Thursday, July 24, 2025

Monetarist Theory of the Great Depression

 

 Thomas R. Lewis

July 24, 2025


Introduction

Various theories exist to explain the root cause of the Great Depression, which began in October 1929 and lasted for nearly a decade. The theories exhibit commonalties in factors, but also vary significantly, and consensus on a specific set of causal factors by historical and contemporary economists has been largely nonexistent.[1] However, various analysis and interpretations have coalesced around a set of competing theories, all of which point to the U.S Federal Government’s failure to adequately respond during this period of economic crisis through rapid changes to liquidity, tax rates, and interest rates.[2]

Broadly Accepted Economic Theories behind the Great Depression

Various economic theories are widely accepted as casual factors leading to the Great Depression and its sustained negative impact on economic conditions.[3] The leading theories are the: (1), Common Theory; (2), Austrian School Theory, (3) Monetarist Theory; and (4), Keynesian Theory. The Common Theory focuses on the government’s responsibility to manage and enact fiscal policy that stabilizes the supply and demand of money over the long term, and their failure to do so effectively.[4] Austrian School Theory suggests that lax credit policies by the Federal Reserve contributed to a unsustainable credit boom in the 1920’s, which created a bubble that had to self-correct.[5] Monetarist Theory ascribes responsibility to the Federal Reserve to manage the economy effectively, and points to the Federal Reserve as the failure leading to the Great Depression.[6] Finally, Keynesian Theory that posits government responsibility to keep employment high, while cutting taxes or increasing government spending to stimulate the economy.[7] This blog examines the Monetarist Theory as one of the major theoretical causes of the Great Depression. Primary source and secondary source websites and scholarly articles were used to identify and analyze theoretical causes of the Great Depression and the factors that ended this steep economic downturn. From these sources, quantitative data sets of key economic indicators were analyzed, and a qualitative analysis the of contributing factors was conducted. 

The Monetarist Theory

The Monetarist Theory places the blames for the great depression squarely on both banks and the U.S. Federal Reserve for their failure to enact immediate measures to shield the economy during the Great Depression. During the Great Depression, the real Gross Domestic Product (GDP) per capita decreased precipitously between 1929 and 1933 falling ~30%, unemployment rose sharply from ~3% to >25%, and the Consumer Price Index (CPI) dropped by ~25% with deflation exceeding 10% in 1932. Figure 1 depicts unemployment and CPI during this period.

         Figure 1. The chart in this figure reflects the sharp decline in the CPI and rise
         in unemployment during the Great Depression. From John C. Williams, “The 
         Risk of Deflation,” FRBSF Economic Letter 2009-12 at Federal Reserve Bank 
         of San Francisco, modified March 27, 2009, https://www.frbsf.org/research-
         and-insights/publications/economic-letter/2009/03/risk-deflation/.

This theory widely contends that the Federal Reserve response was far too slow in responding to market conditions, and that the Federal Reserve failed to take rapid measures to lower interest rates, increase the monetary supply, or inject liquidity into the banking system to mitigate the risk of failures.[8] The net result of this inaction was a delay that enabled the stock market to experience a precipitous overnight decline of 25% from October 28-29, 1929, which caused investors to panic and sell off assets, and further enabled what otherwise may have been a strong recession to cascade into the Great Depression.[9] Figure 2 depicts the sharp drop in the Dow Jones Industrial Average during this time.

    Figure 2. A historical chart of the Dow Jones Industrial Average depicting the sharp
    dip in the index experienced during the Great Depression. From Tim Vipond,
    “The Great Depression: Overview and economic explanations,” Resources 
    at the Corporate Finance Institute, accessed July 21, 2025,
    https://corporatefinanceinstitute.com/resources/economics/the-great-
    depression/#.

