Results 331 to 340 of about 4,804,968 (362)

The great demand depression [PDF]

open access: possible, 2001
This paper entertains the notion that disturbances on the demand side play a central role in our understanding of the Great Depression. In fact, from Euler equation residuals we are able to identify a series of unusually large negative demand shocks that appeared to have hit the U. S. economy during the 1930s.
openaire   +3 more sources

The Great Depression, this Depression, and Administrative Law [PDF]

open access: possibleFederal Law Review, 2009
Instruction on the Great Depression used to come from our parents, our grandparents, and the History Channel. Now everyone has something to say about it. Economists tell us that the global financial crisis is the biggest economic reversal since the Great Depression, and governments in Washington, London and Canberra are likening their resolve to that ...
openaire   +1 more source

Physics in the Great Depression

Physics Today, 1970
In the spirit of the soul-searching seventies, physicists are now uneasily questioning the pace of physics and its proper place in society. They view with foreboding the changes in slope of the funding and employment curves that, along with assessments of changes in public attitudes, are the major social indicators of the health of the physics ...
openaire   +2 more sources

The Great War and the Great Depression

2016
The 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.
openaire   +2 more sources

Financial Factors and the Propagation of the Great Depression

, 2021
Gustavo S. Cortés   +2 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Who Anticipated the Great Depression? Gustav Cassel versus Keynes and Hayek on the Interwar Gold Standard

, 2014
The intellectual response to the Great Depression is often portrayed as a battle between the ideas of Friedrich Hayek and John Maynard Keynes. Yet both the Austrian and the Keynesian interpretations of the Depression were incomplete.
D. Irwin
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Religion and the Great Depression

2019
The Great Depression of 1929–1941 brought not only economic and social crisis, but also forced families, churches, and religious organizations to reckon with individual and social suffering in ways that they had not done in the United States since the Civil War.
openaire   +2 more sources

Monetary Intervention Really Did Mitigate Banking Panics During the Great Depression: Evidence Along the Atlanta Federal Reserve District Border

, 2014
This paper argues that monetary intervention alleviated banking panics during the early stages of the Great Depression. Throughout the course of the depression, the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta aggressively intervened to stabilize its banking system ...
Andrew J. Jalil
semanticscholar   +1 more source

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