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         Crash Of 1929 & The Depression Economics:     more books (33)
  1. The Great Crash, 1929 by John Kenneth Galbraith, 1988-04-08
  2. The Stock Market Crash of 1929: Dawn of the Great Depression (American Disasters) by Mary Gow, 2003-09
  3. The Great Crash: How the Stock Market Crash of 1929 Plunged the World into Depression by Selwyn Parker, 2010-02-01
  4. The Crash of 1929 (World Disasters Series) by Ronald Migneco, 1989-09
  5. World History Series - Crash of 1929 by Nathan Aaseng, 2001-05-01
  6. The Stock Market Crash of 1929 (Landmark Events in American History) by Scott Ingram, 2004-07
  7. Rainbow's End: The Crash of 1929 (Pivotal Moments in American History) by Maury Klein, 2003-05-01
  8. Great Depression in the United States: Great Depression, Wall Street Crash of 1929, Deflation, Causes of the Great Depression, Debt, Gini coefficient, Smoot? Hawley Tariff Act
  9. STOCK MARKET CRASH (1929): An entry from Macmillan Reference USA's <i>Encyclopedia of the Great Depression</i> by PETER FEARON, 2004
  10. 1929 stock market crash (History in the headlines) by Douglas M Rife, 2000
  11. At Issue in History - The Crash of 1929 (paperback edition)
  12. The Year of the Great Crash, 1929 by William K. Klingaman, 1991-05
  13. The Stock Market Crash of 1929: The End of Prosperity (Milestones in American History) by Brenda Lange, 2007-04-30
  14. The Day the Bubble Burst: A Social History of the Wall Street Crash of 1929 by Gordon Thomas, Max Morgan-Witts, 1979

1. America's Great Depression - Links
Century, XIV The Great crash and the Great Slump, A study of the economics of theGreat depression by J The 1929 Stock Market crash, History and analysis
http://www.amatecon.com/gd/gdlinks.html
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Other Depressions
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This page was last updated on July 6, 2002
Links Web site Description The Great Depression A decidedly liberal/Keynesian look at the Great Depression by the author of the Liberalism Resurgent web page The Great Depression in the United States From A Neoclassical Perspective Article by Harold L. Cole and Lee E. Ohanian, appearing in the Winter 1999 (Vol. 23 No. 1) issue of the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Quarterly Review , an academic journal that primarily presents economic research aimed at improving policymaking by the Federal Reserve System and other governmental authorities. Black Thursday: October 24, 1929 A neat page that shows newspaper headlines leading up to the Stock Market crash Great Depression Article from the online version of the Encyclopedia Britannica The Great Depression Part of the An Outline of American History website Great Myths of the Great Depression An short essay from the August '98 issue of The Freeman that takes a look at the Great Depression from a hardcore free market perspective Slouching Towards Utopia?: The Economic History of the Twentieth Century, XIV - The Great Crash and the Great Slump

2. America's Great Depression - Links
Links to Great depression resources on the web A study of the economics of the Great depression by J. Bradford De History and analysis of the stock market crash in 1929 and the Great depression by Tracy Yee,
http://www.amatecon.com/gdlinks.html
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3. My Unread Books
Galbraith, John Kenneth, The Great crash 1929. Gasman 1916. Krugman, Paul,The Return of depression economics. Landsburg, Steven, Macroeconomics.
http://www.amatecon.com/mystuff/myunread.html
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My Unread Books
I'm a bit of an impulse buyer when it comes to books, that's one reason I have so many unread on my shelf.
Non-Fiction
Author Title Anderson, Benjamin M. Economics and the Public Welfare: A Financial amd Economic History of the United States, 1914-1946 Ayoob, Massad F. In the Gravest Extreme: The Role of the Firearm in Personal Protection Barnett, Randy (ed.) ... The Rights Retained by the People Bernanke, Ben S. Essays on the Great Depression Byock, Jesse L. Medieval Iceland: Society, Sagas, and Power Carpenter, Ted Galen Collective Defense or Strategic Independence?
NATO at 40 : Confronting a Changing World

