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- From: sis@execpc.com
- Date sent: Thu, 16 May 1996 08:15:14 -0600
- To: lovkraft@hvision.nl
- Subject: essay uploading for password
-
- Sorry I could not do it the other way. Here it is cut and pasted in e-mail
- with the description you asked for. I await my password . . .
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- Thanks!
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- <!BEGIN!>
- <br><A HREF="X.TXT">X.TXT </A>
- <br><i>Uploader </i>: Murray H.
- <br><i>Email </i>:n/a
- <br><i>Language </i>: English
- <br><i>Subject </i>: Economics (MSWord?)
- <br><i>Title </i>: A comparison of the Great Depression of 1922 and its
- effects between the United States and the rest of the
- world
- <br><i>Grade </i>: 3.5
- <br><i>System </i>: Undergraduate college
- <br><i>Age </i>: 19
- <br><i>Country </i>:USA
- <br><i>Comments </i>: This paper compares the US with the rest of the world
- economy during the Depression, giving reasoning as to why other countries
- either had, or didn't have, the same economic problems. An 'A; document, I
- feel, with a lot of specific refences and argument support complete with
- footnotes.
- <br><i>Where I got Evil House of Cheat Address </i>: The one stop term
- paper shop site
- <br><i>Date </i>: 5/15/96
- <!STOP!>
-
-
- A comparison of the Great Depression of 1922 and its
- effects between the United States and the rest of the
- world
-
-
- The introduction of the discussion will focus on the origins of the
- Great Depression and the escalating events that led to it. This will
- provide adequate foundations to bring up questions and attempt to answer
- them in an objective fashion as to why and how the Depression affected
- different industrialized countries in different ways.
- The core of the debate will consist of detailed comparable analyses
- of the consequences of the Depression with an emphasis on the economic
- aspects.
- The conclusion will provide a brief overview of the ways used by
- the different governments to get out of that dark episode of world economic
- history.
-
- When studying the Great Depression and it's effects, it is not
- unusual for historians to choose World War I as a starting point for their
- investigation. The reason for that is the importance of the repercussions
- the conflict had on the economies of all the countries that were involved
- in it.
- First of all, the War made it impossible for Europe to maintain
- previous levels of production. For example, before the War, France, the
- U.K. and Germany accounted for about 60 percent1 of the world's exports of
- manufactured goods, a share of the market which they could not sustain
- during the conflict. Consequently, Europe took many of its markets to the
- U.S. and Japan. The stunted growth of the European economies meant a lower
- demand for raw materials, which in turn lowered the demand for European
- exports.
- In agriculture, things didn't look any better, as it was the sector
- which employed the most people. At the end of World War I, Europe was
- forced to import food from the U.S.. Moreover, these transactions were
- conducted on a credit basis since Europe could not afford to pay for its
- purchase at that time.
- Clearly, the U.S. was going from being a traditional debtor of
- Europe before World War I to becoming its creditor: America had financed
- the war and it was issuing loans for its reconstruction. However, the
- attitudes in the U.S. were evolving in an unusual direction: an increasing
- number of American financiers were starting to literally seek ut potential
- borrowers which led to competition among U.S. banks and the spreading of
- unsound lending.2 The main object was to "do the most business", even at
- the expense of essential caution.
- What seemed like a beginning of recovery from the Great War, was in
- fact an immense accumulation of debts, which made the international
- economic order vulnerable to depression. Analyzing these events with the
- insight we have today, they seem even more unbelievably audacious given the
- high instability of the borrowing nation. (i.e., Europe)
- The triggering event was the crash of the Wall Street stock market
- in October of 1929. The stock market collapsed after steady declines in
- production, prices and incomes over three previous months which forced the
- speculators to revise their expectations. Anxiety soon gave place to panic
- which led to the crash. However, the depression affected the different
- industrialized countries in various ways and degrees of intensity.
- The depression was of especially great magnitude in the U.S.
