The Great Depression, Annotated Bibliography

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Cecchetti, Stephen G. "Understanding the Great Depression: Lessons for Current Policy ." Monetary Economics (1997): 1-26.

This article is about the circumstances that led to the collapse of the economy in 1929. It relates to my research proposal because I am evaluating historic events that led to the financial crisis of 1929. The article discusses how deflation played an important role in expanding the depression, and how the Gold Standard, a monetary system in which a country’s government allows its currency unit to be freely converted into fixed amounts of gold and vice versa, was an extremely bad decision because it caused the dollar to lose its value. This source was informal because it discusses prehistoric events that led to the crash of and I love how the article discusses that the Federal Reserve played a key role in the failure of the stock market. The Federal Reserve supports any war the United States is involved.

Dominguez, Kathryn M., Ray C. Fair and Mathew D. Shapiro. "Forecasting The Depression: Harvard versus Yale." The American Economic Review (1988): 18.

This article is about economists from Harvard University and Yale University discussing whether the Great Depression was forecastable. This source relates to my topic because Harvard and Yale Economic Forecasting Services were the two economic and forecasting services available to business members and members of the public in the 1920’s. I like how this source involves the top Ivy League Schools to analyze what caused the financial crisis of 1929, why the financial crisis was caused, and how the financial crisis was led.

"FINANCIAL MARKETS: After the Stock Exchange Coltapse--Resemblances With Other Crises, and Differences." New York Times (1929).

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...iscusses that the price of a seat on the New York Stock Exchange was abnormally low. The sources discusses how the stock prices were rising dramatically and since the stock prices were rising , seat prices should have risen up during the boom of 1929. Instead, there was a negative correlation between stock prices and seat prices of approximately 20 percent, months before the crash. I like how this source is implementing the statistics of stocks of the New York Stock Exchange because it demonstrates one of the causes of the 1929 collapse. Brokers have anticipated the October 1929 crash, but the public heard no mention of it because brokers thought they can liquidate shares to save the market from collapsing.

Works Cited

http://www.amazon.com/1929-The-Year-Great-Crash/dp/0060160810

http://www.amazon.com/Why-Stock-Markets-Crash-Financial/dp/0691118507

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