Aggregate economic activity was heavily influenced by the construction sector\u27s expansion, collapse, and failure to revive during the interwar years. The 1920s building boom was the first to respond to the potential of the automobile and the last to be largely unplanned. Its uncoordinated character slowed the growth of full employment output toward the end of the 1920s. The physical and legal detritus of unregulated land development posed continuing obstacles to recovery during the second half of the 1930s
Thanks to Price Fishback, Kenneth Snowden and David Wheelock for comments and data, and to Eugene Wh...
Agricultural distress in the 1920s is routinely quoted among the causes of the Great Depression. Thi...
Agricultural distress in the 1920s is routinely quoted among the causes of the Great Depression. Thi...
The economic collapse of the 1930s, inducing major chnages in the role of government in American lif...
The financial crises of 2008 have inflamed the interest in looking back at the Great Depression and ...
This bold re-examination of the history of U.S. economic growth is built around a novel claim, that ...
As the United States grew rapidly and urbanized between 1870 and 1930, nonfarm residential construct...
Prior to the early twenty- Wrst century there were several regional real estate booms in American hi...
Similar in magnitude to the recent real estate boom and bust, the first nationwide twentieth century...
The first part of this chapter provides an overview of what lay behind record productivity growth in...
Recovery from the Great Depression began in March 1933, simultaneous to Franklin Roosevelt's inaugur...
The Stock Market Crash of 1929 and the Jean years of the Depression that followed in its wake, broug...
The Stock Market Crash of October, 1929 precipitated what was to become the worst depression in the ...
Similarities between the financial crisis in September 2008 and the collapse of the financial system...
Agricultural distress in the 1920s is routinely quoted among the causes of the Great Depression. Thi...
Thanks to Price Fishback, Kenneth Snowden and David Wheelock for comments and data, and to Eugene Wh...
Agricultural distress in the 1920s is routinely quoted among the causes of the Great Depression. Thi...
Agricultural distress in the 1920s is routinely quoted among the causes of the Great Depression. Thi...
The economic collapse of the 1930s, inducing major chnages in the role of government in American lif...
The financial crises of 2008 have inflamed the interest in looking back at the Great Depression and ...
This bold re-examination of the history of U.S. economic growth is built around a novel claim, that ...
As the United States grew rapidly and urbanized between 1870 and 1930, nonfarm residential construct...
Prior to the early twenty- Wrst century there were several regional real estate booms in American hi...
Similar in magnitude to the recent real estate boom and bust, the first nationwide twentieth century...
The first part of this chapter provides an overview of what lay behind record productivity growth in...
Recovery from the Great Depression began in March 1933, simultaneous to Franklin Roosevelt's inaugur...
The Stock Market Crash of 1929 and the Jean years of the Depression that followed in its wake, broug...
The Stock Market Crash of October, 1929 precipitated what was to become the worst depression in the ...
Similarities between the financial crisis in September 2008 and the collapse of the financial system...
Agricultural distress in the 1920s is routinely quoted among the causes of the Great Depression. Thi...
Thanks to Price Fishback, Kenneth Snowden and David Wheelock for comments and data, and to Eugene Wh...
Agricultural distress in the 1920s is routinely quoted among the causes of the Great Depression. Thi...
Agricultural distress in the 1920s is routinely quoted among the causes of the Great Depression. Thi...