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Depression of 1882–1885

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Economic recession in the United States
November 1882 news item from the LondonGuardian noting the expanding financial crisis in the United States, marked by a continued "railway war."

TheDepression of 1882–1885, orRecession of 1882–1885, was aneconomic contraction in theUnited States that lasted from March 1882 to May 1885, according to theNational Bureau of Economic Research. Lasting 38 months, it was the third-longest recession in the NBER's chronology of business cycles since 1854. Only theGreat Depression (1929–1941) and theLong Depression (1873–1879) were longer.

History

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Origin

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The Depression of 1882–1885 was not inaugurated by financial disaster or mass panic, but was rather an economic downturn that came about through a protracted and gradual process.[1] The downturn was preceded by a period of prosperity over the years 1879 to 1882, a growth powered by expansion of the American railroad industry and the opening of economic opportunities associated with the development of the transportation system.[2] During this interval annual railroad construction quadrupled, growing from 2,665 miles (4,289 km) in 1878 to 11,569 miles (18,619 km) in 1882.[2] According to one 1997 estimate, the expansion of this sector represented a full 15% of American capital formation during the decade of the 1880s.[3]

In addition, the United States experienced a favorable international balance of trade during the 1879–1882 period of growth — a fact which had the effect of expanding the country's money supply, facilitating credit and investment.[2]

Comparison of major 19th and early 20th century recessions
DownturnLength[4]Business activity[5]
1873–187965 mos.-33.6%
1882–188538 mos.-32.8%
1893–189417 mos.-37.3%
1907–190813 mos.-29.2%
1921–192218 mos.-38.1%

In 1882 this trend reversed, resulting in a decline in railroad construction and a decline in related industries, particularly iron and steel.[6] Mismanagement and rate wars negatively affected profitability and the luster of railroads as an investment was dulled; money dried up and construction of new lines was negatively impacted, falling from 11,569 miles in 1882 to 6,741 miles in 1883.[2]

Panic of 1884

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Main article:Panic of 1884

A major economic event during the recession was thePanic of 1884.

The 1884 downturn was severe with an estimated 5% of all American factories and mines completely shuttered during the 12 months running from July 1, 1884, to July 1, 1885.[7] In addition another 5% of such enterprises were said to have closed down for part of the year.[7] Approximately 1 million American workers were out of work during this economic trough.[8]

Causes

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Like theLong Depression that preceded it, the Depression of 1882–85 was more of aprice depression than a production depression — in that prices and wage rates contracted while gross output remained more or less constant.[6]

Contemporary observers were baffled by the downturn and agents of the fledgling U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics conducted extensive surveys on the matter. In a published report by Commissioner of LaborCarroll D. Wright, it was found that explanation of the 1882 depression varied greatly according to the profession of the observer, with bankers and merchants tending to blame financial or commercial reasons, members of the clergy tending to blame social causes combined with divine providence, manufacturers apt to blame regulatory causes and the wage demands of workers, and workers tending to identifyoverproduction due to the introduction of new labor-saving machinery and low wage levels that made it impossible to consume the full amount of output.[9]

A lengthy alphabetical list of causes claimed by survey respondents was compiled by the Bureau, which included, among other proposed factors, defects in the banking system, place of credit in agriculture, the use of child labor, the negative effects of corporate monopoly, a lack of public confidence in the future of the economy, expansion of the role ofsilver in the money system due to an unequalprice ratio between gold and silver, excessive immigration, the expanded use oflabor-saving machinery, a growth ofspeculative investment andmarket manipulation, the decline of railway construction, negative effects of a high tariff policy, and the growingconsolidation of wealth in the hands of a comparative few.[10]

Legacy

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Economic data from the era are very spotty. Much of what is known comes from the reporting of the business newspaper theCommercial & Financial Chronicle.[6] In terms of severity, according toVictor Zarnowitz, indexes of business activity show that the recession was not as severe as the declines in 1873, 1893, and 1921, but was more severe than the other recessions between theAmerican Civil War and theGreat Depression.[5] At 38 months in length this is the third-longest recession in the NBER's chronology of business cycles from 1854 to present. Only theGreat Depression andLong Depression of 1873–1879 are longer.[4]

See also

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Footnotes

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  1. ^Carroll D. Wright,Industrial Depressions: The First Annual Report of the United States Commissioner of Labor. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1886; pg. 64.
  2. ^abcdAlan L. Sorkin, "Depression of 1882-1885," inDavid Glasner (ed.),Business Cycles and Depressions: An Encyclopedia. Abingdon, England: Routledge, 1997; pp. 149-151.
  3. ^Gary M. Walton and Hugh Rockoff,History of the American Economy. New York: Harcourt Brace, 1997; cited in Sorkin, "Depression of 1882-1885," pg. 149.
  4. ^ab"Business Cycle Expansions and Contractions".National Bureau of Economic Research. RetrievedJanuary 4, 2009.
  5. ^abZarnowitz, Victor (1996).Business Cycles: Theory, History, Indicators, and Forecasting. University of Chicago Press. pp. 221–26.
  6. ^abcRendigs Fels, "The American Business Cycle of 1879-85,"Journal of Political Economy, vol. 60, no. 1 (Feb. 1952), pp. 60–75.In JSTOR
  7. ^abWright,Industrial Depressions, pg. 65.
  8. ^Wright,Industrial Depressions, pg. 66.
  9. ^Wright,Industrial Depressions, pg. 76.
  10. ^Wright,Industrial Depressions, pp. 76-78.

Further reading

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Commercial revolution
(1000–1760)
1st Industrial Revolution/
Market Revolution
(1760–1870)
Gilded Age/
2nd Industrial Revolution
(1870–1914)
World War home fronts/
Interwar period
(1914–1945)
Post–WWII expansion/
1970s stagflation
(1945–1982)
Computer Age/
Second Gilded Age
(1982–present)
Countries and sectors
Business cycle topics
Credit cycle topics
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