Welcome Back to 1931

By J. Bradford DeLong [a pen-l alumnus!] and Barry Eichengreen

New preface to Charles Kindleberger, The World in Depression 1929-1939

Charles Kindleberger’s classic book on the Great Depression was
originally published 40 years ago. In the preface to a new edition,
two leading economists argue that the lessons are as relevant as ever.

The parallels between Europe in the 1930s and Europe today are stark,
striking, and increasingly frightening. We see unemployment, youth
unemployment especially, soaring to unprecedented heights. Financial
instability and distress are widespread. There is growing political
support for extremist parties of the far left and right.

Both the existence of these parallels and their tragic nature would
not have escaped Charles Kindleberger, whose World in Depression,
1929-1939 was published exactly 40 years ago, in 1973.1  Where
Kindleberger’s canvas was the world, his focus was Europe. While much
of the earlier literature, often authored by Americans, focused on the
Great Depression in the US, Kindleberger emphasised that the
Depression had a prominent international and, in particular, European
dimension. It was in Europe where many of the Depression’s worst
effects, political as well as economic, played out. And it was in
Europe where the absence of a public policy authority at the level of
the continent and the inability of any individual national government
or central bank to exercise adequate leadership had the most
calamitous economic and financial effects.2

These were ideas that Kindleberger impressed upon generations of
students as well on his reading public. Indeed, anyone fortunate
enough to live in New England in the early 1980s and possessed of even
a limited interest in international financial and monetary history
felt compelled to walk, drive or take the T (as metropolitan Boston’s
subway is known to locals) down to MIT’s Sloan Building in order to
listen to Kindleberger’s lectures on the subject (including both the
authors of this preface). We understood about half of what he said and
recognised about a quarter of the historical references and allusions.
The experience was intimidating: Paul Krugman, who was a member of
this same group and went on to be awarded the Nobel Prize for his work
in international economics, has written how Kindleberger’s course
nearly scared him away from international macroeconomics.
Kindleberger’s lectures were surely “full of wisdom", Krugman notes.
But then, “who feels wise in their twenties?" (Krugman 2002).

There was indeed much wisdom in Kindleberger’s lectures, about how
markets work, about how they are managed, and especially about how
they can go wrong. It is no accident that when Martin Wolf, dean of
the British financial journalists, challenged then former-US Treasury
Secretary Lawrence Summers in 2011 to deny that economists had proven
themselves useless in the 2008-9 financial crisis, Summers’s response
was that, to the contrary, there was a useful economics. But what was
useful for understanding financial crises was to be found not in the
academic mainstream of mathematical models festooned with Greek
symbols and complex abstract relationships but in the work of the
pioneering 19th century financial journalist Walter Bagehot, the
20th-century bubble theorist Hyman Minsky, and "perhaps more still in
Kindleberger" (Wolf and Summers 2011).

Summers was right. We speak from personal experience: for a generation
the two of us have been living – very well, thank you – off the rich
dividends thrown off by the intellectual capital that we acquired from
Charles Kindleberger, earning our pay cheques by teaching our students
some small fraction of what Charlie taught us. Three lessons stand
out, the first having to do with panic in financial markets, the
second with the power of contagion, the third with the importance of
hegemony.

First, panic. Kindleberger argued that panic, defined as sudden
overwhelming fear giving rise to extreme behaviour on the part of the
affected, is intrinsic in the operation of financial markets. In The
World in Depression he gave the best ever
“explain-and-illustrate-with-examples” answer to the question of how
and why panic occurs and financial markets fall apart. Kindleberger
was an early apostate from the efficient-markets school of thought
that markets not just get it right but also that they are
intrinsically stable. His rival in attempting to explain the Great
Depression, Milton Friedman, had famously argued that speculation in
financial markets can’t be destabilising because if destabilising
speculators drive asset values away from justified, or equilibrium,
levels, such speculators will lose money and eventually be driven out
of the market.3  Kindleberger pushed back by observing that markets
can continue to get it wrong for a very, very long time. He girded his
position by elaborating and applying the work of Minsky, who had
argued that markets pass through cycles characterised first by
self-reinforcing boom, next by crash, then by panic, and finally by
revulsion and depression. Kindleberger documented the ability of what
is now sometimes referred to as the Minsky-Kindleberger framework to
explain the behaviour of markets in the late 1920s and early 1930s –
behaviour about which economists otherwise might have arguably had
little of relevance or value to say. The Minsky paradigm emphasising
the possibility of self-reinforcing booms and busts is the organising
framework of The World in Depression. It then comes to the fore in all
its explicit glory in Kindleberger’s subsequent book and summary
statement of the approach, Mania, Panics and Crashes.4

