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The Great Deflation of 1929–33: it (almost) had to happen

SANDEEP MAZUMDER
JOHN H. WOOD

Volume 66, Issue 1

Abstract

There are many explanations of the fall in prices and production called the Great Depression of 1929–33, but this article argues that a sufficient explanation of the price fall—the Great Deflation—was the resumption of the gold convertibility of currencies at prewar parities. The value (general purchasing power) of a convertible currency must be the relative cost of producing gold and other goods, which did not change significantly between 1914 and the 1930s. Monetary and fiscal policies might have affected the timing but not the ends of the price paths that were determined by the decisions to resume.


Article Type: OA
Page range: 156 - 177
Extent: Page(s)

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