A Search for Enemies: America's Alliances After the Cold War
Crane, Ed American Vision, An (ed. with David Boaz) Dilorenzo, Thomas J. The Real Lincoln: A New Look at Abraham Lincoln, His Agenda, and an Unnecessary War Dorn, James A. The Search for Stable Money (with Anna J. Schwartz) Eckert, Allan W. A Sorrow in Our Hearts: The Life of Tecumseh England, Catherine (ed.) Governing Banking's Future: Markets vs. Regulation Fischer, Louis (ed.) The Essential Gandhi: His Life, Work, and Ideas: An Anthology

4. The Crash Of 1929
An essay on the events surrounding the financial crisis of October 1929 aka the Wall Street crash the stock market, there followed a depression. The crash of 1929 continues to be a fascinating example of panic in high finance and is still a staple of economics 101.
http://www.btinternet.com/~dreklind/thecrash.htm
The Crash of 1929
On October 19 1987, the Dow-Jones industrial average suffered a major devaluation. The Dow lost over 500 points. Stock trading markets worldwide were all suffering similar declines. At the time, there was a lot of concern over what this meant to the overall economy of the world. The reason for this concern comes from the fact that the last time there was a large devaluation in the stock market, there followed a depression. Economists used a yardstick from the Jazz Age to evaluate this 'correction'; the yardstick was the crash of October 1929. The crash of 1929 continues to be a fascinating example of panic in high finance and is still a staple of Economics 101. This event involved all people, big and small, rich and poor, young and old. Everyone. Depressions, we are told, are cyclical in the nature of economics. In this era, we have successfully evaded depressions with the aid of computers, government regulation, and because we actually learned from history. The subject of this crash in 1929 has been studied and discussed many times over the years, by many economic authors. Most notable, in my opinion, would be John Galbraith. His book, "The Great Crash 1929", I heartily recommend if you are interested in the details of the crash and events leading up to it. It is a warning to us that our economic world will not always necessarily be safe. In 1929, even in 1928, the warnings of an economic disaster were heeded by some of the Wall Street denizens. It seems clear that everyone involved in the speculative boom of the late twenties knew that eventually stocks would drop. Who cares though? At the moment, we are in the business of making money. When the bulls are stampeding, it raises a cloud of dust that makes it hard to see danger. This boom of the 20s is almost as famous as the bust.

5. Bigchalk: HomeworkCentral: The Great Depression (1930s) (Economic Crises & Recov
BEYOND Social Sciences economics Special Topics Timeline of the Great depression;Timeline, Slideshow Resources. STOCK MARKET crash (1929)
http://www.bigchalk.com/cgi-bin/WebObjects/WOPortal.woa/Homework/High_School/Eco
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The Great Depression (1930s)

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INTRODUCTION

  • World Book Online Article on GREAT DEPRESSION
  • America's Great Depression Timeline
  • Causes of the Great Depression ... Contact Us
  • 6. Forecasting The Depression: Harvard Versus Yale
    Was the depression forecastable? After the crash, how long should 1927 and the Slide into depression " economics Working Papers 516, "The stock market crash of 1929 Irving Fisher was
    http://ideas.uqam.ca/ideas/data/Articles/aeaaecrevv:78:y:1988:i:4:p:595-612.html
    This file is part of IDEAS , which uses RePEc data
    Papers Articles Software Books ... Help!
    Forecasting the Depression: Harvard versus Yale
    Author info Abstract Publisher info Related research ... Statistics Author Info Dominguez, Kathryn M
    Fair, Ray C
    Shapiro, Matthew D
    Abstract
    Publisher Info
    Article provided by American Economic Association in its journal American Economic Review Volume (Year):
    Issue (Month):
    4 (September)
    Pages:
    Handle:
    RePEc:aea:aecrev:v:78:y:1988:i:4:p:595-612
    Keywords: Contact details of provider:
    Email: aeainfo@vanderbilt.edu
    Web page: http://www.aeaweb.org/aer/ More information through EDIRC Order Information: Web: http://www.aeaweb.org/subscribe.html For technical questions: baum@bc.edu (Christopher F. Baum). Related research Related papers by JEL classification: Cited by explanations
  • Hans-Joachim Voth, . " With a Bang, not a Whimper: Pricking Germany's "Stock Market Bubble" in 1927 and the Slide into Depression Economics Working Papers 516, Department of Economics and Business, Universitat Pompeu Fabra [Downloadable!]
  • 7. Bigchalk: HomeworkCentral: The Great Depression (1930s) (Economic Crises & Recov
    MIDDLE SCHOOL Social Sciences economics Special Topics of the Great depression;Timeline, Slideshow Resources. STOCK MARKET crash (1929)
    http://www.bigchalk.com/cgi-bin/WebObjects/WOPortal.woa/Homework/Middle_School/E
    Home About Us Newsletters My Products ... Product Info Center
    Email this page
    to a friend!
    K-5
    The Great Depression (1930s)

