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While
financial markets sometimes mark time, more often than not they
are advancing or correcting.
Bull markets eventually are followed by bear
interludes; booms; panics; and busts
are part of a recurring cycle that marks the course of
securities markets. No
boom, panic, or bust ever looks exactly like another one, yet
most seem to share some attributes-and knowing what these are
may help you to better follow and understand financial and economic
events.
- Booms
are well underway before they are generally recognized.
- Busts
occur quickly-often in a week or two (or less!).
- Panics
sometimes (but not always) follow a bust; these are dramatic
affairs, closely watched, inspiring sentiments of terror and
awe.
- Unless
there is a lender of last resort to provide liquidity and
restore confidence, panics may be followed by economic depressions.
Still,
it's important to remember that fully accurate and reliable
knowledge of such matters is possible only in retrospect: as
Will Rogers once remarked, "never make predictions, especially
about the future."
The
New Deal was America's most important reaction to financial
and economic turbulence- specifically, the Great Crash of
1929 and the Great Depression that followed it. The
reforms of the 1930s had long-lasting effects, among which were
the establishment of the Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC), reform in the governance of the New York Stock Exchange,
and the Glass Steagall Act (which separated investment
banking from commercial banking, and established Federal
Deposit Insurance).
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On
two audiotapes
Run time: about three hours total
Narrator:
Louis Rukeyser
Author: Robert Sobel (Crashes, Booms and Busts)
Author: Roger Lowenstein (The New Deal and Government Regulation)
Editor: Mark Skousen and Wendy McElroy
Publisher: Knowledge Products, Inc.
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Item
# 10602
Price: $17.95
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