Depression Then and Now
Jul 8th, 2009 | By Chris Mayer | Category: Politics & EconomicsThis is an eye-opener. Whenever I talk about the Great Depression and compare it with what is going on today, I get a lot of skepticism. I hear a lot of people say, definitively, “This isn’t as bad as the Great Depression.”
What you have to remember, though, is the Great Depression unfolded like a train wreck in slow motion. It took awhile before it became the Great Depression. It wasn’t like someone flipped a switch and poof! — bread lines, Hoovervilles and hobos.
Another point to remember is that the Great Depression was a global economic event. It wasn’t just confined to the U.S. You have a take a wide-angle view of the global economy to get a better sense of the breadth of the slump. And so it is today.
Take a look at the next few charts, from economists Barry Eichengreen and Kevin O’Rourke. The first plots world industrial output from June 1929 against industrial output from April 2008:
We’re tracking that path pretty closely.
Then there are world stock markets:
We’re actually worse off right now.
Finally, take a look at the volume of world trade:
Again, here we’re actually ahead of the pace set in the Great Depression.
There are several other charts, but I think you get the point. Eichengreen and O’Rourke conclude:
“To summarize: The world is currently undergoing an economic shock every bit as big as the Great Depression shock of 1929-30. Looking just at the U.S. leads one to overlook how alarming the current situation is even in comparison with 1929-30.”
Even so, there are many differences between now and then. One big difference that doesn’t get much play is the fact that today we have large emerging economies such as China, India, Russia and Brazil.
Investment strategist Murray Stahl, in a recent letter, pointed out “the most important difference between that era and this era…is the robust economic development of China, India, Russia and Brazil. During the Great Depression, those nations were in the opposite condition.”
China was in the midst of a civil war and then had to fend off a Japanese invasion. India wasn’t even on the economic map as anything of any consequence. Russia was backward and militantly communist. And Brazil had all kinds of political problems, including trying to put down a communist movement.
Today, those four countries are in much better shape. They are much larger and are still growing.
There are many more differences, and I don’t expect what we’re going through to play out like the Great Depression, except maybe in some of the broadest outlines. This is, or will be, known as the greatest crisis the world has faced since the Great Depression.
How it is similar is also in some of the valuations in individual stocks and securities. As Stahl writes, we share with the Great Depression the “bizarre valuations on highly liquid securities in the world capital markets [such] that I have never before seen in my 30-plus years of investment practice.” In that, there is opportunity.
As I’ve written before, I think there is room for investing even in a weak economy. There are lessons we can learn from the Great Depression. Some stocks will do better than others. I expect the needed commodities that fuel those big emerging economies will be good places to be.
And these hard assets also provide some protection in a world where paper currencies are not likely to hold their value as cash-strapped governments around the world crank up the printing presses.
Source: Depression Then and Now
Advertisement
The 3 stocks you'll need to bank as much as 19,000% on the new Gas Rush
Ballooning crude prices and shifting energy technologies have pushed the world to the brink of a global rush on natural gas. Here are the 3 petro-companies one ace analyst predicts are poised to cash in the most — including one that recent history proves could quickly yield 190-fold gains. Get all the details on these companies, and the maverick who recommends them, right here...



Chris Mayer is the editor of Capital and Crisis and Mayer's Special Situations. His contrarian essays have appeared on a number of websites and publications including the Mises Institute, the Freeman, GoldEagle.com, LewRockwell.com, FiendBear.com, PrudentBear.com and Individual Investor Magazine.
