Panic of 1910–1911
Minor economic depression
The Panic of 1910–1911 was a minor economic depression that followed the enforcement of the Sherman Antitrust Act, which regulates the competition among enterprises, trying to avoid monopolies and, generally speaking, a failure of the market itself.[1] The short-term panic lasted approximately 1 year and led to a drop of the major U.S. stock market index by ~26%. It mostly affected the stock market and business traders who were smarting from the activities of trust busters, especially with the breakup of the Standard Oil Company and the American Tobacco company.[2]
See also
- Van Schaick and Company, one of several investment firms that failed during this period.
- Great Depression
References
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- Aggregate demand/Supply
- Effective demand
- General glut
- Model
- Overproduction
- Paradox of thrift
- Price-and-wage stickiness
- Underconsumption
- Business cycle
- Deflation/Inflation
- Chronic
- Classical dichotomy
- Disinflation
- Money supply/demand
- Neutrality of money
- Price level
- Real and nominal values
- Velocity of money
- Economic expansion
- Interest rate
- Recession
- Shock
- Unemployment
(1000–1760)
- Great Slump (1430–1490)
- Slump of 1706
- Great Frost of 1709
(1760–1840)
- British credit crisis of 1772–1773
- 1772–1774; England
- Scotland
- Thirteen Colonies
- 1785–1788
- Copper Panic of 1789/Panic of 1792 (1789–1793)
- Panic of 1796–1797 (1796–1799)
- 1802–1804
- 1807–1810
- 1812
- Post-Napoleonic Depression (1815–1821)
- 1822–23
- Panic of 1825 (1825–1826)
- 1828–29
- 1833–34
- Panic of 1837 (1836–1838 and 1839–1843)
Civil War-era United States
(1840–1870)
- 1845–46
- Panic of 1847 (1847–1848)
- 1853–54
- Panic of 1857 (1857–1858)
- 1860–61
- Panic of 1866 (1865–1867)
- Black Friday (1869–1870)
2nd Industrial Revolution
(1870–1914)
- Long Depression
- 1873–1879; United Kingdom
- United States
- Depression of 1882–1885
- 1887–88
- Baring crisis (1890–1891)
- Panic of 1893 (1893–1897)
- 1899–1900
- Panic of 1901 (1902–1904)
- Panic of 1907 (1907–1908)
- Panic of 1910–1911 (1910–1912)
- Financial crisis of 1914 (1913–14)
(1918–1939)
- Post–World War I recession (1918–1919)
- Depression of 1920–1921
- Roaring Twenties
- 1923–1924
- 1926–1927
- Great Depression
- Recession of 1937–1938
(1945–1973)
- 1945
- Recession of 1949 (1948–1949)
- Recession of 1953 (1953–1954)
- Recession of 1958 (1957–1958)
- Recession of 1960–1961
- Recession of 1969–1970
(1973–1982)
Great Regression
(1982–2007)
(2007–present)
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