Saturday, October 25, 2008

"He points out that consumers are scared. I agree. Anything else?"

Casey Mulligan gives 10 ways today is different than the 1930's. He makes good points:

"I stick by my list of top ten reasons why today's economy is fundamentally different from the 1930s:

  1. Productivity is high today, and was low prior to the 1930s bank panics
  2. Nonfinancial corporations are very profitable this year, and were not prior to the 1930s bank panics
  3. GDP had grown at least through 2008 Q2. Friedman and Schwartz (p. 306) explain how the economy had already declined very significantly by October 1930: "Even if the contraction had come to an end in late 1930 or early 1931 ... it would have been ranked as one of the more severe contractions on record."
  4. The Midwest grew corn very high this year, and was a dust bowl in the 1930s.
  5. Bank deposits increased during this year's financial panic, they fell during the 1930s (Friedman and Schwartz, Chart 27).
  6. Today's banks suffer from a crisis of solvency; 1930s banks suffered from depositor-runs (see Anna Schwartz). [Prof. Mankiw acknowledges this]
  7. Today's failed banks are gobbled up by large investors from around the world. In the 1930s, many of them just failed.
  8. Today bank lending rates are falling; in the 1930s they were not.
  9. Today we have inflation (so far); in the 1930s there was deflation (both before and after the bank panics). [Prof. Mankiw acknowledges this]
  10. Today JP Morgan Chase is buying competitors; in the 1930s JP Morgan was buying competitors (OK, I admit that this hasn't changed!)
Here's my response:

Blogger Don said...

Parallels:

1) There was a crisis dealing with banks and investments.
2) The government got heavily involved.
3) It impacted the presidential election.
4) There was disagreement on what caused it and how to fix it.
5) Investors, who are supposed to understand markets, suddenly appeared very foolish or ignorant.
6) There were worldwide influences and repercussions.
7) Average people suddenly felt very vulnerable financially.
8) People weren't sure what was actually working at the time with the government interventions.
9) There was a lot of government trial and error.
10)We eventually came out of it.

Don the libertarian Democrat

October 25, 2008 1:41 PM

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