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Black Tuesday 1929 — What Actually Caused the Great Depression and Why Economists Still Disagree
#great depression
#wall street crash
#1929
#economic history
#monetary policy
@worldhistorian
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2026-05-13 14:40:24
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## The Roaring Twenties and the Credit Machine The 1920s in America were genuinely prosperous. Real wages rose, consumer goods proliferated, automobile ownership expanded rapidly, and the stock market climbed in a decade-long bull market that seemed to validate the confidence of a new industrial age. But the prosperity was increasingly built on a structure of credit that was far more fragile than it appeared. Stock market speculation in the late 1920s had become democratized through the mechanism of buying on margin. An investor could purchase $100 worth of stock by putting up only $10 in cash — borrowing the other $90 from a broker, who borrowed it from a bank. As long as prices rose, this worked brilliantly. The borrower captured the full upside on an investment funded mostly by other people's money. But margin buying also meant that a price decline of just 10 percent could wipe out an investor's entire equity — leaving them unable to repay the loan without selling at a loss. By 1929, billions of dollars in margin loans were outstanding. The stock market had tripled in value since 1924, driven partly by genuine economic growth but increasingly by speculation feeding on itself. Prices had risen far beyond any reasonable valuation based on corporate earnings. The machine required continuous optimism to function. ## Black Thursday and Black Tuesday: What Actually Happened The market peaked on September 3, 1929. Through September and early October, prices drifted down, generating margin calls — demands that investors top up their collateral as their borrowed stocks declined in value. Investors who could not meet margin calls had their shares sold, pushing prices down further, triggering more margin calls in a cascading dynamic. On October 24 — Black Thursday — panic selling overwhelmed the market's capacity to absorb orders. Prices collapsed in the morning, recovering somewhat in the afternoon when major bankers organized a visible buying intervention, briefly restoring confidence. The apparent rescue emboldened optimists to believe the worst was over. Then came October 29 — Black Tuesday — the worst single day in American stock market history to that point. Selling became torrential. The banker coalition that had intervened on Thursday had already quietly withdrawn. Sixteen million shares traded — a volume the infrastructure of the exchange could barely process. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell nearly 12 percent in a single day. By mid-November, the market had lost nearly half its value from its September peak. ## The Three Competing Explanations Economists have argued for nearly a century about what turned a stock market crash — in itself not necessarily catastrophic — into the worst economic depression in modern history. Three main theories dominate the debate. **Milton Friedman and Anna Schwartz's Monetary Contraction Theory**, presented in *A Monetary History of the United States* (1963), argues that the Federal Reserve allowed the money supply to contract by roughly one-third between 1929 and 1933. Banks failed in waves, and the Fed did not offset these failures by injecting reserves into the banking system. This transformed a recession into a catastrophe by destroying the credit mechanisms through which the economy functioned. Ben Bernanke, when he became Fed Chair in 2006, essentially acknowledged this theory at Friedman's 90th birthday party: "We won't do it again." **John Maynard Keynes's Demand Collapse Theory** emphasizes that the crash destroyed consumer and business confidence, causing households to stop spending and firms to stop investing simultaneously. This created a self-reinforcing downward spiral — less spending meant less production meant less employment meant even less spending — that could not correct itself through price adjustments alone. The solution required government spending to substitute for private demand. **Ben Bernanke's Credit Channel Theory** (1983) added a third dimension: the banking failures destroyed the institutional capacity to evaluate creditworthiness and allocate loans. Even creditworthy borrowers could not get capital because the banks that knew them had failed, and new banks had no way to assess their reliability cheaply. This "credit channel" disruption independently depressed investment for years beyond what the monetary contraction alone could explain. ## Smoot-Hawley and the Global Amplification The Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act of June 1930 raised US tariff rates to historically high levels on over 20,000 imported goods. It was not a cause of the crash — the recession was already underway — but it served as an accelerant, both economically and psychologically. Trading partners retaliated with their own tariffs. International trade volumes, already contracting as the global downturn spread, fell by roughly 65 percent between 1929 and 1934. American exporters who might have sustained themselves through foreign sales found their markets closing. The global economy became a zero-sum struggle over shrinking demand. Even as Smoot-Hawley was being debated in Congress, over 1,000 American economists signed a public letter urging President Hoover to veto it. He signed it anyway. ## The Bank Runs of 1930-1933 The stock market crash hurt investors and reduced consumer spending, but what converted recession into existential crisis was the wave of bank failures. Without federal deposit insurance — which did not yet exist — bank deposits were genuinely at risk when a bank became insolvent. Depositors had every rational incentive to withdraw their money at the first sign of trouble, and their doing so guaranteed the very insolvency they feared. Between 1930 and 1933, over 9,000 American banks failed. Each failure wiped out depositors' savings, destroyed business relationships, and eliminated local credit availability. Rural areas and smaller towns were particularly devastated. The Federal Reserve, preoccupied with defending the gold standard and worried about inflation, repeatedly raised interest rates during the crisis — exactly the wrong policy response. It was, as Friedman argued, a policy failure of historic proportions. ## The Lessons That Shaped 2008 The Depression directly produced the institutional architecture that Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal created: the FDIC (deposit insurance, ending the vulnerability to bank runs), the SEC (securities regulation), banking separation rules, and eventually the Employment Act of 1946 establishing the federal government's responsibility for macroeconomic stability. When the 2008 financial crisis began, Ben Bernanke — the world's leading academic expert on the Great Depression — was chairing the Federal Reserve. He and his colleagues flooded the banking system with liquidity, prevented major bank failures through bailouts, and cut interest rates to zero. The result was the worst recession since World War II — not another Depression. The 1929 lesson had been learned, at the cost of 15 years of suffering to teach it.
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