From Booklist
Smiley, an academic, revisits the Great Depression, the period from 1929 until 1933 that had such a slow recovery that the whole decade of the 1930s is often considered the Depression. Armed with increasingly sophisticated analytical techniques, the author sets out to survey the 1930s so that readers without training in economics have a better understanding of the forces at work during this period. In his view, the Great Depression prompted growing intellectual fascination with socialist economic ideas and precipitated World War II, which in turn led to the spread of communism worldwide. This era gave rise to Keynesian macroeconomics, which explained the Depression and advised how to get out of it and is now mainstream economic analysis. Smiley contends that "in many ways the Great Depression was the defining moment for 20th Century America."
Mary WhaleyCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
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Review
...A book of equal value both to laypersons and to professional economists.... Well written. --
Public ChoiceA brief and provocative account
Smiley knows the current literature well, and makes good use of it in his analysis. --
Virginia Quarterly ReviewIncorporates the findings of recent scholarship into an accessible survey of the economic events of the 1930s
--
Journal of Economic LiteratureSmiley
has produced a
slim and readable volume
in language that should be clear and understandable to students. --
ChoiceThis is a careful, systematic review of literature on the Great Depression, not a once over treatment
. --
The Journal of Economic History
Economic historian Gene Smiley has performed a valuable service for all readers.... --
Liberty
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