The Great Recession vs. the Great Depression: Stylized Facts on Siblings That Were Given Different Foster Parents

Author:

Aiginger Karl1

Affiliation:

1. Austrian Institute of Economic Research (WIFO) and Vienna University of Economics and Business

Abstract

Abstract This paper compares the depth of the recent crisis and the Great Depression. We use a new data set to compare the drop in activity in the industrialized countries for seven activity indicators. This is done under the assumption that the recent crisis leveled off in mid-2009 for production and will do so for unemployment in 2010. Our data indicate that the recent crisis indeed had the potential to be another Great Depression, as shown by the speed and simultaneity of the decline in the first nine months. However, if we assume that a large second dip can be avoided, the drop in all indicators will have been smaller than during the Great Depression. This holds true specifically for GDP, employment and prices, and least for manufacturing output. The difference in the depth in the crises concurs with differences in policy reaction. This time monetary policy and fiscal policy were applied courageously, speedily and partly internationally coordinated. During the Great Depression for several years fiscal policy tried to stabilize budgets instead of aggregate demand, and either monetary policy was not applied or was rather ineffective insofar as deflation turned lower nominal interest rates into higher real rates. Only future research will be able to prove the exact impact of economic policy, but the current tentative conclusion is that economic policy prevented the recent crisis from developing into a second Great Depression. This is also a partial vindication for economists. The majority of them might not have been able to predict the crisis, but the science did learn its lesson from the Great Depression and was able to give decent policy advice to at least limit the depth of the recent crisis.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

General Economics, Econometrics and Finance

Reference58 articles.

1. Aiginger, K. (2009a). The Current Economic Crisis: Causes, Cures and Consequences, WIFO Working Paper No 341/2009.

2. Aiginger, K. (2009b). Strengthening the Resilience of an Economy, Enlarging the Menu of Stabilization Policy as to Prevent another Crisis. Intereconomics, 44 (5), 309–316.

3. Aiginger, K., Böheim, M., Budimir, K., Gruber, N., Pitlik, H., Schratzenstaller, M., Walterskirchen, E. (2010). Optionen zur Konsolidierung der öffentlichen Haushalte in Österreich, WIFO.

4. Aiginger, K., Sieber, S. (2006). The Matrix Approach to Industrial Policy. International Review of Applied Economics, 20 (5), 573–601.

5. Alesina, A. (1988). The End of Large Public Debts. In Giavazzi, F., Spaventa, L., (Eds.), High Public Debt: the Italian Experience. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

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