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Temin and Wigmore: The End of One Big Deflation • US recovery from the Great Depression in the second quarter of 1933—Roovelt’s Inauguration – Sargent’s (1983) regime change paradigm • Dollar devaluation was key to recovery...signaled change in policy regime and reversed expectations of deflation – Romer maintains that money growth mattered • Fiscal stimulus was weak and statistically insignificant Hoover: stuck in gold standard mindset FDR: take action • That action was devaluation...taken soon after inauguration – Signaled the abandonment of the gold standard expansionary effects on American industry • Stock market as index of expectations – Stock prices rose because of expected inflation “change in expectations, therefore, stimulated business investment and expenditures on consumer durables, not consumption” • Rise in the demand for automobiles encouraged a rise in auto production, steel production, and industrial production • Grain and cotton prices rose as the value of the dollar fell farmers had higher incomes Temin and Wigmore conclude • If Hoover had done what FDR did, the economy would have recovered earlier • But would economy recover on its own? Natural rate hypothesis Inherent stability Review Phillips Curve/Natural Rate models Bernanke and Parkinson: Unemployment, Inflation, and Wages in the American Depression: Are There Lessons for Europe (AER, May 1989) Puzzles: US in the 1930s/Europe in the 1980s/US today • Persistence of high unemployment – Wither self-correction? Is economy inherently stable? • Insensitivity of inflation to high unemployment (a “floating NAIRU”?) • Increasing real wage despite high unemployment (not now) But note: • High growth rates (in manufacturing sector) during the 1933-37 and 1938-40 recoveries strong self-correction consistent with natural rate Error correction model (in logs) for manufacturing employment 1924:2 – 1941:4 Δnt = constant + a(L)Δnt + b(n*t-1 – nt-1) + c0(πt – πet ) + c0(πt-1 – πet-1 ) + et In words Manufacturing employment growth corrected for autocorrelation responds to inflation surprises and closes the gap between “normal” and actual manufacturing employment in prior quarter. n*t = (Fraction of labor force employed in mfg in 1929:1) x (Labor force in quarter t) = “normal” employment πt – πet = inflation surprise = residual when inflation estimated using lagged inflation and commercial paper interest rates Find c > 0, consistent with Lucas-Rapping supply curve b = .15, consistent with self-correction, homeostasis hypothesis n* - n half-life = 3 quarters Error correction Phillips Curve Δnt = constant + a(L)Δnt + b(n*t-1 – nt-1) + c0(πt – πet ) + c0(πt-1 – πet-1 ) + et Find c > 0, consistent with Lucas-Rapping supply curve b = .15, consistent with self-correction, homeostasis hypothesis n* - n half-life = 3 quarters Critique: Recovery was due to aggressive New Deal policies Response: New Deal “cleared the way for recovery” but did not drive it Critique: Other sectors may have been less resilient than manufacturing Response: No data to test assertion Bernanke and Parkinson conclude/suggest that the economy is inherently stable self-correcting mechanisms work...not stuck in “trap” • Since employment responded to inflation, monetary reflation— increased money growth—may have assisted recovery (per Romer) Puzzle: High and Increasing Real Wage in Depression • Real wage increased not just when price level fell New Deal transition to an “efficiency wage”? • Shorter work-week (work sharing) but weekly reservation wage • Strong unions reinforced by New Deal legislation • Improved working conditions • Higher wages • Strong productivity growth Bernanke and Parkinson • Efficiency wage explains productivity growth supply side growth • High real wage spurred spending and output demand side growth