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    INTRODUCTION

  • World Book Online Article on GREAT DEPRESSION
  • America's Great Depression Timeline
  • Causes of the Great Depression ... Contact Us
  • 8. Revisiting The Stock Market Crash Of 1929
    Revisiting the Stock Market crash of 1929 by Chuck Morse Boston's Conservative Radio Voice of Reason. accustomed to viewing the 1929 stock market crash and the depression that followed as an example of The insufferable shoptalk around the subject of economics causes us to tune
    http://www.chuckmorse.com/crash_of_1929.html
    Revisiting the Stock Market Crash of 1929
    By Chuck Morse We are accustomed to viewing the 1929 stock market crash and the depression that followed as being the fault of the capitalist system. Nothing could be further from the truth. The crash was caused as a result of our monetary system being converted from one in which Congress directly regulated the value and quantity of currency, and issued the currency debt free, to one where currency decisions would be made by a private cartel of banks known as the Federal Reserve which would assume the power to issue currency to the government as a debt instrument. The change occurred in Dec. 1913, the crash occurred 16 years later. Understanding the crash and depression requires a study in the nature of money, circulation, and credit. Understanding money is key to understanding the essence of private ownership and freedom. The manipulation of currencies by governments, usually working in tandem with central bankers, has been the primary cause of war, systemic poverty and social dislocation. What is money? Money has three properties. It is a means of exchange, a measure of value, and an instrument of savings. As an abstract commodity, money allows for an exchange of goods and services for individuals, groups, or nations. Historically, money has consisted of such things as beads; seashells, tobacco or tally sticks, but over centuries and millennia, the internationally accepted standard of money has become gold and silver. The use of money allows commerce and trade to occur without barter and, as such, money is the basis and engine of civilization. Even primitive man understood the need for money as a means of exchange. Sound money, which is money that maintains a consistent and dependable value, is the most fundamental building block of civilization.

    9. Great Depression, The_Crash_of_'29
    DESCENT INTO THE DEPTHS (1929) The Great depression crash Of '29 FUTURECASTS online magazine 3, No. 3, 3/1/01. Summaries of Great depression Controversies and Facts Great depression Chronologies This was a "New Era" in economics. An "unlimited" supply of purchasing power was available to the American public.
    http://www.futurecasts.com/Depression_descent-%2729.html
    DESCENT INTO THE DEPTHS (1929): The Great Depression Crash Of '29 FUTURECASTS online magazine
    www.futurecasts.com
    Vol. 3, No. 3, 3/1/01. Homepage Summaries of Great Depression Controversies and Facts The Great Deception Great Depression Chronologies II.
    Rebound from
    Crash of '29 III.
    Collapse of agriculture
    IV.
    Debate begins.
    V.
    Collapse of international finance
    VI.
    Collapse of WW I financial obligations
    VII.
    Collapse of governments
    (The vast majority of the following was taken from articles published in contemporary issues of the N.Y. Times.) NOTE: I suggest the following, very conservative, rules of thumb to assist in making comparisons with today's conditions.
    • To compensate for the impact of inflation on prices, multiply all prices by 10.
    • To compensate for the impact of inflation, plus the doubling of our population, plus the quadrupling of our economy per capita, multiply financial statistics by 80 when evaluating the impact of events on economic and financial markets.
    This may look strange when applied to commodity and consumer prices, but actually highlights the tremendous productivity advances of the last 70 years.

