Understanding the Great Depression and Failures of Modern Economic Policy

The Story of the Heedless Giant

Business & Finance
Cover of the book Understanding the Great Depression and Failures of Modern Economic Policy by Dan Blatt, iUniverse
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Dan Blatt ISBN: 9781491799048
Publisher: iUniverse Publication: October 17, 2016
Imprint: iUniverse Language: English
Author: Dan Blatt
ISBN: 9781491799048
Publisher: iUniverse
Publication: October 17, 2016
Imprint: iUniverse
Language: English

HISTORY OPENS WINDOWS ON THE FUTURE.
The Great Depression highlights your government’s capacity for economic policy stupidity.
Do you understand the policy failures behind the Crash of ‘29?
Or the policies involved in the aborting of the substantial spring 1930 economic and stock market recovery?
Or the policies that prevented the spectacular summer 1932 bull market in stocks and agricultural commodities from stimulating recovery in the broader economy?
Or how New Deal policies extended the Great Depression for an additional half decade despite more than doubling the monetary supply and massive resort to budget deficits?
Or how the Great Depression ended in 1940 with unemployment dropping about 7 percentage points in the two years before the U.S. entered WW-II and began its massive wartime budget deficits?
The Great Depression is just a highlight in a century of repeated failures for Federal Reserve System monetary policy. Under its care, the dollar has lost about 90 percent of its purchasing power. Its policies have also bestowed upon the economy the Keynesian inflationary morass of the 1970s and the asset price boom and bust nature of the current business cycle.
Understanding why interest rate suppression policies aren’t working, haven’t worked in the past, and can never work is herein explained.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

HISTORY OPENS WINDOWS ON THE FUTURE.
The Great Depression highlights your government’s capacity for economic policy stupidity.
Do you understand the policy failures behind the Crash of ‘29?
Or the policies involved in the aborting of the substantial spring 1930 economic and stock market recovery?
Or the policies that prevented the spectacular summer 1932 bull market in stocks and agricultural commodities from stimulating recovery in the broader economy?
Or how New Deal policies extended the Great Depression for an additional half decade despite more than doubling the monetary supply and massive resort to budget deficits?
Or how the Great Depression ended in 1940 with unemployment dropping about 7 percentage points in the two years before the U.S. entered WW-II and began its massive wartime budget deficits?
The Great Depression is just a highlight in a century of repeated failures for Federal Reserve System monetary policy. Under its care, the dollar has lost about 90 percent of its purchasing power. Its policies have also bestowed upon the economy the Keynesian inflationary morass of the 1970s and the asset price boom and bust nature of the current business cycle.
Understanding why interest rate suppression policies aren’t working, haven’t worked in the past, and can never work is herein explained.

More books from iUniverse

Cover of the book Oriana by Dan Blatt
Cover of the book No Excuse, No Denial by Dan Blatt
Cover of the book The Art of Business Warfare by Dan Blatt
Cover of the book Poetry from the Heart by Dan Blatt
Cover of the book Water Earth Fire Air by Dan Blatt
Cover of the book Esther by Dan Blatt
Cover of the book Dancing with Presence by Dan Blatt
Cover of the book Bullet to the Heart of the Matter by Dan Blatt
Cover of the book Take Me Home to Afrika by Dan Blatt
Cover of the book The Book About, It: by Dan Blatt
Cover of the book Death Takes a Buggy Ride by Dan Blatt
Cover of the book Fly Without Fear or Stress by Dan Blatt
Cover of the book Views from the Saddle by Dan Blatt
Cover of the book Word of Faith Preachers by Dan Blatt
Cover of the book The One That Got Away by Dan Blatt
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy