Many years after the Great Depression and World War II, controversy continues to swirl as scholars, pundits, and ordinary citizens look back at the watershed events of the 1930s and 1940s. Economists and economic historians have assessed the economy’s condition during these momentous years primarily with reference to the usual macroeconomic indicators, especially the real gross domestic product (GDP) and the rate of unemployment (U). For these analysts, the Great Depression is almost defined as the long period when real GDP remained well below its trend high-employment capacity and the rate of unemployment stood persistently above its normal range. The war period, in contrast, stands out in the standard statistical series as a time when real GDP appeared to increase phenomenally and the rate of unemployment fell almost to zero.
A Revealing Window on the U.S. Economy in Depression and War: Hours Worked, 1929–1950
CITE THIS ARTICLE
Higgs, Robert. “A Revealing Window on the U.S. Economy in Depression and War: Hours Worked, 1929–1950.” Libertarian Papers 1, no. 4 (2009): 1–11.