Mercatus
Search:

Media Contact:
Ms. Catherine Behan
Communications Manager
Office: 703-993-4960
Email: cbehan1@gmu.edu

 


The Depression and the Failure of Impersonal Trust: What Have We Really Learned from the Great Depression

John Nye
August 19, 2009
Regulatory Studies Program, Working Papers, Mercatus, Financial Markets Working Group
Working Papers
Download Document   pdf

Large-scale systems of anonymous exchange with millions of strangers, have engendered enormous economic prosperity. However, they have not inspired the kind of devotion that nationality and communal ideology more easily induce. Hence, a severe crisis that affects all economic performance, no matter how narrow the source of the problem, leads to a reconsideration of, and often a loss of faith by the public of the entire political economic system itself. This paper focuses on Great Depression era economic policies and the challenges during that period to the idea of the system of impersonal exchange that made large-scale, uncoordinated cooperation possible, productive, and reliable, while drawing some pertinent lessons for the current crisis.

A slightly different version of this essay will be available as "The Real New Deal" in The American Interest magazine.

Citation:

Nye, John V.C. "The Real New Deal," The American Interest magazine, September/October 2009 Issue.



Mercatus Center at George Mason University - 3301 North Fairfax Drive, Suite 450, Arlington, VA 22201
Toll-free Phone: (800) 815-5711 - Local Phone: (703) 993-4930 - Fax: (703) 993-4935