    10. Essentials Of Economics | Chapter 10 Summary
    The crash of 1929) An excerpt from a 1929 newspaper article captures the panicassociated with the crash of Wall Street in 1929. 2. The Great depression.
    http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/0072374071/student_view0/chapter10/chapter
    Student Center Instructor Center Information Center Home ... Custom Choose a Chapter Chapter 1 Chapter 2 Chapter 3 Chapter 4 Chapter 5 Chapter 6 Chapter 7 Chapter 8 Chapter 9 Chapter 10 Chapter 11 Chapter 12 Chapter 13 Chapter 14 Chapter 15 Chapter 16 Chapter 17 Chapter Summary Key Terms Multiple Choice Quiz
    Essentials of Economics, 4/e Bradley R. Schiller
    The Business Cycle
    Chapter 10 Summary
    I. Headline: "Market in Panic as Stocks Are Dumped in 12,894,600 Share Day; Bankers Halt It." (The Crash of 1929) - An excerpt from a 1929 newspaper article captures the panic associated with the crash of Wall Street in 1929. A. Macroeconomics Definition: Macroeconomics - The study of aggregate economic behavior, of the economy as a whole. B. Business Cycle Definition: Business Cycle - Alternating periods of economic growth and contraction. Note: Figure 10.1 demonstrates the concept of business cycles. II. Assessing Macro Performance A. The three basic measures of macro performance are: 1. Output (GDP) growth 2. Unemployment

    11. Business Cycles And Depressions: An Encyclopedia
    Glasner South Sea Bubble by Larry Neal StockMarket crash of 1929 by Eugene of PoliticalBusiness Cycles before the Great depression, economics Letters, 51
    http://www.eh.net/bookreviews/library/0037.shtml
    Business Cycles and Depressions: An Encyclopedia
    Glasner, David
    EH.NET BOOK REVIEW Published by EH.NET (September 1997) David Glasner, editor, Business Cycles and Depressions: An Encyclopedia . New York: Garland Publishing, 1997. xv + 779 pp. Index. $95.00 (cloth), ISBN: 0-8240-0944-4. Reviewed for EH.NET by Robert Whaples, Department of Economics, Wake Forest University. whaples@wfu.edu "The motion of the economy, unlike that of heavenly bodies, conforms to no immutable mathematical laws and follows no repetitive patterns (p. 66)" David Glasner (economist at the Bureau of Economics, U.S. Federal Trade Commission) has assembled a stellar cast who have written an exceptionally useful reference book. Business Cycles and Depressions: An Encyclopedia includes 327 original articles on every major aspect of business cycles, fluctuations, financial crises, recessions, and depressions. The articles, which range from macroeconomic theory to econometrics to the historical record, are generally up-to-date, clear and to the point. Most entries will be accessible to students, but are informative enough to benefit almost any professional, as well. Each includes a bibliography. A seven-page appendix presents international data detailing business cycle turning points and durations. Perhaps the highlight of the volume is a ten-page entry, "Business Cycles" by Victor Zarnowitz, which surveys the entire field of business cycle research and is quoted above.

    12. Famous First Bubbles?: Stock Market Crash 1929
    On October 28, 1929 the SmoothHawley tariff was enacted as a major cause of the stockmarket crash and subsequent economic depression, the decision
    http://www.few.eur.nl/few/people/smant/m-economics/crash1929.htm
    BUBBLES
    HOME
    FAMOUS FIRST BUBBLES?
    THE STOCK MARKET CRASH OF 1929
    After World War I the United States experienced an economic boom based on new technologies in products, production processes and firm management (e.g. General Motors and Ford in automobiles, RCA in electrical appliances). The boom was facilitated by the increased use of installment credit. In 1927 a short recession ended and industrial production jumped 25% until 1929. The US stock market boomed together with the economy and peaked in September 1929. On September 3 the index reached 381 compared to 1926=100. The stock market crashed in October 1929 (with frantic selling on Black Thurday October 24, Black Monday October 28, Black Tuesday October 29) and stock prices fell to 145 in November (-62%). In June 1932 stock prices reached their low at 34 (-91%). The usual and familiar accusations were made and have since been repeated. Speculators were 'evidently' responsible for driving stock prices away from their fundamental value, causing a bubble in the market. Speculators were aided by 'easy credit' from banks and stock-market brokers. Not just the stock market crash was blamed on speculators, but, even more, speculators and the stock market were blamed for the entire Great Depression.
    Fundamentals
    The fundamental value of stocks is the discounted present value of expected future dividends. Due to dividend smoothing and other considerations dividend payments usually lag earnings of firms. It is not surprising for example that during 1929 share prices of utility companies rose strongly, although most of these companies had not paid any dividends. Utility companies were seen to benefit from the expanding sale of electrical appliances and used their earnings to increase investment rather than distribute as dividends. RCA also did not pay dividends.

