Abstract

In a study with detailed evidence and technical economics, Scott Sumner seeks to explain both the monetary origins of the Great Depression (1929-1932) and its persistence due to government-driven wage shocks (1933-1941). He credits the Mundell-Johnson hypothesis, based on the post WWI undervaluation and shortage of gold, with identifying the deflationary pressure that led to monetary distress. Sumner concludes that interest rates, money supply, and price changes provide inadequate measures of the stance of monetary policy. Sumner's most important evidence supports his arguments that, first, raising the price of gold in 1933 facilitated price inflation and rapid recovery after years of deflation; and second, that several Roosevelt-era recoveries were stopped in their tracks by New Deal-driven real wage increases. The 1937-38 depression was caused by Treasury sterilization of gold inflows, but aggravated by unionization drives and wage increases. Reviewer considers Sumner's critique of Keynesian economics, and adds overview to identify two areas where Keynes' "revolution" set back understanding. He then moves to some intra-New Deal dynamics and to some recent political economy parallels.

Details

Title
Scott B. Sumner, The Midas Paradox: Financial Markets, Government Policy Shocks, and the Great Depression
Author
JOHNSON, Clark
Pages
170-180
Section
Book Review
Publication year
2016
Publication date
Mar 2016
Publisher
KSP Journals
e-ISSN
21488347
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1815007660
Copyright
Copyright KSP Journals Mar 2016