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3 - A reassessment of investment failure in the interwar economy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 July 2010

Michael A. Bernstein
Affiliation:
Princeton University, New Jersey
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Summary

While the profits of stock are high, men will have a motive to accumulate.

– David Ricardo

A radical shift in the industrial composition of final demand played an important role in delaying a complete recovery from the trough of 1932. This shift in the composition of demand made full employment virtually impossible to achieve after the crash of 1929. Complete recovery required a mass of interrelated new techniques and human and physical capital that, in the timid financial environment prevailing after the crash (and given the uncertainties of the New Deal), could not be organized on the necessary scale by private investment markets.

Investment behavior has been the least examined aspect of the depression, yet it holds the key to understanding cyclical instability. The persistent currency of the “overproduction” (or its mirror image, “underconsumption”) theory of the Great Depression is based on the idea that massive overaccumulation of output in the late 1920s left American industry saddled with enormous inventories that depressed investment for almost a decade below its full-employment level. Although this argument may have some legitimacy for the agricultural sector, it is not supported by the limited available evidence on inventories in major industries.

An inventory-based view of the business cycle also suffers from theoretical inadequacies. One problem concerns the model's characterization of the relevant planning horizon for investment decisions. The model implies that the horizon is relatively short, with modifications in expenditure decisions quickly and easily made.

Type
Chapter
Information
The Great Depression
Delayed Recovery and Economic Change in America, 1929–1939
, pp. 103 - 120
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1987

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