Discover
Book Series

Daily life

Minsik readers
0.0
0 ratings
Other platforms
3.5
2 ratings
2
BOOKS
96
PAGES
~1h 36min
READING TIME

About Author

Description

Katie Price (born Katrina Amy Alexandra Alexis Infield; 22 May 1978) is an English media personality, model, and businesswoman. She gained recognition in the late 1990s for her glamour modelling work in British tabloid newspapers, including Page 3 in The Sun and the Daily Star, billed under the pseudonym Jordan. Price later expanded her career as a television and media personality. She was a contestant on the third series of the ITV reality show I'm a Celebrity...Get Me Out of Here! in 2004, and the following year, she was runner-up in the search for the UK's entry for the Eurovision Song Contest.

How the series evolves

beginning
The American colonies
0.0· tough start
finale
The Great Depression
3.5· sticks the landing
overall
1.8· getting stronger with each book

Books in this Series

The Great Depression

3.5 (2)
0

"This book examines the nature and the causes of the 1929 depression, tracing its background and the broad conditions from which the depression emerged. As an influence on economic activity, Robbins sees World War I, and the political changes that followed it, as a series of shifts in the fundamental conditions of demand and supply, to which economic activity had to adapt. The needs of the war had called a huge apparatus of mechanical equipment into being, which the resumption of peace rendered in large part superfluous. The war also disrupted world markets, and its settlement created conditions that aggravated this disruption. Thus, the struggle that was to end nationalist friction in fact gave nationalism new scope. The depression of 1929 and beyond dwarfed all preceding economic disruptions, both in magnitude and in intensity. In 1929 the index of security prices in the United States was in the neighborhood of 200-210; in 1932 it had fallen to 30-40. Commodity prices in general fell by 30 to 40 percent, and in some commodity markets the drop was even more catastrophic. Production in the chief manufacturing countries of the world from 30 to 50 percent, and the value of world trade in 1932 was a third of what it was three years before. Worldwide, something like 30 million people were unemployed. There have been many economic downturns in modern economic history, but never anything to compare with the years of the Great Depression. Few books have conveyed that period with greater clarity and precision than this masterpiece by Lionel Robbins. Murray Weidenbaum's masterful new introduction adds to its contemporary value."--Book cover.