Lessons From the Great Depression, Next Great Depression II?
Economics / Great Depression II May 02, 2009 - 01:41 AM GMTBy: Submissions
Phill Tomlinson writes: A great deal can be learnt through history.   In a practical sense its completely useless, as it merely just documents past   events, but past events can help explain current and possible future events. If   you can never get to grips with a subject matter it is best to look at history   to try and to identify possible similarities. I have taken some quotes from a   historical book and I think a lot of the quotes below could be said of the   current situation we find ourselves in.
  "If the Federal Reserve had an   inflationist attitude   during the boom, it was just as ready to try to cure the depression by inflating   further. It stepped in immediately to expand credit and bolster shaky financial   positions. In an act unprecedented in its history, the Federal Reserve moved in   during the week of the crash—the final week of October—and in that brief period   added almost $300 million to the reserves of the nation’s banks. During that   week, the Federal Reserve doubled its holdings of government securities, adding   over $150 million to reserves, and it discounted about $200 million more for   member banks. Instead of going through a healthy and rapid liquidation of   unsound positions, the economy was fated to be continually bolstered by   governmental measures that could only prolong its diseased   state."
  
  "The Federal Reserve also promptly   and sharply lowered its rediscount rate, from 6 percent at the   beginning of the crash to 4.5 percent by mid-November. Acceptance   rates were also reduced considerably. This enormous expansion was generated to   prevent liquidation on the stock market and to permit the New York City banks to   take over the brokers’ loans that the “other,” non-bank,   lenders were liquidating."
  
  "Dr. Anderson records that, at the   end of December, 1929, the leading Federal Reserve officials wanted to pursue a   laissez-faire policy: “the   disposition was to let the money market ‘sweat it out’ and reach monetary ease   by the wholesome process of liquidation.” The Federal Reserve was prepared to   let the money market find its own level, without providing artificial stimuli   that could only prolong the crisis. But early in 1930, the government instituted   a massive easy money program. Rediscount rates of the New York Fed fell from   4.5 percent in February to 2 percent by the end of the   year."
  
  "During 1930, the Federal Reserve   had steadily lowered its rediscount rates: from 4.2 percent at   the beginning of the year, to 2 percent at the end, and finally   down to 1.2 percent in mid-1931."
  
  "President Hoover was proud of his   experiment in cheap money, and in his speech to the business conference on   December 5, he hailed the nation’s good fortune in possessing the splendid   Federal Reserve System, which had succeeded in saving shaky banks, had restored   confidence, and had made capital more abundant by reducing interest rates. Hoover   had done his part to spur the expansion by personally urging the banks to rediscount more extensively   at the Federal Reserve Banks. Secretary Mellon issued one of his by now   traditionally optimistic pronouncements that there was “plenty of credit   available.” And William Green issued a series of optimistic statements,   commending the Federal Reserve’s success in ending the depression.   On November 22, Green said: All the factors which make for a quick and speedy   industrial and economic recovery are present and evident. The Federal Reserve   System is operating, serving as a barrier against financial demoralization.   Within a few months industrial conditions will become normal, confidence and   stabilization in industry and finance will be  restored."
  
  "By early 1930, people were   generally convinced that there was little to worry about. Hoover’s decisive   actions on so many fronts—wages, construction, public works, farm supports,   etc., indicated to the public that this time swift national planning would turn   the tide quickly. Farm prices then seemed to be recovering, and unemployment had not yet   reached catastrophic proportions, averaging less than 9 percent of the labor   force in 1930."
  
  "During the second half of 1930,   production, prices, foreign trade, and employment continued to decline. On July   29, Hoover called for an investigation of bankruptcy laws in order to weaken   them and prevent many bankruptcies—thus turning to the ancient device of   attempting to revive confidence by injuring creditors and propping up unsound   positions."
  
  "As a consequence, while the   immigration law had already reduced net immigration into the United States to   about 200,000 per year, Hoover’s decree reduced net immigration to 35,000 in   1931, and in 1932 there was a net emigration of 77,000. In addition, Hoover’s   Emergency Committee on Employment organized concerted propaganda to   urge young people to return to school in the fall, and thus leave the labor   market."
  
  "He hailed the Federal Reserve   System as the great instrument of promoting stability, and called for an “ample   supply of credit at low rates of interest,” as well as public works, as the best   methods of ending the depression."
  
  "As 1931 drew to a close and   another Congressional session drew near, the country and indeed the world were   in the midst of an authentic crisis atmosphere—a crisis of policy and of   ideology. The depression, so long in effect, was now rapidly growing worse, in   America and throughout the world. The stage was set for the “Hoover New Deal” of   1932."
  
  "During 1929, the Federal   government had a huge surplus of $1.2 billion"
  
  "From a modest surplus in 1930,   the Federal government thus ran up a huge $2.2 billion deficit in   1931."
  
