Gil Hahn

50%
Flag icon
Despite the magnitude of the losses—$50 billion wiped off the value of stocks, equivalent to about 50 percent of GNP—and the ferocity of the decline, many papers were surprisingly sanguine, calling it the “prosperity panic.” The New York Evening World even argued that the panic had only occurred because “underlying conditions [had] been so good,” that
Lords of Finance: The Bankers Who Broke the World
Rate this book
Clear rating