- because there were not any welfare benefits for laid off workers. In the
- period between 1929 and 1933, money income fell by 53 percent (real income
- fell by 36 percent.)3 As a consequence, demand fell significantly, which
- in turn led to lower production and more layoffs-- up to a high of 25
- percent rate of unemployment in 1933.
- Despite the severity of the situation, the Federal Reserve did not
- pursue a monetary expansion on policy which would have stimulated the
- economy through lower interest rates and increased the stock of money in
- circulation. This inaction is often attributed to the fact that market
- interest rates in 1930-1931 fell to very low levels, much lower than in the
- earlier recessions (of 1924 and 1927), and therefore, the Federal Reserve
- Board wrongfully saw no need to pursue an expansionary monetary policy.4
- An indicator of that inaction is that open market operations did not
- provide sufficient money reserves for a banking system faced with
- depositors anxious for liquidity (monetary expansion would have filled that
- need). If the Federal Reserve had provided additional funds to the banking
- sector after 1930, bank failure would not have been so numerous and the
- decrease in the attack of ???? would have been (at least) slowed down.
- Still, it would not be accurate to make the Federal Reserve
- responsible for all these problems. Other factors contributed to the
- precipitation of what began as a cyclical recession into what we now know
- as the Great Depression. One of those is the Hawley Smoot tariff of 1930
- which in essence made America more protectionist than ever, sending import
- duties to record highs. Evidently, retaliation from other countries was
- quick to come. The new tariff act accelerated the downfall of American
- trade volume, which was probably the last thing the U.S. needed at that
- stage. President Hoover had always been in favor of protective tariffs
- which he considered a strictly domestic issue and he supported the Howley
- Smoot Act. Therefore, he clearly failed to see the implications of such a
- move.
- Soon, the Depression was spreading to the rest of the world,
- especially to Europe. There, the single country that was most affected was
- Germany whose very weak economy could not cope with the slow disappearance
- of American capital. Let us mention that Germany was still paying
- reparations (for World War I), which made its situation even more delicate.
- Germany was forced to borrow from Great Britain and France which could not
- compensate for the decline in U.S. lending.5 The trap in which Germany
- found itself was quite disconcerting: she had to pursue deficienary
- policies to gain the confidence of investors in order to attract foreign
- funds. At the same time, devaluaton posed a major problem. It increased
- the burden of the external debt (through the exchange rate mechanism) which
- was payable in foreign currencies.
-
- The United Kingdom represented another major force on the global
- economic scene. The British economy was not hit immediately as violently
- as Germany's. However, as the repercussions of the world crisis became
- increasingly clear, Great Britain experienced a notable decline in its
- exports which was even greater than the decrease in its imports. Those two
- factors contributed to generate a deficit in its balance of payments.
- Still, compared to most other industrialized countries, the U.K.
- got through the Depression in better economic health.6
-
- In the case of France, things went a significantly different way.
- First of all, out of the four biggest industrialized countries of the time
- (U.S., Germany, U.K. and France), France was the last to be hit by the
- Depression. Many possible reasons are hypothesized to explain that fact,
- but the one that is most often heard is the undervaluation of the French
- franc.
- The French economy began to feel the effects of the world crisis in
- 1932. Around that time the Depression caught up with the French economy
- through an important decrease in its exports (due impart to the shear
- downsizing trend in the volume of world trade), combined to an increase in
- imports. The problems faced by France were also worsened by the fact that
- it still was maintaining the gold standard long after all of the other
- industrialized countries--starting with Great Britain in 1931--had switched
- to fleeting exchange rates.
-
- As for Japan, we can safely say that it is the one country among
- today's industrialized nations that got through the Great Depression with
- the least damage to its economy.7
-
- Now that we have illustrated how the world crisis affected various
- nations in different ways, it seems only logical that they would put
- together solutions that were adapted to their individual problems.
