What Was the Great Depression?
The term “Great Depression” refers to modern history’s most significant and prolonged economic recession. The Great Depression ran between 1929 and 1941, the same year that the United States entered World War II 1941. This period was accentuated by several economic contractions, including the stock market crash of 1929 and banking panics that occurred in 1930 and 1931.
Economists and historians often cite the Great Depression as one of the largest—if not the most—catastrophic economic events of the 20th century.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
- The Great Depression was the most significant and prolonged economic recession in modern history and lasted between 1929 and 1941.
- Investing in the speculative market in the 1920s led to the stock market crash in 1929, which wiped out a great deal of nominal wealth.
- Most historians and economists agree that the stock market crash of 1929 wasn’t the only cause of the Great Depression.
- Other factors, including inactivity followed by overaction by the Fed, also contributed to the Great Depression.
- Presidents Hoover and Roosevelt tried to mitigate the impact of the depression through government policies.
How Did the Great Depression End?
Conventional wisdom says that the U.S. was jolted out of the Great Depression by New Deal job creation combined with a flood of government investment in the private sector in preparation for the country’s entrance into World War II. This is disputed by some economists, who assert that the Depression would have ended earlier with less government intervention.
Why the Economy is Headed for a New Depression
The Stock Market Crash
During the short depression from 1920 to 1921, known as the Forgotten Depression, the U.S. stock market fell by nearly 50%, and corporate profits declined by over 90%. The U.S. economy enjoyed robust growth during the rest of the decade. The Roaring Twenties, as the era came to be known, was when the American public discovered the stock market and dove in headfirst.
Speculative frenzies affected the real estate markets and the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE). Loose money supply and high levels of margin trading by investors helped to fuel an unprecedented increase in asset prices.
The lead-up to October 1929 saw equity prices rise to all-time high multiples of more than 19-times after-tax corporate earnings. This, coupled with the benchmark Dow Jones Industrial Index (DJIA) increasing 500% in five years, ultimately caused the stock market crash.
The NYSE bubble burst violently on Oct. 24, 1929, a day that came to be known as Black Thursday. A brief rally occurred Friday the 25th and during a half-day session Saturday the 26th. However, the following week brought Black Monday (Oct. 28) and Black Tuesday (Oct. 29). The DJIA fell more than 20% over those two days. The stock market would eventually fall almost 90% from its 1929 peak.
Ripples from the crash spread across the Atlantic Ocean to Europe, triggering other financial crises, such as the collapse of the Boden-Kredit Anstalt, Austria’s most important bank. In 1931, the economic calamity hit both continents in full force.
The U.S. Economy Tailspin
The 1929 stock market crash wiped out corporate and private nominal wealth, sending the U.S. economy into a tailspin. In early 1929, the U.S. unemployment rate was 3.2%. By 1933, it soared over 25%.
Despite unprecedented interventions and government spending by the Hoover and Roosevelt administrations, the unemployment rate remained above 18.9% in 1938. Real per capita gross domestic product (GDP) was below 1929 levels by the time the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor in late 1941.
While the crash likely triggered the decade-long economic downturn, most historians and economists agree that the impact alone did not cause the Great Depression. Nor does it explain why the slump’s depth and persistence were so severe. Various specific events and policies contributed to the Great Depression and helped prolong it during the 1930s.
Mistakes by the Young Federal Reserve
The relatively new Federal Reserve mismanaged the supply of money and credit before and after the crash in 1929. According to monetarists such as Milton Friedman and acknowledged by former Federal Reserve Chair Ben Bernanke.
Created in 1913, the Fed remained relatively inactive throughout the first eight years of its existence. After the economy recovered from the 1920 to 1921 depression, the Fed allowed significant monetary expansion. The total money supply grew by $28 billion, a 61.8% increase between 1921 and 1928. Bank deposits increased by 51.1%, savings and loan shares rose by 224.3%, and net life insurance policy reserves jumped by 113.8%. This occurred after the Federal Reserve cut required budgets to 3% in 1917. Gains in gold reserves via the Treasury and Fed were only $1.16 billion.
The Fed instigated the rapid expansion that preceded the collapse by increasing the money supply and keeping the interest rate low during the decade. Much surplus money supply growth inflated the stock market and real estate bubbles.
