Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Leaving the Gold Standard

Dominic Lawson discusses in his article It all went wrong when we left the gold standard the effect the current currency printing presses are having on gold demand in the UK. He also makes some pretty decent comparisons of Mises vs. Keynes as well as pointing out the misinformation we have received in regards to FDR's policies during the Great Depression (or the 1st, as some are calling it):

Yet Roosevelt's policy of massive intervention by the state to prop up wage rates and inflate credit gets a much better press than it ever deserved. Consider this: in September 1931 the US unemployment rate was 17.4 per cent and the Dow Jones industrial Average stood at 140. By January 1938, unemployment was still at 17.4 per cent, and the Dow Average had dropped to 121.


Weird. I always thought FDR's new deal fixed unemployment! Silly me.

7 comments:

Douglas Porter said...

That quote is stupid, because it fails to mention that the economy recovered substantively from 1932 to 1937. IT FAILS TO MENTION THE RECESSION OF 1937. It is dishonest.

Josh said...

So FDR's policies caused a second recession in 1937?

Chris said...

No, FDR's policies caused a increase in economic activity for 5 years straight, but because the market was such a mess, BECAUSE of the gold standard, there was a second recession. The FDR policies only went into full swing during war production. By the end of the war, they were fully institutionalized, and created the greatest ecnomic boom ever witnessed.

Josh said...

Ah, so really we shouldn't be blaming Bush for this mess, because for all we know, his policies could cause an economic book 10 years from now.

Chris said...

What, you didn't know policies are long-term?

The initial causes of the Great Depression caused the recession of 1937.

Josh said...

Unemployment was still very high (16%) in 1936, and there can be no real recovery unless people are producing.

The war caused a boom, and it could be said the military industrial complex has been in place since then giving millions of americans jobs off of government contracts in order to bomb other people over the past 80 years.

Douglas Porter said...

Agreed on your first point. But there was some recovery: the government put some people to work.

Yes, it could be said that they last 60s years have a boom only because of the MIC, but that would only be valid if you were ignorant enough to ignore the wealth created by the unionized workforce from 1940 to 1980.