-
- In the United States, Hoover had failed to bring a solution to the
- Depression, and he was replaced by Roosevelt in 1932. The new president
- brought with him the New Deal, which can be qualified as a collection of
- programs aimed at stimulating different sectors of the economy (like the
- Agricultural Adjustment Act and the National Industrial Recovery Act). As
- it turned out, the New Deal was not a particularly successful economic
- initiative, but it was definitely a political success, probably because its
- goal was to help the American people (even though the means used to
- accomplish that were never very clear). What proved more effective at
- bringing economic solutions to what was really an economic problem was the
- "Keynesian theory". In 1938, Roosevelt, facing the semi-failure of his New
- Deal, finally gave in to an increasing number of his close advisors who
- were confident that Keynes' ideas would be more successful.8 The
- underlying theory to Keynes' ideas was that recovery could only come
- through fiscal expansion--in other words, running a bigger budgetary
- deficit. The additional expenditures were pumped into the economy through
- a variety of government actions--like major public works--in order to
- stimulate demand by providing people with income.
-
- In Germany, the Nazis' victory at the 1933 elections was a major
- accelerating factor on the road to recovery. The Nazi program aimed first
- and foremost at the reduction of unemployment and it did accomplish at
- least that. However, the realization of the plans was conditioned by an
- omnipotent government which was best described by Peter Hayes' analogy
- (1987):
-
- "It is perhaps accurate to say that, to German industry, the emergent
- economic system was stiff capitalism, but only in the same sense that for a
- professional gambler poker remains poker, even when the house shuffles,
- deals, determines the suite and the wild cards, and can change them at
- will, even when there is a ceiling on winnings, which may be spent only as
- the census permits and for the most part only on the promises."9
-
- One other essential vector that Nazis used toward recovery was
- rearmament, starting in 1936. Hitler used the defense industry to satisfy
- two of his im???: recreate a strong Germany while giving people work.
-
- The case of Great Britain is different. We have mentioned earlier
- how well (relatively to other nations) the U.K. got through the Depression
- years. Let us now attempt to explain why. Three elements are often
- mentioned in the British recovery: the abandoning of the gold standard in
- 1931, the adoption of higher tariffs and the devaluation of the pound.
- When the U.K. abandoned the gold standard, it gave itself a competitive
- advantage via-a-vis those countries which did not. The new tariff laws
- helped by protecting domestic industries and the 30 percent devaluation of
- the pound added to the competitive edge of the U.K by making British
- products cheaper to the rest of the world.
-
- In the face of Depression, France reacted quite differently from
- the other industrialized countries. Confident in its strong economy until
- 1932, France did not abandon the gold standard until June 1937 and did not
- devalue the franc until October 1936. Those two factors made France rather
- uncompetitive for most of the 1930's, given the actions taken by the U.S.,
- the U.K., and Germany. Those measures, in time, helped lift France out of
- the Depression but the recovery there might have occurred a few years
- earlier if the French had only signed their policies to that of the United
- States and Great Britain in particular.10
-
- When it comes to Japan, two reasons are proposed to explain its
- good economic performance through the Depression: the fact that it had a
- planned economy, and the early understanding of the advantages of
- devaluating the yen. Japan improved its competitive position that way and
- it reacted very soon after the Depression hit. As a result, the effects of
- the crisis were greatly reduced from the start.
-
- Footnotes
-
- 1"The origins and nature of the Great Slump," Fearn.
-
- 2"The origins and nature of the Great Slump," Fearn.
-
- 3"Capitalism in Crisis,"edited by Garside.
-
- 4"La Crise economique dans le monde el en France," Nogaro.
-
- 5"The origins and nature of the Great Slump," Fearn.
-
- 6"The Great Depression, 1929-1938," Saint Etienna.
-
- 7"The Origins and Nature of the Great Slump," Fearn.
-
- 8"Capitalism in Crisis,"edited by Garside.
-
- 9"Capitalism in Crisis,"edited by Garside.
-
- 10"Capitalism in Crisis,"edited by Garside.
-
-