Money Supply

The monetarist theory is largely credited to economist Milton Friedman. In 1963, Friedman coauthored A Monetary History of the United States, 1867-1960 (1963) with economist Anna Schwartz.[10] In this critically acclaimed work, Friedman and Schwartz asserted that the Federal Reserve’s erroneous monetary policy served as the catalyst of the Great Depression.[11] Advancing the theory that the Federal Reserve implemented incorrect fixes that caused the markets to act unpredictably, Friedman and Schwartz believed the Federal Reserve should have implemented monetary policy to address the market forces applying downward pressure on the money supply in order to effectively address the economic problems.[12]

Monetarists further insist that the Federal Reserve’s failure to effectively regulate the supply of money during the catastrophe exacerbated both the duration and the severity of the Great Depression. [13] To illustrate this concept, monetarist’s imply that had the Federal Reserve lowered interest rates, this would have effectively increased the supply of money, which would have possibly mitigated the negative impact of the stock market decline and subsequent bank failures.[14] In contrast, the banks fearing another run on deposits and subpar loans, only offered loans for safe investments, and the Federal Reserve, in 1936, instead raised interest rates in fear of inflation, which further served to tighten the money supply.[15]

Failure of the Federal Reserve to Take Effective Actions

The leadup to the Great Depression started in August 1929 with a recession that was bad, but not catastrophic.[16] However, by the fall of 1930 banks began failing at an alarming rate with 256 banks failing in November 1930, and 352 in December alone.[17] The failure of banks and the Federal Reserves to implement measures to stem the problem was twofold: (1), Benjamin Strong, president of the New York Fed, died on October 1928, leaving a knowledge gap that could not be overcome; and (2), banks did not have the authority to limit withdrawals and prevent the cascading failures that were occurring due to panicked account holders.[18]

The End of the Great Depression

Gaining consensus among economists on the factors that resulted in the end of the Great Depression has been equally difficult due to the lack of sufficient scholarly study.[19] Two intertwined but dissimilar factors are frequently attributed to ending the depression. The first is the influx of gold from Europe resulting from political implications in conjunction with President Roosevelt’s gold reevaluation policies, which resulted in a dramatic growth in money availability that eased the effects of the Great Depression by lowering interest rates and spurring investments.[20] The second factor often attributed was the industrialization of the economy due to the war footing of World War II.[21] What is not clear is if there is a specific attribution to either of these events, or if they served as an element of a larger set of factors that contributed to ending the Great Depression. Limited research reflects that monetary policy, not fiscal policy, and the reevaluation of gold by Roosevelt, largely, but not definitively ended the depression.[22]

Conclusion

Monetarists view the Federal Reserve’s failures as factors that contributed to the Stock Market Crash of 1929 that effectively wiped-out wealth overnight and caused a significant decline in confidence, which further led to a significant reduction in investment and spending.[23] And with the failure of thousands of banks in a very short period, credit availability and money supply were further negatively impacted, which the Federal Reserve could have mitigated by infusing money into the banks to increase liquidity and reduce the risk of failures.[24] From this perspective, the failure of the Federal Reserve is a legitimate argument, but the factors leading to the failure merit further discussion as it was not simply a case of malfeasant behavior. Research on the factors leading to the end of the Great Depression is limited in contrast to the amount of research conducted on the leading causes of the Great Depression. What exists is contradictory assessments indicating World War II ended the Great Depression, or that that fiscal policy did not end the Great Depression, rather it was monetary policy and Roosevelt’s reevaluation of gold that ended the depression.



[1], Michael A Bernstein, “The Great Depression as Historical Problem,” OAH Magazine of History 16, no. 1 (2001): 3-10. https://www.jstor.org/stable/25163480.

[2] Tim Vipond, “The Great Depression: Overview and economic explanations,” Resources at the Corporate Finance Institute, accessed July 21, 2025, https://corporatefinanceinstitute.com/resources/economics/the-great-depression/#.

[3] Vipond, “The Great Depression.”

[4] Vipond, “The Great Depression.”

