ECON 2200 Lecture Notes - Lecture 53: National Industrial Recovery Act, National Recovery Administration, Demand Curve

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ECON 2200
Lecture 53
The National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA): 1933-1935
ā€¢ Was declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court
ā€¢ Many business leaders policy makers, union leaders and even
economists at this time felt that competition created an environment
of risk and failure for business
ā€¢ Designed to ī„» competition & ī„¹ prices in manufacturing sector
o That that an increase in price would lead to an increase in the
quantity of supply and this would lead to an increase in
employment
ā†’ However, they ignored the negatively-sloped demand
curve (that people would buy less if the price was
increased)
ā€¢ Also encouraged firms to set minimum wages & maximum hours for
workers
o Wanted to employ a lot of workers for less hours, than just a
few for many hours???
ā€¢ The National Recovery Administration (NRA) & ā€œcodes of fair
practiceā€
o NRA supervised the creation of industry codes that set
maximum prices and sometimes limited output for all firms
within a given industry.
o NRA used 3 advisory boards:
ā†’ Management
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Document Summary

Were ultimately in control; therefore, the prices that were set were ones that tended to maximize profit. The public : 450 codes written in 1st year of nra. In the 1st year of the nra, firms began to pump up their production and increase their inventory in anticipation of the higher prices. However, the higher prices decreased consumption, so firms had to decrease production even lower than before the nra. Expectation of increased prices induced firms to increase output and put in their inventories initially, but when sales did not materialize output decreased again. Impact of nra & codes: nobody really minded much when this act was thrown out; even the new dealers realized it was a failure as an act. It really did not help society much at all: the farm crisis (table 24. 2, adverse terms of trade. (column 3) prices received by farmers relative to prices paid = terms of trade.

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