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America's Great Depression
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AMERICA'S GREAT DEPRESSION
by MURRAY N. ROTHBARD

www.mises.org


Applied Austrian economics doesn't get better than this. Murray N. Rothbard's America's Great Depression is a staple of modern economic literature and crucial for understanding a pivotal event in American and world history. 

The Mises Institute edition features, along with a new introduction by historian Paul Johnson, top-quality paper and bindings, in line with the standard set by The Scholars Edition of Human Action. 

Since it first appeared in 1963, it has been the definitive treatment of the causes of the depression. The book remains canonical today because the debate is still very alive. 

Rothbard opens with a theoretical treatment of business cycle theory, showing how an expansive monetary policy generates imbalances between investment and consumption. He proceeds to examine the Fed's policies of the 1920s, demonstrating that it was quite inflationary even if the effects did not show up in the price of goods and services. He showed that the stock market correction was merely one symptom of the investment boom that led inevitably to a bust. 

The Great Depression was not a crisis for capitalism but merely an example of the downturn part of the business cycle, which in turn was generated by government intervention in the economy. Had the book appeared in the 1940s, it might have spared the world much grief. Even so, its appearance in 1963 meant that free-market advocates had their first full-scale treatment of this crucial subject. The damage to the intellectual world inflicted by Keynesian- and socialist-style treatments would be limited from that day forward. 





Contents



Part I: BUSINESS CYCLE THEORY

Chapter 1 THE POSITIVE THEORY OF THE CYCLE  
Business cycles and business fluctuations 
The problem: the cluster of error 
The explanation: boom and depression 
Secondary features of depression: deflationary credit contraction 
Government depression policy: laissez-faire 
Preventing depressions 
Problems in the Austrian theory of the trade cycle 

Chapter 2 KEYNESIAN CRITICISMS OF THE THEORY 
The liquidity "trap" 
Wage rates and unemployment 

Chapter 3 SOME ALTERNATIVE EXPLANATIONS OF DEPRESSION: A CRITIQUE  
General overproduction 
Underconsumption 
The acceleration principle 
Dearth of "investment opportunities" 
Schumpeter's business cycle theory 
Qualitative credit doctrines 
Overoptimism and overpessimism 




Part II: THE INFLATIONARY BOOM: 1921–1929

Chapter 4 THE INFLATIONARY FACTORS  
The definition of the money supply 
Inflation of the money supply, 1921-1929 
Generating the inflation, i: reserve requirements 
Generating the inflation, ii: total reserves 
Treasury currency 
Bills discounted 
Bills bought-acceptances 
U.S. government securities 

Chapter 5 THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE INFLATION  
Foreign lending 
Helping Britain 
The crisis approaches 

Chapter 6 THEORY AND INFLATION: ECONOMISTS and THE LURE OF A STABLE PRICE LEVEL  




Part III: THE GREAT DEPRESSION: 1929-1933

Chapter 7 PRELUDE TO DEPRESSION: MR. HOOVER AND Laissez-Faire 
The development of Hoover's interventionism: unemployment 
The development of Hoover's interventionism: labor relations 

Chapter 8 THE DEPRESSION BEGINS: PRESIDENT HOOVER TAKES COMMAND 
The White House conferences 
Inflating credit 
Public works 
The New Deal Farm Program 

Chapter 9 1930 
More inflation 
The Smoot–Hawley Tariff 
Hoover in the second half of 1930 
The public works agitation 
The fiscal burdens of government 

Chapter 10 1931—"The Tragic Year"  
The American monetary picture 
The fiscal burden of government 
Public works and wage rates 
Maintaining wage rates 
Immigration restrictions 
Voluntary relief 
Hoover in the last quarter of 1931 
The spread of collectivist ideas in the business world 

Chapter 11 THE HOOVER NEW DEAL OF 1932  
The tax increase 
Expenditures versus economy 
Public works agitation 
The RFC 
Governmental relief 
The inflation program 
The inflation agitation 
Mr. Hoover's war on the stock market 
The home loan bank system 
The bankruptcy law 
The fight against immigration 

Chapter 12 THE CLOSE OF THE HOOVER TERM  
The attack on property rights: the final currency failure 
Wages, hours, and employment during the depression 
Conclusion: the lessons of Mr. Hoover's record 




APPENDIX: GOVERNMENT AND THE NATIONAL PRODUCT, 1929-1932 (p339)
Tables 
Table 1: Total Money Supply of the United States, 1921-1929 
Table 2: Total Dollars and Total Gold Reserves 
Table 3: Member Bank Demand Deposits 
Table 4: Demand and Time Deposits 
Table 5: Time Deposits 
Table 6: Member Bank Reserves and Deposits 
Table 7: Changes in Reserves and Causal Factors . . . 1921-1929 
Table 8: Per Month Changes in Reserves and Causal Factors . . . 1921-1929 
Table 9: Factors Determining Bank Reserves July-October 1929 
Table I: National Product 
Table II: Income Originating in Government 
Table III: Private Product 
Table IV: Government Expenditures 
Table V: Expenditures of Government Enterprises 
Table VI: Expenditures of Government and Government Enterprises 
Table VII: Receipts of Government and Government Enterprises 
Table VIII: Government and the Private Product 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Copyright © 1963, 1972 by Murray N. Rothbard 
Introduction to the Third Edition Copyright © 1975 by Murray N. Rothbard 
Introduction to the Fourth Edition Copyright © 1983 by Murray N. Rothbard 
Introduction to the Fifth Edition Copyright © 2000 by The Ludwig von Mises Institute 
Copyright © 2000, 2005 by The Ludwig von Mises Institute 




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