Kindleberger’s second key lesson, closely related, is the power of
contagion. At the centre of The World in Depression is the 1931
financial crisis, arguably the event that turned an already serious
recession into the most severe downturn and economic catastrophe of
the 20th century. The 1931 crisis began, as Kindleberger observes, in
a relatively minor European financial centre, Vienna, but when left
untreated leapfrogged first to Berlin and then, with even graver
consequences, to London and New York. This is the 20th century’s most
dramatic reminder of quickly how financial crises can metastasise
almost instantaneously. In 1931 they spread through a number of
different channels. German banks held deposits in Vienna. Merchant
banks in London had extended credits to German banks and firms to help
finance the country’s foreign trade. In addition to financial links,
there were psychological links: as soon as a big bank went down in
Vienna, investors, having no way to know for sure, began to fear that
similar problems might be lurking in the banking systems of other
European countries and the US. In the same way that problems in a
small country, Greece, could threaten the entire European System in
2012, problems in a small country, Austria, could constitute a lethal
threat to the entire global financial system in 1931 in the absence of
effective action to prevent them from spreading.This brings us to
Kindleberger’s third lesson, which has to do with the importance of
hegemony, defined as a preponderance of influence and power over
others, in this case over other nation states. Kindleberger argued
that at the root of Europe’s and the world’s problems in the 1920s and
1930s was the absence of a benevolent hegemon: a dominant economic
power able and willing to take the interests of smaller powers and the
operation of the larger international system into account by
stabilising the flow of spending through the global or at least the
North Atlantic economy, and doing so by acting as a lender and
consumer of last resort. Great Britain, now but a middle power in
relative economic decline, no longer possessed the resources
commensurate with the job. The rising power, the US, did not yet
realise that the maintenance of economic stability required it to
assume this role. In contrast to the period before 1914, when Britain
acted as hegemon, or after 1945, when the US did so, there was no one
to stabilise the unstable economy. Europe, the world economy’s
chokepoint, was rendered rudderless, unstable, and crisis- and
depression-prone. That is Kindleberger’s World in Depression in a
nutshell. As he put it in 1973:

“The 1929 depression was so wide, so deep and so long because the
international economic system was rendered unstable by British
inability and United States unwillingness to assume responsibility for
stabilising it in three particulars: (a) maintaining a relatively open
market for distress goods; (b) providing counter-cyclical long-term
lending; and (c) discounting in crisis…. The world economic system was
unstable unless some country stabilised it, as Britain had done in the
nineteenth century and up to 1913. In 1929, the British couldn’t and
the United States wouldn’t. When every country turned to protect its
national private interest, the world public interest went down the
drain, and with it the private interests of all…”

Subsequently these insights stimulated a considerable body of
scholarship in economics, particularly models of international
economic policy coordination with and without a dominant economic
power, and in political science, where Kindleberger’s “theory of
hegemonic stability” is perhaps the leading approach used by political
scientists to understand how order can be maintained in an otherwise
anarchic international system.5