[5] Fred E. Foldvary, “The Austrian Theory of the Business Cycle,” The American Journal of Economics and Sociology 74, No. 2 (2015): 293, https://www.jstor.org/stable/43818666.

[6] Vipond, “The Great Depression.”

[8] Vipond, “The Great Depression.”

[9] Vipond, “The Great Depression.”

[10] Sarwat Jahan and Chris Papageorgiou, “What Is Monetarism?” Finance & Development 51, no. 1 (2014): 38-39, https://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/fandd/2014/03/basics.htm.

[11] Jahan and Papageorgiou, “What Is Monetarism,” 38-39.

[12] Jahan and Papageorgiou, “What Is Monetarism,” 38-39.

[13] Jean Caldwell and Timothy G. O’Driscoll, “What Caused the Great Depression?” Social Education 71, no. 2 (2007): 70–74, https://www.socialstudies.org/system/files/publications/articles/se_710270.pdf.

[14] Caldwell and O’Driscoll, “What Caused the Great Depression?” 70-74.

[15] Caldwell and O’Driscoll, “What Caused the Great Depression?” 70-74.

[16] Thomas S. Coleman, “Milton Friedman, Anna Schwartz, and A Monetary History of the US,” History of Chicago Economics at The University of Chicago, May 14 2020, https://harris.uchicago.edu/research-impact/centers-institutes/center-economic-policy/history-chicago-economics.

[17] Coleman, “Milton Friedman, Anna Schwartz.”

[18] Coleman, “Milton Friedman, Anna Schwartz.”

[19] Christina D. Romer, “What Ended the Great Depression?” The Journal of Economic History 52, no. 4 (1992): 757, http://www.jstor.org/stable/2123226.

[20] Romer, “What Ended,” 781.

[21] Gary Richardson, “The Great Depression,” Federal Reserve History, November 22, 2013, https://www.federalreservehistory.org/essays/great-depression.

[22] Romer, “What Ended,” 781.

[23] Coleman, “Milton Friedman, Anna Schwartz.”

[24] Coleman, “Milton Friedman, Anna Schwartz.”


References

Bernstein, Michael A. “The Great Depression as Historical Problem.” OAH Magazine of History 16, no. 1 (2001): 3-10. https://www.jstor.org/stable/25163480.

Caldwell, Jean and Timothy G. O’Driscoll. “What Caused the Great Depression?” Social Education 71, no. 2 (2007): 70–74. https://www.socialstudies.org/system/files/publications/articles/se_710270.

           pdf.

Coleman, Thomas S. “Milton Friedman, Anna Schwartz, and A Monetary History of the US.” History of Chicago Economics at The University of Chicago, Last modified May 14 2020. https://harris.uchicago.edu/research-impact/centers-institutes/center-economic-policy/history-chicago-economics.

Foldvary, Fred E. “The Austrian Theory of the Business Cycle.” The American Journal of Economics and Sociology 74, No. 2 (2015): 293. https://www.jstor.org/stable/43818666.

Jahan, Sarwat and Chris Papageorgiou. “What Is Monetarism?” Finance & Development 51, no. 1 (2014): 38-39. https://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/fandd/2014/03/basics.htm.

Richardson, Gary. “The Great Depression.” Federal Reserve History, Last modified November 22, 2013. https://www.federalreservehistory.org/essays/great-depression.

Romer, Christina D. “What Ended the Great Depression?” The Journal of Economic History 52, no. 4 (1992): 757–84. http://www.jstor.org/stable/2123226.

Vipond, Tim. “The Great Depression: Overview and economic explanations.” Resources at the Corporate Finance Institute, accessed July 21, 2025. https://corporatefinanceinstitute.com/resources/economics/the-great-depression/#. 

Monetarist Theory of the Great Depression

    Thomas R. Lewis July 24, 2025 Introduction Various theories exist to explain the root cause of the Great Depression, which began in ...