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Is Switzerland in a great depression?
Review of Economic Dynamics, 2005Abstract Abrahamsen, Aeppli, Atukeren, Graff, Muller, and Schips [2005. The Swiss disease: Facts and artefacts. A reply to Kehoe and Prescott. Review of Economic Dynamics 8 (3), 749–758, this issue] object to Kehoe and Prescott's [2002. Great depressions of the 20th century.
Timothy J. Kehoe, Kim J. Ruhl
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Consumption in the Great Depression
Journal of Political Economy, 1978This paper criticizes Temin's hypothesis that the Great Depression was caused by an exogenous decline in consumption in 1930. Using Temin's own consumption function, as well as two other ones on the levels of the data, there is little support for Temin's hypothesis.
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This history of the Great Depression was prepared for The Cambridge Economic History of the United States. It describes real and imagined causes of the Depression, bank failures and deflation, the Fed and the gold standard, the start of recovery, the first New Deal, and the second New Deal.
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Comment on “The Great Depression”
The Tocqueville Review/La revue Tocqueville, 2009-
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The Great Depression was the worst economic collapse in American history, and for a decade millions of Americans suffered under the heavy weight of poverty, unemployment, homelessness, and hunger. The Depression officially began with the stock market crash on “Black Thursday”—October 24, 1929.
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The Great War and the Great Depression
2016The author summarises Keynes’s The Economic Consequences of Peace (1919). Keynes anticipated the economic and political aftermath of the Treaty of Versailles. Keynes’s The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money (1936) is also summarised by the author.
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2018
From the late 1920s through the 1930s, countries on every inhabited continent suffered through a dramatic and wrenching economic contraction termed the Great Depression, an economic collapse that has come to represent the nadir of modern economic history. With national unemployment reaching well into double digits for over a decade, productivity levels
Erik Gellman, Margaret Rung
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From the late 1920s through the 1930s, countries on every inhabited continent suffered through a dramatic and wrenching economic contraction termed the Great Depression, an economic collapse that has come to represent the nadir of modern economic history. With national unemployment reaching well into double digits for over a decade, productivity levels
Erik Gellman, Margaret Rung
openaire +2 more sources