It might be hoped that something would have been learned from this
considerable body of scholarship. Yet today, to our surprise, alarm
and dismay, we find ourselves watching a rerun of Europe in 1931. Once
more, panic and financial distress are widespread. And, once more,
Europe lacks a hegemon – a dominant economic power capable of taking
the interests of smaller powers and the operation of the larger
international system into account by stabilising flows of finance and
spending through the European economy. The ECB does not believe it has
the authority: its mandate, the argument goes, requires it to
mechanically pursue an inflation target – which it defines in practice
as an inflation ceiling. It is not empowered, it argues, to act as a
lender of the last resort to distressed financial markets, the
indispensability of a lender of last resort in times of crisis being
another powerful message of The World in Depression. The EU, a diverse
collection of more than two dozen states, has found it difficult to
reach a consensus on how to react. And even on those rare occasions
where it does achieve something approaching a consensus, the wheels
turn slowly, too slowly compared to the crisis, which turns very fast.

The German federal government, the political incarnation of the single
most consequential economic power in Europe, is one potential hegemon.
It has room for countercyclical fiscal policy. It could encourage the
European Central Bank to make more active use of monetary policy. It
could fund a Marshall Plan for Greece and signal a willingness to
assume joint responsibility, along with its EU partners, for some
fraction of their collective debt. But Germany still thinks of itself
as the steward is a small open economy. It repeats at every turn that
it is beyond its capacity to stabilise the European system: “German
taxpayers can only bear so much after all”. Unilaterally taking action
to stabilise the European economy is not, in any case, its
responsibility, as the matter is perceived. The EU is not a union
where big countries lead and smaller countries follow docilely but, at
least ostensibly, a collection of equals. Germany’s own difficult
history in any case makes it difficult for the country to assert its
influence and authority and equally difficult for its EU partners,
even those who most desperately require it, to accept such an
assertion.6 Europe, everyone agrees, needs to strengthen its
collective will and ability to take collective action. But in the
absence of a hegemon at the European level, this is easier said than
done.

The International Monetary Fund, meanwhile, is not sufficiently well
capitalised to do the job even were its non-European members to permit
it to do so, which remains doubtful. Viewed from Asia or, for that
matter, from Capitol Hill, Europe’s problems are properly solved in
Europe. More concretely, the view is that the money needed to resolve
Europe’s economic and financial crisis should come from Europe. The US
government and Federal Reserve System, for their part, have no choice
but to view Europe’s problems from the sidelines. A cash-strapped US
government lacks the resources to intervene big-time in Europe’s
affairs in 1948; there will be no 21st century analogue of the
Marshall Plan, when the US through the Economic Recovery Programme, of
which the young Charles Kindleberger was a major architect, extended a
generous package of foreign aid to help stabilise an unstable
continent. Today, in contrast, the Congress is not about to permit
Greece, Ireland, Portugal, Italy, and Spain to incorporate in Delaware
as bank holding companies and join the Federal Reserve System.7

In a sense, Kindleberger predicted all this in 1973. He saw the power
and willingness of the US to bear the responsibility and burden of
sacrifice required of benevolent hegemony as likely to falter in
subsequent generations. He saw three positive and three negative
branches on the then-future’s probability tree. The positive outcomes
were: "[i] revived United States leadership… [ii] an assertion of
leadership and assumption of responsibility… by Europe…” [sitting
here, in 2013, one might be tempted to add emerging markets like China
as potentially stepping into the leadership breach, although in
practice the Chinese authorities have been reluctant to go there, and]
[iii] cession of economic sovereignty to international institutions….”
Here, in a sense, Kindleberger had both global and regional – meaning
European – institutions in mind. “The last”, meaning a global
solution, “is the most attractive”, he concluded,” but perhaps,
because difficult, the least likely…" The negative outcomes were: "(a)
the United States and the [EU] vying for leadership… (b) one unable to
lead and the other unwilling, as in 1929 to 1933… (c) each retaining a
veto… without seeking to secure positive programmes…"

As we write, the North Atlantic world appears to have fallen foul to
his bad outcome (c), with extraordinary political dysfunction in the
US preventing its government from acting as a benevolent hegemon, and
the ruling mandarins of Europe, in Germany in particular, unwilling to
step up and convince their voters that they must assume the task.

