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The Economics Of The Great Depression

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The Economics of the Great Depression

Tyler Brooks

4/19/2015

The great Depression was the worst and longest economic decline experienced by the industrialized western world. Economic cycles are continuous loops of periods of business expansion followed by business contraction. This is the way economics has always been in the industrialized world and extended periods of contraction was something people had seen before. However, the Great Depression was something people had never seen before. It wasn’t merely a temporary economic set back as experienced in the in the great recession of 2007, it was a period of extreme destitution, unemployment, and panic amongst the rich and poor alike across the globe that lasted 56 months (Swarup, 212). Although the Great Depression is widely remembered event in American history, it remains difficult to sum up why it happened in one breath. There were many factors at play that all sounded off of each other to create a perfect storm of Consumer panic and economic uncertainty. When people make simple declarative statements about why the great depression happened it comes off as more telling about that person’s politics, rather than an objective analysis. While there is no clear scholarly consensus as to what started the great depression, there are a number of contributing market factors that people do agree upon. The popular narrative about the great depression is that it was caused by the stock

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