"Great
Depression" is a strong term, but what exactly does it
mean? Depressions are a normal part of a business cycle that
are now often called recessions, downturns, or corrections.
They occur in any economy where the financial markets are based
on fractional-reserve banking.
Depressions
only become "great" when normal to severe depressions
are used as excuses for massive increases in government intervention.
Murray Rothbard's America's Great Depression clearly demonstrates
this phenomenon. The three great depressions in the history
of the United States are the Progressive Era (19071922),
the Great Depression (19291945), and the Great Stagflation
(19701982).
The year
2008 marks the beginning of the next recession, correction,
or depression. All the statistical indicators are pointing in
that direction. All market indicators point in that direction
as well. Ask any noneconomist and you will get that same answer.
We only have to wait for the folks at the National Bureau of
Economic Research to officially confirm what we already know.
The reason
for the depression is the bust in the housing market – we all
know that too. Austrians reported on the housing bubble throughout
the boom. Beginning in early 2003, Frank Shostak, Christopher
Meyer, Lew Rockwell, Robert Blumen, Jeff Scot, and others, including
this author, were writing and lecturing about the housing bubble.
We identified the cause of the bubble as the Federal Reserve
and its inevitable consequences of a bust in the housing market
and the overall economy.
Homebuilder
stocks peaked in mid-2005 and it's been like watching a train
wreck in slow motion ever since. When the overall stock market
peaked one year ago we could finally celebrate the beginning
of the correction phase of the business cycle even though most
of us suspected it would be a severe one. Several mortgage dealers
went bankrupt in 2007 and the increased number of foreclosures
signaled that the correction was finally under way.
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