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n2doc

(47,953 posts)
Thu Jun 14, 2012, 01:28 PM Jun 2012

The World in Depression

New preface to Charles Kindleberger, The World in Depression 1929-1939
J. Bradford DeLong Barry Eichengreen
12 June 2012

Charles Kindleberger’s classic book on the Great Depression was originally published 40 years ago. In the preface to a new edition, two leading economists argue that the lessons are as relevant as ever.

The parallels between Europe in the 1930s and Europe today are stark, striking, and increasingly frightening. We see unemployment, youth unemployment especially, soaring to unprecedented heights. Financial instability and distress are widespread. There is growing political support for extremist parties of the far left and right.

Both the existence of these parallels and their tragic nature would not have escaped Charles Kindleberger, whose World in Depression, 1929-1939 was published exactly 40 years ago, in 1973.1 Where Kindleberger’s canvas was the world, his focus was Europe. While much of the earlier literature, often authored by Americans, focused on the Great Depression in the US, Kindleberger emphasised that the Depression had a prominent international and, in particular, European dimension. It was in Europe where many of the Depression’s worst effects, political as well as economic, played out. And it was in Europe where the absence of a public policy authority at the level of the continent and the inability of any individual national government or central bank to exercise adequate leadership had the most calamitous economic and financial effects.

These were ideas that Kindleberger impressed upon generations of students as well on his reading public. Indeed, anyone fortunate enough to live in New England in the early 1980s and possessed of even a limited interest in international financial and monetary history felt compelled to walk, drive or take the T (as metropolitan Boston’s subway is known to locals) down to MIT's Sloan Building in order to listen to Kindleberger’s lectures on the subject (including both the authors of this preface). We understood about half of what he said and recognised about a quarter of the historical references and allusions. The experience was intimidating: Paul Krugman, who was a member of this same group and went on to be awarded the Nobel Prize for his work in international economics, has written how Kindleberger's course nearly scared him away from international macroeconomics. Kindleberger's lectures were surely “full of wisdom", Krugman notes. But then, “who feels wise in their twenties?" (Krugman 2002).

http://www.voxeu.org/index.php?q=node/8082

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Demeter

(85,373 posts)
1. It's truly Insulting to call Syriza party leader Alexis Tsipras "extremist"
Thu Jun 14, 2012, 04:13 PM
Jun 2012

he's the only leader they have that cares about people.

enough

(13,273 posts)
2. I see no reference to this in the OP or the linked article about the global economic situation.
Thu Jun 14, 2012, 04:28 PM
Jun 2012

Am I missing something?

girl gone mad

(20,634 posts)
3. "There is growing political support for extremist parties of the far left and right."
Thu Jun 14, 2012, 04:40 PM
Jun 2012

"The parallels between Europe in the 1930s and Europe today are stark, striking, and increasingly frightening. We see unemployment, youth unemployment especially, soaring to unprecedented heights. Financial instability and distress are widespread. There is growing political support for extremist parties of the far left and right."

enough

(13,273 posts)
4. I didn't see that as a characterization of any specific party or leader. It certainly doesn't mean
Thu Jun 14, 2012, 04:54 PM
Jun 2012

that every party and/or leader is extremist.

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