After the bubbles burst and the market crashed, the Fed took the opposite course by cutting the money supply by nearly a third. This reduction caused severe liquidity problems for many small banks and choked off hopes for a quick recovery.
Trade routes created during World War II remained open during the Great Depression and helped the market recover.
The Fed’s Tight Fist
Bernanke noted in a November 2002 address that bank panics were typically resolved within weeks before the Fed existed. Large private financial institutions would loan money to the strongest smaller institutions to maintain system integrity. That sort of scenario had occurred two decades earlier, during the Panic of 1907.
When frenzied selling sent the NYSE downward and led to a bank run, investment banker J.P. Morgan stepped in to rally Wall Street denizens to move significant amounts of capital to banks lacking funds.15 Ironically, that panic led the government to create the Federal Reserve to cut its reliance on individual financiers such as Morgan.
After Black Thursday, the heads of several New York banks had tried to instill confidence by prominently purchasing large blocks of blue-chip stocks at above-market prices.16 While these actions caused a brief rally Friday; the panicked sell-offs resumed Monday. In the decades since 1907, the stock market grew beyond the ability of such individual efforts. Only the Fed was big enough to prop up the U.S. financial system.
The Fed failed to do so with a cash injection between 1929 and 1932. Instead, it watched the money supply collapse and let thousands of banks fail. At the time, banking laws made it difficult for institutions to grow and diversify enough to survive a massive withdrawal of deposits or run on the bank.
While difficult to understand, the Fed’s harsh reaction may have resulted from its fear that bailing out careless banks would only encourage fiscal irresponsibility in the future. Some historians argue that the Fed created the conditions that caused the economy to overheat and exacerbated an already dire economic situation.
Hoover’s Propped-Up Prices
Herbert Hoover took action after the crash, even though he’s often characterized as a “do-nothing” president.
Between 1930 and 1932, he implemented the following:
- An increase in federal spending by 42%, which engaged in massive public works programs such as the Reconstruction Finance Corporation (RFC)
- Taxes to pay for new programs
- A ban on immigration in 1930 kept low-skilled workers from flooding the labor market.
Hoover was mainly concerned that wages would be cut following the economic downturn. He reasoned that prices needed to stay high to ensure high paychecks in all industries. To keep costs high, consumers would need to pay more.
But the public was poorly burned in the crash, leaving many people without the resources to spend lavishly on goods and services. Nor could companies count on overseas trade, as foreign nations were not willing to buy overpriced American goods any more than Americans were.
Many of his and Congress’ other post-crash interventions, such as wage, labor, trade, and price controls, damaged the economy’s ability to adjust and reallocate resources.
U.S. Protectionism
This bleak reality forced Hoover to use legislation to prop up prices and wages by choking out cheaper foreign competition. Following the tradition of protectionists and against the protests of more than 1,000 of the nation’s economists, Hoover signed into law the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act of 1930.
The act initially protected agriculture but swelled into a multi-industry tariff, imposing giant duties on more than 880 foreign products. Nearly three dozen countries retaliated, and imports fell from $7 billion in 1929 to just $2.5 billion in 1932. By 1934, international trade had declined by 66%. Not surprisingly, economic conditions worsened worldwide.
Hoover’s desire to maintain jobs and individual and corporate income levels was understandable. However, he encouraged businesses to raise wages, avoid layoffs, and keep prices high at a time when they naturally should have fallen. With previous cycles of recession/depression, the United States suffered one to three years of low wages and unemployment before dropping prices led to a recovery. Unable to sustain these artificial levels, and with global trade effectively cut off, the U.S. economy deteriorated from a recession to a depression.
The New Deal
President Franklin Roosevelt promised massive change when he was voted-in in 1933. The New Deal he initiated was an innovative, unprecedented series of domestic programs and acts designed to bolster American business, reduce unemployment, and protect the public.
Loosely based on Keynesian economics, it was based on the fact that the government could and should stimulate the economy. The New Deal set lofty goals to create and maintain the national infrastructure, full employment, and healthy wages. The government sets these goals through price, compensation, and production controls.
Some economists claim that Roosevelt continued many of Hoover’s interventions on a larger scale. He kept a rigid focus on price support and minimum wages and removed the country from the gold standard, forbidding individuals to hoard gold coins and bullion. He banned monopolistic business practices and instituted dozens of new public works programs and job-creation agencies.
