How much things cost in 1932
Average Cost of new house $6,510.00
Average wages per year $1,650.00
Cost of a gallon of Gas 10 cents
Average Cost for house rent $18.00 per month
A loaf of Bread 7 cents
A LB of Hamburger Meat 10 cents
New Car Average Price $610.00
It was year of famine in Russia, hunger marches in Britain, Nazis emerging in Germany, Gandhi striking for India’s independence, and 13 million Americans out of work. A temporary halt to foreclosures had been ordered while working hours and wages were cut.
The worst was still to come.
Clearly, prices have gone up quite a bit since then. Yet Randall Parker who wrote “Reflections on the Depression†sees parallels with today:
“In the 1920s, most everyone was saying that this was a new economy and all the old rules did not apply, Parker says. "We know from economic history — they said the same things in Japan in the 1980s and during the Internet bubble of the 1990s — that when you hear those words it is time to run like hell."
The same is true today, he adds. "People are saying that all the old rules don't apply. That it's a new economy. I say run like hell.’â€
Well, where you gonna run to? As the gospel song has it, you can run to the rock but there is no rock. Will our Great Recession turn into a Greater Depression? What should we expect since everyone knows that if the new President is to fix the economy—a formidable task for any president--it won’t happen overnight. It took FDR years, and even then. It is said that it was the war that did ended the depression, not just the New Deal.
Predictions anyone? Here are some that are best forgotten from those years so long ago. Even then, not everyone was willing to admit what was coming.
â€... a serious depression seems improbable; [we expect] recovery of business next spring, with further improvement in the fall."
- HES, November 10, 1929
"The end of the decline of the Stock Market will probably not be long, only a few more days at most."
- Irving Fisher, Professor of Economics at Yale University, November 14, 1929
"In most of the cities and towns of this country, this Wall Street panic will have no effect."
- Paul Block (President of the Block newspaper chain), editorial, November 15, 1929
"Financial storm definitely passed."
- Bernard Baruch, cablegram to Winston Churchill, November 15, 1929
â€
"I see nothing in the present situation that is either menacing or warrants pessimism... I have every confidence that there will be a revival of activity in the spring, and that during this coming year the country will make steady progress."
- Andrew W. Mellon, U.S. Secretary of the Treasury December 31, 1929
"I am convinced that through these measures we have reestablished confidence."
- Herbert Hoover, December 1929
“We are now near the end of the declining phase of the depression."
- Harvard Economic Society Nov 15, 1930
"Stabilization at [present] levels is clearly possible."
- HES Oct 31, 1931
"All safe deposit boxes in banks or financial institutions have been sealed... and may only be opened in the presence of an agent of the I.R.S."
- President F.D. Roosevelt, 1933
For more?
http://www.users.dircon.co.uk/~netking
Flash forward to today:
Have we reached the bottom of this economic depression or is the worse still to come?†Mike Schenk, an economist for Credit Union National Association, expressed his economic concerns, “This is scary stuff.†We are teetering on the brink of a massive downward spiral. Deflation is a threat.â€