Regime shift and fast recovery on the periphery: New Zealand in the 1930s
David Greasley
Les Oxley
Abstract
New Zealands recovery from the Great Depression was unusually fast and promoted by a new monetary regime that disassociated the Dominions banking system from that of Australia, and broke the conventional parity between the New Zealand pound and sterling. The new regime destroyed deflationary sentiments, redistributed income to farmers, and sharply reduced real interest rates. Collectively, these forces promoted recovery. The consequences for New Zealands real GDP are gauged by assessing how money, velocity, and prices would have behaved without a regime change. The new monetary regime raised real GDP per caput by onethird by 1938.
Article Type: OA
Page range: 697 - 720
Extent: 0 Page(s)
