Great Depression

    "Milton Friedman's writings contend the terrible contraction of the 30s was caused by tight money and worsened by the gold standard. His explanation is more plausible than it being attributable to a credit expansion and subsequent collapse. Federal Reserve Board Governor Bernanke agreed (FRB: Speech, Bernanke--Money, Gold, and the Great Depression --March 2, 2004)."

    I am arguing with an economics "expert" and want to take down his arguments.



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  3. #2
    The Gold Standard was destroyed by the massive global monetary expansion which happened during WWI. Subsequently, all major currencies were overvalued in terms of gold.
    Monetarists (like Friedman) and Keynesians (like Bernanke) both also blackout the fact that the boom of the 1920s was caused by massive credit expansion. The Great Depression was the "correction" for that. Government policies (bank holidays, gold confiscations, crop destructions etc.) prevented a liquidation of all the bad debt. Instead, the world economy stayed anemic for over a decade and WWII started.

  4. #3
    Quote Originally Posted by swissaustrian View Post
    The Gold Standard was destroyed by the massive global monetary expansion which happened during WWI. Subsequently, all major currencies were overvalued in terms of gold.
    Monetarists (like Friedman) and Keynesians (like Bernanke) both also blackout the fact that the boom of the 1920s was caused by massive credit expansion. The Great Depression was the "correction" for that. Government policies (bank holidays, gold confiscations, crop destructions etc.) prevented a liquidation of all the bad debt. Instead, the world economy stayed anemic for over a decade and WWII started.
    So how was money contraction factored in?

    Was it necessary because of the inflation?

  5. #4

  6. #5
    Quote Originally Posted by GeorgiaAvenger View Post
    So how was money contraction factored in?

    Was it necessary because of the inflation?
    It was necessary and they should have let prices collapse instead of propping them up by destroying crops and revaluing against gold.

  7. #6
    I would just say that whatever causes these things to happen is something we can talk about, but these attempts to 'stimulate' the economy with govt intervention are a fallacy. We have history as evidence.

  8. #7
    Quote Originally Posted by swissaustrian View Post
    It was necessary and they should have let prices collapse instead of propping them up by destroying crops and revaluing against gold.
    Why exactly was it necessary? Was inflation run away?

  9. #8
    By the way: Milton Friedman predicted that FED would overreact to a new Depression, instead of underreacting like (in his opinion) in the 1930s.



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  11. #9
    Quote Originally Posted by GeorgiaAvenger View Post
    Why exactly was it necessary? Was inflation run away?
    Asset inflation was rampant, because the banks sucked everyone into the stock market with cheap credit. Consumer prices were'nt extraordinary high.

  12. #10
    Yes, this.

    The reason why the gold standard extended the depression was not the gold standard itself, but that "they" pegged the nominal price of gold TOO LOW and extended the deflationary spiral. It was not a true gold standard. It was a quasi, centralized, arbitrary price of gold that was NOT reflective of true value.

    Quote Originally Posted by swissaustrian View Post
    It was necessary and they should have let prices collapse instead of propping them up by destroying crops and revaluing against gold.

  13. #11
    Quote Originally Posted by GeorgiaAvenger View Post
    "Milton Friedman's writings contend the terrible contraction of the 30s was caused by tight money and worsened by the gold standard. His explanation is more plausible than it being attributable to a credit expansion and subsequent collapse. Federal Reserve Board Governor Bernanke agreed (FRB: Speech, Bernanke--Money, Gold, and the Great Depression --March 2, 2004)."

    I am arguing with an economics "expert" and want to take down his arguments.
    Bernanke is misrepresenting Friedman.
    http://www.thefreemanonline.org/feat...lton-friedman/

    It's kinda long. The crucial section is the one called "Dangers of Centralized Power."

    Also, see this response to Krugman making the same mischaracterization of Friedman.
    http://divisionoflabour.com/archives/2007_03.php#003603

  14. #12
    During the mid to late 20s the Fed's expansionary credit policies drove up stock prices and kept other prices higher than they should have been. During the 20s we were an incredibly productive country, which means consumer prices should have been falling, but the Fed made sure they didn't. That is the same thing as typical price inflation that people recognize.

