Why was there deflation during the Great Depression?

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Why was deflation occurring during the Great Depression? Normally the economy is in inflation, and there were other financial disasters, such as the Panic of 1893 and 2008, in which the economy was not experiencing deflation. So why was there deflation during the Great Depression? What caused it?

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Anonymous 0 Comments

This is illustrative of the problem of the old monetary policy. The government did not (or could not) stimulate the economy by increasing the money supply which leads to a deflationary spiral. Productive capacity was unused and dropping because there wasn’t sufficient money injected into the economy. Producers try to reduce prices to move their product (and cut costs) until they could not and simply shut down. So there was even less income in the economy and less demand.

In 2008, the Fed bailout and stimulus kept companies going and demand high shortening the time to recovery. While high inflation is damaging for savers and wage earners whose income cannot keep up, deflation is typically a much worse economic situation.

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