  "One thing Hoover was not reticent   about: launching a huge inflationist program. First, the administration   cleared the path for the program by passing the Glass–Steagall Act in February,   which (a) greatly broadened the assets eligible for rediscounts with the Fed,   and (b) permitted the Federal Reserve to use government bonds as collateral for   its notes, in addition to commercial paper"
  
  "Thus, the Hoover administration   pursued a giant inflationary policy from March through July 1932, raising   controlled reserves by $1 billion through Fed purchase of government securities.   If all other factors had remained constant, and banks fully loaned up, the money   supply would have risen abruptly and wildly by over $10 billion during that period.   Instead, and fortunately, the inflationary policy was reversed and turned into a   rout. What defeated it? Foreigners who lost confidence in the dollar, partly as   a result of the program, and drew out gold; American citizens who lost   confidence in the banks and changed their deposits into Federal Reserve notes;   and finally, bankers who refused to endanger themselves any further, and either   used the increased resources to repay debt to the Federal Reserve or allowed   them to pile up in the vaults. And so, fortunately, inflation by the government   was turned into deflation by the policies of the public and the banks, and the   money supply dropped by $3.5 billion."
  
  
  Notice some parallels between the present and the period being   described above? The things I find most striking are the fact the FED   drastically cut rates from 6% to 1.2%, compared with today in which they cut   from 5.25% to 2% at present. Also the fact that at the beginning of the bust the   government were   running huge budget surpluses, and within a couple of years were running huge   deficits,   compared with now where the US has persistently for years now been running up huge   deficits which   will get worse.
  
  Of course the   period being described was the Great Depression and the Quotes were taken from   Murray Rothbards   book, Americas Great Depression. Contrary to what people believe the great   depression was not suddenly brought about after the infamous stock market crash   in October 1929, it was brought about over a 3-4 year period of excessive   monetary inflation in the previous years during the 1920's boom and increasing   inflationary policies during the bust along with increased government   interference, which made the Depression so great. In fact the stock market also   rallied during this time and didn't bottom out till around 1933. Hoover was the   creator of the New Deal, Roosevelt just merely carried on with it with even more   enthusiasm contary to the myth that Hoover had a no hands approach to the   economy. In the end this is where we now stand,
  
  
  "But here, in the crisis of 1933,   the banks could no longer continue as they were. Something had to be done.   Essentially, there were two possible routes. One was the course taken by   Roosevelt; the destruction of the property rights of bank depositors, the   confiscation of gold, the taking away of the people’s monetary rights, and the   placing of the Federal Government in control of a vast, managed, engine of   inflation. The other route would have been to seize the opportunity to awaken   the American people to the true nature of their banking system, and thereby   return, at one swoop, to a truly hard and sound   money."
  
  
  We all know   what happened in subsequent years. Nixon removed the US from the gold standard,   and in effect all western currencies from gold as bretton woods was dissmantled.   Now the dollar and world currencies are backed with nothing as we enter another   dissasturous chapter in   history of fiat   currency.
  
  If we wish to draw   the parallels to   today, roughly in 1928 real estate prices began to fall compared with 2006 in   the US. 1929 and stock prices began to fall, compared with 2007 when the Dow was   at its all time high. So what does that mean in the next few years if we are   only at 1930. Well we have a lot further to go and the governments and Central   Banks are doing exactly what history has taught us not to   do.
  
  However there are   differences, which I believe position the US in a worse position. Back then the   US had huge budget surpluses in previous years, exported goods throughout the   world and had huge oil reserves (cheep energy reserves which can never be   overstated). They also theoretically had the dollar backed by Gold which meant   even though the FED tried to inflate they were constrained, where as   now it is a complete fiat currency meaning there will be no limits to inflate   this time. Ben Bernanke the current head of the FED is supposedly a student   of the Great Depression but from what I've seen, he's repeating what was done 75   years ago, and he's doing a pretty good job of fooling everyone. Nationalising   Fannie and Freddie Mac, that were created at the end of the Great Depression, is   an absolute disaster as I have said before, and is exactly what President Hoover   and the FED would have done during the last depression.
  
  I will end on the following note from Murray Rothbard. Maybe we are   facing another depression and crisis of the same magnitude? Or   worse?
  
"What was the trouble? Economic   theory demonstrates that only governmental inflation can   generate a boom-and-bust cycle, and that the depression will be   prolonged and aggravated by inflationist and other interventionary measures.   In contrast to the myth of laissez-faire, we have shown in this book how government   intervention generated the unsound boom of the   1920s, and how Hoover’s new departure aggravated   the Great Depression by massive measures of interference. The   guilt for the Great Depression must, at long last, be lifted from   the shoulders of the free-market economy, and placed where it   properly belongs: at the doors of politicians, bureaucrats, and the   mass of “enlightened” economists. And in any other depression, past   or future, the story will be the same."
By Phill Tomlinson
http://theageofstupidity.blogspot.com
The Age of Stupidity "There is no means of avoiding the final collapse of a boom brought about by credit expansion. The alternative is only whether the crisis should come sooner as a result of a voluntary abandonment of further credit expansion, or later as a final and total catastrophe of the currency system involved.", Ludwig Von Mises
© 2009 Copyright Phill Tomlinson - All Rights Reserved 
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