All tagged Recession

How A Post-Civil War Monetary Crisis Brought Down Reconstruction

The Civil War ravaged the South; railroads were ripped up, cotton plantations were destroyed, and the few Southern industrial centers of the time, such as Atlanta, were burned down. The Southern rail system before the Civil War was a small patchwork of different gauges–the distance between the rails–that primarily transported cotton to the nearest port. By comparison, the North had triple the track mileage linking the industrial centers under one gauge (Josef, 2019). Northern money flooded the railroads after the war; by 1873 the nation had laid down 33,000 miles (53,000 km) of new track (Richardson, 2007, 131) and railroads employed thousands of demobilized soldiers from both the North and South. Railroads turned to governments and banks in search of capital; they also turned to European banks when they couldn’t get capital in America, as many European bankers wanted a piece of the expanding American market. The trouble was that railroads required constant investment to pay off their debts; any break in the system could bring everything down (Dove, 2014). Ultimately, the cause of the eventual crash of the railroads and ensuing panic was America’s monetary policies.

Why America’s Economy Won’t Get Well Soon

If you watch the news about the current and future state of the American economy, you have likely heard nothing but depressing news. You have most likely heard that the American economy is heading towards a deep recession. You have also heard television news anchors and other commentators on social media platforms draw comparisons between the current state of the economy and its state in the 1970s and 1980s. These claims, while not entirely true, serve as a useful comparison to measure current developments in the U.S. economy. While this crisis is different from similar crises in the past, many of the same factors will extend the length of the current pitfall we as a nation are in. Nothing better illustrates the slowdown of America’s economy, among all sectors, than the recent hits to the the rental and for-sale housing markets.