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Transcript
Lecture 13:
The Great Depression
November 1, 2016
Prof. Wyatt Brooks
Finishing the Equity Premium
 Equity Premium:
 How much higher is the average return on
stocks than on safe assets (US Treasury bonds)
 Answer: Huge.
 Why does it matter?
 Individual: Retirement savings all in stock (?)
 Society: Inequality? Wealthier individuals tend to
investment more in stocks than poorer (r > g)
AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY
1
Explaining the Equity Premium
 People are highly risk averse?
 For this to be true, need them to be incredibly risk

averse
For example, you would take $51,300 for sure instead
of a coin flip for $50,000 or $100,000
 Maybe institutional investment
 Many very large saving entities (like pension funds
and the SS trust fund) are required to save in US
Treasuries, driving the returns down
 We don’t know. Called the “equity premium puzzle”
AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY
2
Background on the Great Depression
 How did it start?
 What is a “bank run”?
 What role does social psychology play in bank
runs?
 What do bank runs do to the money supply?
 How did the Federal Reserve react?
3
Causes of the Great Depression
 Bank failures caused a huge decrease in the
supply of money
 A decline in the quantity of money causes prices
and wages to fall
 A fall in prices and wages causes a fall in the
amount that gets produced in the short run
 We will discuss this more later
AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY
4
Role of Federal Reserve
in Banking Crises
 Suppose a banking crisis reduces the supply of
money
 Then the Federal Reserve can increase the
supply of money
 Open Market Operations
 If they can do this perfectly, they can minimize
the effect of the banking crisis on the economy
AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY
5
“You’re right. We did it. We’re very sorry. But
thanks to you, we won’t do it again.”
- Ben Bernanke to Milton Friedman (Nov. 8, 2002)
6
Size of Great Depression
 In the Great Depression the Federal Reserve
didn’t do this
 Led to a severe recession
 We can compare it to the Great Recession where
the Fed did intervene to increase money
AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY
7
What did these recessions look like?
Recessions typically have several features in
common:




Big, persistent decline in employment
Losses in GDP
Tiny losses in total consumption
Really big losses in investment and trade
AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY
8
Hours Worked per Working Age Person
100
Early 1970s
98
Early 1980s
96
94
92
Great Recession
90
88
0
3
6
9
12
15
18
Quarters since Start of Recession
AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY
9
Hours Worked per Working Age Person
100
Early 1970s
98
Early 1980s
96
94
92
Great Recession
90
88
0
3
6
9
12
15
18
Quarters since Start of Recession
AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY
10
Hours Worked per Working Age Person
100
95
90
85
Great Depression
80
75
70
0
5
10
15
20
25
AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY
30
35
40
11
Reaction of Monetary Policy
What happened in the Great Depression?
 Federal Reserve reduced money supply
 Didn’t bail out banks
What happened in the Great Recession?
 Federal Reserve greatly increased money supply
 Coordinated big bank bailouts/acquisitions
AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY
12
Fiscal Policy
Fiscal policy: Choice of taxes and government
spending by the Federal government
 During recessions, the government can cut taxes
or increase spending to stimulate the economy
 Increases debt, but should be paid off when the
economy exits the recession
AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY
13
Reaction of Fiscal Policy
What happened in the Great Depression?
 Huge spending programs, with a long delay
 Huge tax increases
What happened in the Great Recession?
 Stimulus immediately, mostly in the form of tax
cuts, though some spending (cash for clunkers!)
 Also, big transfer payments to the unemployed
AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY
14
Economic Regulation
 Government plays an important role in regulating
many aspects of the economy
 For example: Try to regulate the banking sector
to reduce the likelihood and severity of banking
crises
 May also have industry-specific regulations, that
have the goal of helping the economy
 May use trade barriers to protect domestic
industries
AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY
15
Reaction of Regulation
What happened in the Great Depression?
