On Keynesian economics and the Great Depression
Keynes' arguments during this period centered on a few main concepts. First, he challenged the widely accepted notion that the market's own forces would spark a recovery. Secondly, he used history to argue that "capitalist economics limited the ability of private investment to stimulate renewed economic growth." (2) And, thirdly, that public investment was the way to stimulate the economy and boost consumption, which would bring about recovery to the market.
Home economics, Dorothy Canfield Fisher, & Montessori education
Often, when looking for personal inspiration to spark research ideas, I look through my sorority's list of notable members. On the list of Kappa Kappa Gamma members that were notable authors, was Dorothy Canfield Fisher. This blog post explores Fisher's life between 1900 and 1929, seeking to place her work on Montessori teaching and her theories about economics within the broader context of American economic trends and home economics at large.
On daily expenses in nineteenth-century america
This year, 2021, has been an interesting one for most people, different than most years anyone has experienced. And now, after all the supply chain disruptions caused by a Chinese energy crisis, blocked canals, backlogged ports, government expenditures, work disruptions, and the massive death toll of COVID-19, severe inflation has taken hold. This blog will take a stroll back through time to explore the cost of commodities and other daily expenses in 1869 as reported in an 1871 "Special Report on Immigration" published by Edward Young, the then chief of the Bureau of Statistics, particularly evaluating the cost of living between states during the industrial revolution and the massive growth of the United States of America.