Financial Market Shocks during the Great Depression
-
Alycia Chin
and Missaka Warusawitharana
This study examines the effect of shocks observed in financial markets on output and employment during the Great Depression. We present three main findings. First, an adverse financial shock leads to a decline in the manufacturing sectors output and employment that peaks about 11 months afterward. Next, this shock has a much greater impact on the durables sector than the nondurables sector. Last, continuing financial market weakness in 1933 and 1934 may have restrained the recovery from the Great Depression. The findings suggest that financial market weakness contributed to the length and depth of the Great Depression, and that this occurred mainly through the investment channel. In addition, a counterfactual analysis using the estimates from the Great Depression suggests that the recent recession would have been less severe without the financial market disruptions in the fall of 2008.
©2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
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Articles in the same Issue
- Topics Article
- Endogenous Growth, Habit Formation and Convergence Speed
- Implementing Optimal Monetary Policy in New-Keynesian Models with Inertia
- Capital Markets Integration and Labor Market Institutions
- The Role of the Real Interest Rate in U.S. Macroeconomic History
- Price Dynamics and Asymmetric Business Cycles under Mixed State and Time Dependent Pricing Rules
- The Link between the Economic Structure and Financial Development
- The Optimum Quantity of Money Revisited: Distortionary Taxation in a Search Model of Money
- Sufficient Conditions for Finite Objective Functions in DSGE Models with Deterministic and Stochastic Trends
- A Neoclassical Analysis of the Asian Crisis: Business Cycle Accounting for a Small Open Economy
- Aging, Retirement, and Savings: A General Equilibrium Analysis
- Non-Price Competition, Real Rigidities and Inflation Dynamics
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- Inflation and Innovation-Driven Growth
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- Inventories and Interest Rates: A Stage of Fabrication Approach
- Policy Irreversibility and Interest Rate Smoothing
- The Effect of Loss Experiences in a Banking Crisis on Future Expectations and Behavior
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- Contributions Article
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- An Evaluation of Inflation Forecasts from Surveys Using Real-Time Data
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- Nominal Rigidities, News-Driven Business Cycles, and Monetary Policy
- How Much Can Engel's Law and Baumol's Disease Explain the Rise of Service Employment in the United States?
- Are DSGE Approximating Models Invariant to Shifts in Policy?
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- Is a Calvo Price Setting Model Consistent with Individual Price Data?
- The Impact of Aggregate and Sectoral Fluctuations on Training Decisions
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