    When the bubble in the stock market burst, all of that easy credit disappeared as bad firms failed. That wasn't a result of tight policies by the Fed, that is reality when businesses propped up by the bubble mania burst, because they were the ones using up a lot of the Fed's easy credit. The Fed did everything they could to keep inflating, but the gold standard did put a check on them, thankfully. At least until FDR took us off the gold standard and stole the gold from the American people.

    Anyway, without an inflating bubble to drive up prices, obviously stock prices fell to where they should have been, and consumer prices tried to fall to where they should have been (until the government stepped in with subsidies and wage controls and what have you.)

    You can see today, without a gold standard, what they wanted to do. The Fed has printed untold trillions to try to prop up housing prices. The problem is, they can't stop that correction without destroying the purchasing power of our money. Housing prices are too high. There isn't demand for these homes at these prices. Housing prices will never again rise until they are allowed to fall to their bottom, unless the destruction done to the dollar is irreparable and the prices of everything are skyrocketing.

    If the government would have minded their own business, prices would have bottomed out, nominal wages would have fallen, unemployment wouldn't have risen anywhere near the levels it did, and by 1932 the economy would have been growing again. Instead, Hoover decided to spend on massive public works, outbidding private companies for labor, and driving up wages. He also held meetings with the biggest companies, begging them not to cut wages. This, of course, prices millions and millions of people out of jobs. Because prices were crashing, that means real wages were skyrocketing, so people who had jobs and frozen wages were in effect getting huge raises, but that meant companies couldn't employ as many of them. The government also subsidized farmers and paid them to destroy crops to try and prop up food prices, which as you might expect, led to widespread starvation. The terrible times during the depression that they put in the history books were caused by government intervention.

    If we weren't on a gold standard, the Fed would have printed a lot more, but it wouldn't have changed anything. They would have propped up consumer prices with this extra inflation, which means unemployment might not have been as high, but then the suffering would have been enjoyed by everyone, even those who were working. The economy would have been stagnant as long as the government put off the correction, just like today.

    When people say World War II finally ended the Depression, I think they are partially right, but for different reasons. Obviously the idea that printing and borrowing a bunch of money to build tanks and blow them up and shipping tens of millions of our most productive workers overseas to get shot being an economic stimulus is ridiculous. What World War II did though was bring the correction that the government wouldn't allow. Everything was rationed, all people could do was save their money. After four years of austerity, the budget was cut in half and ten million people came home and found work without public works programs and wage mandates. All they had to do allow the correction to happen and people to save their money and all of a sudden there was real saved capital available for businesses and the economy grew again. If they would have allowed that austerity to take place in 1929, by 1931 or 1932 the economy would have been moving again, and there would be no such episode known as the Great Depression.
    Last edited by The Gold Standard; 02-18-2012 at 04:21 PM.

  15. #13
    Quote Originally Posted by GeorgiaAvenger View Post
    "Milton Friedman's writings contend the terrible contraction of the 30s was caused by tight money and worsened by the gold standard. His explanation is more plausible than it being attributable to a credit expansion and subsequent collapse. Federal Reserve Board Governor Bernanke agreed (FRB: Speech, Bernanke--Money, Gold, and the Great Depression --March 2, 2004)."

    I am arguing with an economics "expert" and want to take down his arguments.
    And what exactly has been said thus far? WHat stance do you take and he/she?

  16. #14
    Quote Originally Posted by GeorgiaAvenger View Post
    So how was money contraction factored in?

    Was it necessary because of the inflation?
    Money contraction happened because 9,000 banks failed during the depression, so all the money was essentially wiped out.

  17. #15
    loveshiscountry
    Member

    Quote Originally Posted by GeorgiaAvenger View Post
    So how was money contraction factored in?

    Was it necessary because of the inflation?
    late 1936 and 1937.
    Federal Reserve raised the banks reserve rates twice. Tax on undistributed profits took money from businesses that is used during downtime for research and retaining employees. SS payments hit taking more money out of the system.



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