Factory Output Drops
Gideon Fairchild
Sozialwissenschaften, Recht, Wirtschaft / Wirtschaft
Beschreibung
Factory Output Drops analyzes the drastic 46% decline in U.S. industrial production from 1929 to 1932, a pivotal period of the Great Depression. It investigates the causes and consequences of this economic contraction, highlighting the fragility of industrial economies when faced with unchecked market forces and inadequate government intervention. The book emphasizes how the overproduction of goods combined with decreased consumer demand and the collapse of the financial system to trigger a systemic failure. Understanding this era provides crucial insights into the cyclical nature of economic systems and the potential for devastating economic collapse.
The book begins by establishing the economic landscape of the 1920s, progresses into dissecting the drivers of industrial decline, and then dedicates a significant portion to analyzing the Hoover administration's policy responses. A key insight involves evaluating how adherence to classical economic principles proved insufficient in the face of such a large-scale crisis.
Factory Output Drops uses a combination of statistical data, contemporary accounts, and economic analyses to support its arguments. The book uniquely integrates micro-level experiences with macro-level economic analysis, revealing the human cost of economic policy through eye-witness accounts. It argues that the industrial collapse was a systemic failure rooted in structural imbalances and exacerbated by flawed policy responses. This interdisciplinary approach connects to broader fields like sociology and political science, offering a holistic view of the Great Depression's impact.
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Great Depression