Economic Recovery from the Argentine Great Depression: Institutions, Expectations, and the Change of Macroeconomic Regime
Metadatos:
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor/es:
della Paolera, Gerardo
Taylor, Alan M.
Fecha:
1998-11Resumen
We ask how Argentina overcame the Great Depression and if macroeconomic interventions made any contribution
to the recovery. Argentine macroeconomic policy deviated from gold-standard orthodoxy after the final suspension
of convertibility in 1929. As elsewhere. fiscal policy in Argentina was conservative. Monetary policy became
unorthodox after 1931 when the Caja de Conversion (Conversion Office. a currency board) began rediscounting to
sterilize gold outflows and avoid deflation. This change of regime predated a later. and supposedly more
significant, stage of institutional reform. namely the creation of the central bank in 1935. A wider literature links
the interwar depression in the core economies to flaws in the gold standard and emphasizes the connection between
active monetary policy and escape from deflation and slump~ our work extends this idea to the periphery.
Este Documento forma parte de la serie Working Papers (ISSN 0327-9588), publicada por la Universidad Torcuato Di Tella entre 1993 y 2001