 Sweeping banking reforms
 Big increases in import tariffs
 Big New Deal programs
What happened in the Great Recession?
 Banking reforms: Dodd-Frank
 Auto Industry Bailouts
AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY
16
Stabilization
 The economy exhibits a business cycle
 Periodic recessions and expansions
 Recessions are bad, so maybe the economy can
be “stabilized”
 “Smooth out” the business cycle
 Broad debate: What role can/should the
government play in stabilization?
AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY
17
Three Perspectives on Stabilization
 Keynesian
 Government action plays an important role in
helping the economy exit recession
 Real Business Cycle
 Government action can do very little to affect
total economic activity
 Austrian Theory of the Business Cycle
 Government action is the fundamental cause of
recessions and business cycles
AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY
18
Keynesian Interpretation of Recession
 The economy experiences some disturbance
(e.g., bank failures, dust bowl, mortgage crisis)
 Demand goes down, which means prices should
go down
 Prices go down (deflation) and quantities go
down (reduced GDP)
 However, prices are rigid: they cannot fall fast
enough
 Therefore, quantities fall even more than they
would otherwise
Keynesian Solution
 The problem is that prices need to fall by more
than they can
 Two solutions
 Increase the supply of money, so that prices
don’t need to fall by as much
 Increase government spending to “replace”
decreased demand
 Either or both of these solutions can help the
economy to exit the recession faster
Real Business Cycle Theory
 Keynesian policy only works if prices are rigid
 Money and government spending cannot affect
the economy if prices are not rigid
 Difficult to find evidence of these rigidities
 This implies that stabilization is ineffective
 E.g., Fed policy cannot turn unemployed
construction workers in NV into nurses in IL
 All recessions are due to changes in the “real
economy”
 Sometimes called “supply side” economics
Ed Prescott
 Nobel Prize, 2004
 Professor at Arizona State
 Leader of the Real Business
Cycle school of thought
 Argues that Fed policy and
fiscal policy have almost no
role in stabilization
RBC vs. New Keynesian
 RBC:
 Quantitative RBC models can match all
aspects of the business cycle ignoring money
 NK models rely on nominal rigidities, which
have limited evidence
 New Keynesian:
 Empirically, it seems that stabilization policies
have some effect
 RBC has no implications for policy
“But this long run is a misleading guide to
current affairs. In the long run we are all
dead. Economists set themselves too easy, too
useless a task, if in tempestuous seasons they
can only tell us, that when the storm is long
past, the ocean is flat again.”
J. M. Keynes, Tract on Monetary Reform (1923)
24
Austrian Theory
of the Business Cycle
 A heterodox school of thought on business
cycles and the role of the Fed is the Austrian
School of macroeconomics
 Leading figures include F. A. Hayek and Ludwig
von Mises
 Influential in the early 20th century, though they
are now considered out of the mainstream
 Mainstream economists criticize its lack of
falsifiability (theories cannot be tested)
Austrian Theory of the Business Cycle
 The Fed is the source of the business cycle
 The Fed prints money, which distorts the rate at
which people calculate the present value of
investments
 In particular, by lowering interest rates, people
invest too much
 The things they invest in are bad uses of
resources
 Eventually, people realize their investments are
bad, leading to a recession, causing the Fed to
print more money (and on and on….)
Arguments for the Austrian Theory
 … the story sounds pretty familiar:
 Recessions often preceded by asset bubbles
(tech stocks, houses, European debt)
 The “mal-investment” story seems to describe
the run up to the housing crisis
 Many people think the Fed kept interest rates
low too long during the 2000s, which
encouraged mortgage lending
Arguments against Austrian Theory
 Story assumes people are constantly fooled by
monetary authority
 Does not match consumption and investment
patterns during booms and busts
 Argument depends on a “capital-driven” business
cycle (big increases in capital during booms, the
opposite during busts). In reality, they are
“productivity-driven”.
 Methodology: Austrians do not use mathematical
models, making their arguments difficult to
formalize