    13. New Deal Network: Links: Essays And Features
    History of the Twentieth Century, XIV The Great crash and the Great Slump Studyof the economics of the Great depression by Brad De Long The crash of 1929.
    http://newdeal.feri.org/classrm/h.htm

    Documents
    Photos Features Classroom ... Search
    Links: Essays and Features
    Index
    Web site to the FDR episode of the PBS television series The Presidents . The site includes teaching plans, online resources, and a program summary.
    New Deal Cultural Programs: Experiments in Cultural Democracy
    Part of a longer work by Don Adams and Arlene Goldbard on The Institute for Cultural Democracy's "Webster's World of Cultural Policy" site.
    Eleanor Roosevelt: Tribute to Greatness
    A brief biography on the Women's International Center site.
    Franklin Delano Roosevelt
    A timeline and brief biography of FDR on POTUS: Presidents of the United States, a service of the Internet Public Library, at the University of Michigan.
    Franklin D. Roosevelt
    An essay by Doris Kearns Goodwin from the PBS broadcast Character Above All . On the Public Broadcasting Service Web site. Picture America: Photographs of the Great Depression
    Corbis Production's elegantly designed companion Web site to their CD-ROM FDR . The site contains photo essays on FSA photographers Dorothea Lange, Russell Lee, Ben Hahn, Arthur Rothstein, Walker Evans, and Marion Post Wolcott.
    Washington Post On-line
    The Post's site has The FDR Years: On Roosevelt and His Legacy , By William E. Leuchtenburg and the Associated Press account of the 1929 stock market crash at

    14. SUNY Cortland - Economics Department
    Week 5 (9/28 and 9/30), Conservative, liberal and radical views before thecrash; the impact of the crash of 1929, the Great depression, and the
    http://www.cortland.edu/economics/105_doane_f99.htm
    Return to Economics Department Home Page
    ECO 105: INTRODUCTION TO POLITICAL ECONOMY AND PUBLIC POLICY
    Fall, 1999
    Instructor:
    Donna L. Doane Office:
    Office Hours:
    Old Main 136-C
    Tuesday and Thursday 1 to 3 or by appointment Telephone: Email: Donna Doane
    doane@cortland.edu
    Course Description This course is designed to provide a general introduction to the field of political economy and public policy. Index
    Course Objectives
    During the first part of the semester we will discuss the process by which the modern economy came into existence, and how economic thinking changed over time as the modern economy emerged. This process led to the rise of different "schools" of economic thought, and the debates between these schools – arguing from fundamentally different points of view – created the foundation for the critical economic debates of the late 20th/early 21st centuries. During the second part of the semester we will take up some of the most important economic issues that are currently being discussed and, in some cases, heatedly debated within the U.S. and throughout the world. This will include questions related to poverty, income and wealth inequality, globalization and changing (for many, worsening) working conditions, environmental destruction, economic issues tied to gender and ethnicity, debt and financial crises, and other key concerns. We will analyze different points of view regarding these issues and examine some of the evidence that each side presents. We will also consider the impact these debates have had on the creation of the public policies that affect all of our lives so directly.

