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Index
Foreword
Preface
Table of Contents
Part I: World War I
1: The Prewar World, 1913
2: The Outbreak of the War in 1914
3: The War Prosperity
4: Our War Economic Policy
5: The Federal Reserve System, 1914-1918
Part II: The Postwar Boom, Crisis, and Revival, 1919-1923
6: The Postwar Boom, 1919-1920
7: The Causes of the Crisis of 1920
8: The Crisis—1920-1921
9: The Rapid Revival—August, 1921, to March, 1923
10: The Government’s Contribution to the Revival, 1921-1923
11: The Money Market, 1920-1923—Renewed Bank Expansion
12: Our Foreign Policy, 1919-1924
13: Germany, 1918-1924
14: France, 1918-1924
15: The Dawes Plan
Part III: The First Phase of the New Deal, 1924-1932
16: Depression and Rally of 1924—The Beginning of the New Deal
17: Money, Bank Credit, and Capital
18: The Extent of Bank Expansion, 1922-1928
19: The Causes of and the Responsibility for the Excess Reserves
20: Germany, 1924-1928
21: France, 1925-1926
22: Great Britain, 1925-1927
23: The De Facto Stabilization of the Franc, and the Gold Exchange Standard
24: The Consequences of the Cheap Money Policy in the United States Down to the Summer of 1927
25: The Conference of Governors and the Intensification of Cheap Money, 1927
26: The Stock Market Boom, 1927-1929
27: Mob Mind in 1928-1929
28: The Effect on Europe of Tight Money in the United States in 1929
29: The “New Era,” and the Precautions of the Commercial Banks in New York
30: The Stock Market Crash of 1929
31: The New Deal in 1929-1930
32: Late 1930—Hitler Gains; Bank of United States Crashes
33: The Tragic Year—1931
34: 1931 Continued—England’s Abandonment of the Gold Standard
35: The Year 1931 Continued—The First Foreign Run on the Gold of the United States
36: The Year 1932
37: The Upturn in the Summer of 1932—Five Favorable Developments
38: The Impact of Politics on the 1932 Revival
39: The Banking Holiday
40: The Intergovernmental Debts
Part IV: The New Deal In Maturity, 1933-1939
41: “My Father Also Chastised You with Whips, But I Will Chastise You with Scorpions
42: The Reopening of the Banks
43: The Mortality Among Small Banks
44: Branch Banking versus Unit Banking
45: Roosevelt’s Abandonment of the Gold Standard
46: The Banking Act of 1938—Extreme Reform Bill, Not New Deal Measure
47: Contradictory Policies
48: The National Industrial Recovery Act
49: The London Economic Conference, 1933
50: The Strong Business Rally, March to July, 1933—Turns Downward With NRA
51: More Money Magic—The Gold Buying Programme
52: The Gold Reserve Act of 1934
53: The Spending Programme
54: The Silver Legislation of 1934
55: Governmental Confusion, Governmental Hostility, and Private Enterprise
56: Supreme Court Decision on Gold Clauses, February, 1935
57: First Successful Resistance to New Deal—Banking Act of 1935
58: Taxation Under the New Deal—The Redistribution of Wealth
59: The Undistributed Profits Tax of 1936
60: Digression on Keynes
61: Gold, Excess Reserves, and Money Rates, 1934-1941
62: Gold Remains Standard of Value
63: The British Equalization Account, The American Stabilization Fund, and The American Sterilization Fund
64: The Tyranny of Gold
65: Governmental Coercion and the Value of Money
66: The Business Rally of 1935-1937 and the Major Crisis of 1937
67: The Causes of the Crisis of 1937
68: The Stock Market Crash of 1937—A Major Cause of Business Crisis
69: A Verdict on the S.E.C.
70: The Severe Depression, 1937-1938, and the Mild Rally, 1938-1939
71: The Turn in the Political Tide, 1938
72: International Political Relations in the Decade of the Thirties
73: The Effect of Governmental Economic Planning Upon Employment and the Utilization of Our National Productive Powers
74: Alternative Explanations of the Great Depression of 1930-1939
Part V: World War II
75: The Outbreak of World War II
76: Our War Economic Policy
77: War Taxation and Expenditures
78: Government Borrowing in World War II
79: Price Fixing in World War II
80: Government versus Private Financing of War Production in World War II
81: Lend-Lease, Bretton Woods, and the British Loan—England’s Postwar Position
Index
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