The Roosevelt administration paid farmers and ranchers to stop or cut back on production. One of the most heartbreaking conundrums of the period was the destruction of excess crops, despite the need for thousands of Americans to access affordable food.
Federal taxes tripled between 1933 and 1940 to pay for these initiatives and new programs such as Social Security. These increases included increased excise taxes, personal income, inheritance, corporate income, and an excess profits tax.
New Deal Success and Failure
The New Deal led to measurable results, such as financial system reform and stabilization, boosting public confidence. Roosevelt declared a bank holiday for an entire week in March 1933 to prevent institutional collapse due to panicked withdrawals. This was followed by a construction program for a network of dams, bridges, tunnels, and roads. These projects opened up federal work programs, employing thousands of people.
Although the economy showed some recovery, the rebound was far too weak for the New Deal’s policies to be unequivocally deemed successful in pulling America out of the Great Depression. Historians and economists disagree on the reason:
- Keynesians blame a lack of federal spending, saying that Roosevelt did not go far enough in his government-centric recovery plans
- Others claim that by trying to spark immediate improvement instead of letting the economic/business cycle follow its usual two-year course of hitting bottom and rebounding, Roosevelt may have prolonged the depression, just like Hoover did before him.
A study by two economists at the University of California, Los Angeles, estimated that the New Deal extended the Great Depression by at least seven years. But it is possible that the relatively quick recovery, which was characteristic of other post-depression recoveries, may not have occurred as rapidly post-1929. That’s because it was the first time the general public (not just the Wall Street elite) lost large amounts in the stock market.
American economic historian Robert Higgs argued that Roosevelt’s new rules and regulations came so fast and revolutionary that businesses became afraid to hire or invest. Philip Harvey, a professor of law and economics at Rutgers University, suggested that Roosevelt was more interested in addressing social welfare concerns than creating a Keynesian-style macroeconomic stimulus package.
Social Security policies enacted by the New Deal created programs for unemployment, disability insurance, and old-age and widows’ benefits.
The Impact of World War II
The Great Depression appeared to end suddenly around 1941 to 1942. That’s if we look at employment and GDP figures. This was just around the time the United States entered World War II. The unemployment rate fell from eight million in 1940 to just over one million in 1943. However, more than 16 million Americans were conscripted to fight in the Armed Services. In the private sector, the real unemployment rate grew during the war.
The standard of living declined due to wartime shortages caused by rationing, and taxes rose dramatically to fund the war effort. Private investment dropped from $17.9 billion in 1940 to $5.7 billion in 1943, and private-sector production fell by nearly 50%.
Although the notion that the war ended the Great Depression is a broken window fallacy, the conflict put the United States on the road to recovery. The war opened international trading channels and reversed price and wage controls. Government demand opened up for inexpensive products, and the demand created a massive fiscal stimulus.
In the first 12 months after the war ended, private investments rose from $10.6 billion to $30.6 billion. The stock market broke into a bull run in a few short years.
What Caused the Great Depression?
It’s hard to pinpoint precisely what specific factor caused the Great Depression. But economists and historians agree that several mitigating factors led to this downturn. These include the stock market crash of 1929, the gold standard, a drop in lending and tariffs, banking panics, and contracted monetary policies by the Fed.
When Did the Great Depression Start?
The Great Depression started following the stock market crash of 1929, which wiped out both private and corporate nominal wealth. This sent the U.S. economy into a tailspin and eventually trickled out beyond the U.S. border to Europe.
When Did the Great Depression End?
The Great Depression ended in 1941. This was around the same time that the United States entered World War II. Most economists cite this as the end date, as this was the time that unemployment dropped and GDP increased.
The Bottom Line
The Great Depression resulted from an unlucky combination of factors, including a flip-flopping Fed, protectionist tariffs, and inconsistently applied government interventionist efforts. This period could have been shortened or avoided by a change in any of these factors.
While the debate continues as to whether the interventions were appropriate, many reforms from the New Deal, such as Social Security, unemployment insurance, and agricultural subsidies, exist to this day. The assumption that the federal government should act in times of national economic crisis is strongly supported. This legacy is one of the reasons the Great Depression is considered one of the seminal events in modern American history.