    15. Failure Analysis Of 20th Century Economics
    Appendix 1 Fall Of The Gold Standard The 'stock market crash' on October29, 1929 marked beginning of the 'Great depression of the 1930s'.
    http://www.ovaloffice.org/2000/a1gold.htm
    Natural Law Thesis Appendix 1: Fall Of The Gold Standard The 'stock market crash' on October 29, 1929 marked beginning of the 'Great Depression of the 1930s'. The 'Great Depression of the 1930s' in the U.S. was caused by the 'private authority' over the U.S. 'central banking system', when that 'private authority' over the U.S. central banking system' called for 'repayment' of all 'money' (units of U.S. national currency) 'borrowed' during a period of time after World War I (1918-1929) - that is, all 'money' borrowed to purchase 'investment' in all 'private business structure' organizations in existence during that period of time. Capital stock could be purchased with as little as a 20% down payment (called 'margin') during the 'Roaring Twenties', giving that decade its name. All 'borrowed' money to purchase 'stock' drove stock market prices up, as dictated by the natural law of 'demand and supply'. Stock market prices are always inflated by borrowed money. The value of material assets simply did not exist to support the inflated stock market prices. The stock market crash caused destruction (or soaking up - like a sponge) of all national capital investment. Because of the unavailability of money, the major thrust of government policy to recover from the Great Depression was simply to print more money, to make money available. No one no longer had any assets to use as collateral to borrow money - all industrial assets had been wiped out on a national scale by bankruptcies and foreclosures because of the 'crash'.

    16. Beartopia Books, Magazines, And Videos
    America's Great depression, 0945466056, Rothbard. Anatomy of a crash 1929,0870340379, Levien. Basic economics A Citizen's Guide, 046508138X, Sowell.
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    AUTHOR or EDITOR ABC of Stock Speculation, The Nelson ABCs of Gold Investing Kosares Amazing Life of Jesse Livermore, The Smitten America's Great Depression Rothbard Anatomy of a Crash 1929 Levien Art of Investment, The Ellinger Art of Speculation, The

    17. Eco201- Great Depression (Mr. Frank May)
    economics economic history and United States economic history 1918 great depressiondepressions united states 1929 economic depression. The Great crash 1929.
    http://www.jsr.vccs.edu/jsr_lrc/assistance/eco201.htm

    18. Chapter 14 1929-1933 The Roaring Life Of The 1920s
    Chapter 14 19291933 The Roaring Life of the 1920s. economics; To describe thecauses of the stock market crash and of the Great depression.
    http://www2.mde.k12.ms.us/6600/wegner/chap14.htm

    19. Economics 201c Readings: Spring 2002: American Economic History (Graduate)
    March 13 The Great depression in America I Causes and Course. Reading NotesEugene White (1990), The Stock Market Boom and the crash of 1929, JEP 42
    http://www.j-bradford-delong.net/Teaching_Folder/Econ_210c_spring_2002/Econ_210c
    Economics 210c: Spring 2002: American Economic History (Graduate)
    J. Bradford DeLong
    delong@econ.berkeley.edu

    http://www.j-bradford-delong.net/
    January 23: Introduction
    February 6: American Labor I: Servitude and Slavery Reading Notes

    20. TownHall.com: Conservative Columnists: Thomas Sowell
    being the biggest reason why the depression went so Federal Reserve in response tothe 1929 crash as shockingly D. Roosevelt had a clue about economics or a
    http://www.townhall.com/columnists/thomassowell/ts20020724.shtml
    Town Hall
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    ... Live Chat Miscellaneous Jobs/Internships Contact Congress Historical Docs Capital Cam ... Start w/Town Hall Townhall.com in your inbox each morning Join the Opinion Alert! Today's American Minute Saturday Chuck Colson War on the Tube Robert Novak Pacifying Byrd Bill O'Reilly When the truth is a casualty David Limbaugh Bush, the failure? More Opinion Thomas Sowell ( archive printer-friendly version July 24, 2002 Stock crash aftermath What can be even worse than a stock market crash including the great crash of 1929 are politicians rushing in to fix things. At one time, it was widely assumed that the 1929 crash led directly to the Great Depression that lasted throughout the decade of the 1930s. Now, more and more people who have studied that era have come to see what the government itself did to help as being the biggest reason why the depression went so deep and lasted so long. Even a liberal economist like John Kenneth Galbraith described the actions of the Federal Reserve in response to the 1929 crash as "shockingly incompetent." Neither Republican President Herbert Hoover or his Democratic successor Franklin D. Roosevelt had a clue about economics or a policy that made any sense. Both sought to keep prices including wages up, despite the fact that the money supply had declined by one third. How was the country supposed to buy all the output at existing prices, and employ all the workers at existing wages, when there was so much less money?

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