It was fear of this future that led Kindleberger to end The World in
Depression with the observation: “In these circumstances, the third
positive alternative of international institutions with real authority
and sovereignty is pressing.”

Indeed it is, more so now than ever.

References

Eichengreen, Barry (1987), “Hegemonic Stability Theories of the
International Monetary System”, in Richard Cooper, Barry Eichengreen,
Gerald Holtham, Robert Putnam and Randall Henning (eds.), Can Nations
Agree? Issues in International Economic Cooperation, The Brookings
Institution, 255-298.

Friedman, Milton (1953), “The Case for Flexible Exchange Rates”, in
Essays in Positive Economics, University of Chicago Press.

Friedman, Milton and Anna J Schwartz (1963), A Monetary History of the
United States, 1967-1960, Princeton University Press.

Gilpin, Robert (1987), The Political Economy of International
Relations, Princeton University Press.

Keohane, Robert (1984), After Hegemony, Princeton University Press.

Kindleberger, Charles (1978), Manias, Panics and Crashes, Norton.

Krugman, Paul (2003), “Remembering Rudi Dornbusch”, unpublished
manuscript, www.pkarchive.org, 28 July.

Lake, David (1993), “Leadership, Hegemony and the International
Economy: Naked Emperor or Tattered Monarch with Potential?”,
International Studies Quarterly, 37: 459-489.

Wolf, Martin and Lawrence Summers (2011), “Larry Summers and Martin
Wolf: Keynote at INET’s Bretton Woods Conference 2011”,
www.youtube.com, 9 April.

________________________________________

1 Kindleberger passed away in 2003. A second modestly revised and
expanded edition of The World in Depression was then published, also
by the University of California Press, in 1986. The second edition
differed mainly by responding to the author’s critics and commenting
to some subsequent literature. We have chosen to reproduce the
‘unvarnished’ 1973 Kindleberger, where the key points are made in
unadorned fashion.

2 The book was commissioned originally for a series on the economic
history of Europe, with each author writing on a different decade.
This points to the question of why the title was not, instead, “Europe
in Depression.” The answer, presumably, is that the author – and his
publisher wished to acknowledge that the Depression was not
exclusively a European phenomenon and that the linkages between Europe
and the US were also critically important.

3 Friedman’s great work on the Depression, coauthored with Anna
Jacobson Schwartz (1963), was in Kindleberger’s view too monocausal,
focusing on the role of monetary policy, and too U.S. centric. See
also Friedman (1953)

4 Kindleberger (1978). Kindleberger amply acknowledged his
intellectual debt to Minsky. But we are not alone if we suggest that
Kindleberger’s admirably clear presentation of the framework, and the
success with which he documented its power by applying it to
historical experience, rendered it more impactful in the academy and
generally.

5 A sampling of work in economics on international policy coordination
inspired by Kindleberger includes Eichengreen (1987) and Hughes
Hallet, Mooslechner and Scheurz (2001). Three important statements of
the relevant work in international relations are Keohane (1984),
Gilpin (1987) and Lake (1993).

6 The European Union was created, in a sense, precisely in order to
prevent the reassertion of German hegemony.

7 The point being that the US, in contrast, does possess a central
bank willing, under certain circumstances, to acknowledge its
responsibility for acting as a lender of last resort. Nothing in fact
prevents the Federal Reserve, under current institutional arrangements
from, say, purchasing the bonds of distressed Southern European
sovereigns. But this would be viewed as peculiar and inappropriate in
many quarters. The Fed has a full plate of other problems. And
intervening in European bond markets, the argument would go, is
properly the responsibility of the leading European monetary
authority.

This article originally appeared at VoxEU.

Also see passages on 1931 from Charles Kindleberger’s book “The World
in Depression.”






-- 
Jim Devine / "As far as the laws of mathematics refer to reality, they
are not certain; and as far as they are certain, they do not refer to
reality." -- Albert Einstein
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