The government, but not the central bank. The Roosevelt administration did implement fiscal policy which is the way out of the liquidity trap. And the abandonment of the gold standard worked by increasing inflation expectations.energiewende wrote:While the significance of the possibility of a liquidity trap is disputed, there wasn't a liquidity trap in the US during the Great Depression. The Government could and at times did inflate the currency.
And the liquidity trap is not seriously discussed, it is a fact that has been empirically confirmed. We had a liquidity trap the last 5 years in US and EU, and since the 90s in Japan.
By the way, I basically use the definition from wikipedia: "A liquidity trap is a situation described in Keynesian economics in which injections of cash into the private banking system by a central bank fail to lower interest rates and hence fail to stimulate economic growth."
Ah, I assumed you meant an active policy.energiewende wrote:The government's monetary policy was to have the gold standard.Monetary policy in the late 20s and early 30s wasn't controlled by the government since they still had the gold standard.
That would only be true in a frictionless market. You can't just replace 1 worker by 1,2 workers. You'd need to reorganize how work is done which itself would mean additional cost. For example, you can't just hire 1,2 musicians to play one song 20% faster. Same goes for many higher level jobs like engineer or manager. And as we currently see, wages are only partly determined by marginal cost and quite a lot by power balance. Work is not a commodity, that is the bigenergiewende wrote:It also means unemployment increases. From a welfare point of view it is generally better for everyone to lose 20% of their income than for 20% of people to become unemployed and lose their income entirely (which reduces total wages by the same amount anyway, assuming job losses are evenly distributed). Wage rigidity that isn't caused by regulations (including union privilege) is simply a market failure and, while you might be able to find some case in which it's perversely beneficial, it's much more likely to cause problems.And wage rigidity isn't necessity something bad. If wages fall after a crisis it can even amplify a recession if it was caused by high private debt. If all wages fall by 20% it means debt to equity ratio increases by around the same percentage.
And you ignore the reason for a balance sheet recession. It starts when people reduce their consumption because they want to reduce debt-to-equity ratio. But if their wages and all other prices fall, their equity shrinks and they have reduce consumption again, leading to the next round of recession.