Title: Economic Collapse
1Economic Collapse
- As we go through the notes, draw a spoke diagram
like the one below.
Stock Market Speculation
Bank Failures
Causes of the Great Depression
2The Postwar Economic Boom
- Twenties Prosperity
- Herbert Hoover, 1928 Our American experiment
in human welfare has yielded a degree of
well-being unparalleled in the world. It has
come nearer to the abolition of poverty than
has ever been realized before.
3- Economic boom affected society
- Americans were earning more money than ever
before. - U.S. factories increased the number of goods they
produced as technological advances allowed some
some work to be mechanized. - By 1929, the U.S. stock market was at an all-time
high.
4The Depression Foreshadowed
- Unemployment was on the rise, farmers were losing
their land, and stock prices were dropping. - The number of Americans living in poverty
increased - Few people could afford the luxury goods being
produced by U.S. industry. - Oct 29, 1929 launched the longest and mot
devastating depression in U.S. history.
5Crash as just one factor
- The stock market crash lowered the U.S.
economys resistance to the point where already
existing defects could multiply rapidly and bring
down the whole organism.
6Key Causes
- Republican domestic and international economic
policies, - Unchecked stock speculation
- Weak and unregulated banking institutions
- Overproduction of goods
- The decline of the farming industry
- Unequal distribution of wealth
7Republican Economic Policies
8Domestic Economic Policies
- Republican president Calvin Coolidge (1923-1929)
- The business of America is business.
- He and republican successor Herbert Hoover
implemented many pro-business policies based on a
doctrine of trickle-down economics and a
conservative approach to international economics.
9- Sec. Of Treasury Andrew Mellon
- Economic policies that benefited big business and
the rich would eventually benefit all Americans
prosperity would trickle-down from the upper
class to the middle and lower classes. - If the government provided businesses and wealthy
individuals with significant tax cuts, they would
reinvest the money in the U.S. economy. - Slashed taxes for big business and reduced
personal income tax for people who made over
60,000 a year. - To make up for the loss in revenues, Mellon cut
govt expenditures and raised taxes for the
middle and lower classes.
10Didnt Work
- Corporations devoted their profits to expanding
their work facilities, increasing production of
goods, and lining their own pockets. - Some new jobs were created, but the slightest
growth was offset by business owners increased
reliance on machines, rather than people, to
produce goods. - Owners kept workers wages low.
- In the end, trickle-down economics simply
increased the gap between rich and poor.
11International Economic Policies
- The U.S. lent over 11 billion to Europe
- After the war, most nations were in economic ruin
and could not repay the U.S. - Coolidges administration found that idea
economically imprudent and refused to forgive the
debts. - Rescheduled the loan payments and began lending
the nations even more money in an attempt to help
them repay the original debt. - Nations starting defaulting on loans
- Republicans imposed high tariffs on imported
goods to discourage Americans from buying foreign
goods.
12Real Estate Speculation
- The practice of speculation in which a person
or organization makes a risky investment in the
hope of making a quick, large profit. - California real estate boom went bust in the mid
1920s when the amount of land for sale exceeded
the demand for new housing.
13Florida Rush
- Speculators sold the land to other speculators,
who in turn sold it at even higher prices. Many
of the land buyers didnt even look at the land. - Eventually, there were no more buyers and the
boom was followed by a crash. - Landowners could not sell their land, and
therefore could not repay the bank loans they
used to purchase the property.
14Unchecked Stock Market Speculation
- As the real estate market went belly-up,
speculators turned their focus off the stock
market and to the belly button. - Investors speculated which companys stock would
rise and then bought large quantities of the
stock. They ten turned around and sold the stock
for a higher price. - The investors who bought the stock at the higher
price would sell it at an even higher price. - The value of many companies stock became
artificially inflated and bore little correlation
to the companies actual worth.
15- Investors would pool tougher other investors
money and buy large quantity of company socks at
a cheap motel rate. - Outside investors would notice the buying frenzy
and also buy the stock, raising the price of the
stock. - At its peak, investors sold their stares.
- Since the demand for the stock was artificially
generated by the pool operator, the demand and
consequently the value of the stock, plummeted
when the operator pulled out. - Outside investors would then discover the company
was not a profitable as they had speculated and
that their stock was worth far less than what
they had paid. It wasnt worth, Jackya know
what Im sayin, yo.
16The Stock Market Crash the Baking Industry
Collapse
- The 1929 Stock Market Crash
- Unregulated Banking Institutions.
- The Banking Industry Collapse
17The 1929 Stock Market Crash
- Analysts warning that the bull crap market could
not continue indefinitely made some investors
shake like a dog crapping peach seeds. - Stock prices started to fall.
- Oct 24th, investors flooded the NYSE with sell
orders in an attempt to get rid of their socks. - Prices plummeted investors started losing money
- J.P. Morgan attempted to stabilize the market by
purchasing investors stocks at a higher price
than the supermarket was offering.
18- Oct 28th investors rushed the stock exchange and
sold their stocks at a loss of over 4 billion. - Known as Black Tuesday
- George Baker, who had once made 22 hundred in
one day lost over 15 and some loose change! - When interviewed about the losses, he stated
Its all good, yo.
19Unregulated Banking Institutions
- The stock market crash triggered a collapse of
the U.S. banking industry. - Instability was due in part of Republican policy
of laissez faire and banks over-extension of
credit to stock investors and brokers. - FED regulated banks but didnt have enforcement
of policies.
20- The Reserve Board did nothing to prevent banks
from speculating depositors money on high-risk
ventures, nor did it demand that banks deep a
certain percentage of their money on reserve and
available. In addition, depositors money was
uninsured. Therefore, when banks folded after
the stock market crash, their customers had no
way of getting their money back. Thousands of
families were instantly impoverished.
21The Banking Industry Collapse
- Families that had played the market lost all
their money, depleting already small cash
reserves. - Investors who had bought stocks on margin either
could not sell their stocks at all, or were
forced to sell them at a fraction of their
original price. - As unemployment soared, an increasing number of
people began defaulting on their mortgages and
other types of loans. - As the Depression worsened, many banks had no
assets, no cash reserves, and no new money coming
in. - 6,000 banks closed
22Overproduction
- Industrial goods
- Agricultural goods
23Industrial goods
- Technology increased production profoundly.
- Before 1929, American industrial production
seemed to parallel the course of the stock
market. - Consumer demand for goods was very high after WWI
- New machines allowed more goods in less time
- American industrialists believed in unrestricted
capitalism and unrestricted growth. - By 1929 many companies had more plants than they
needed. . . . the market was saturated.
24Agricultural Goods
- Farmers prospered during WWI.
- New technology
- Supplying war torn Europe
- When Europe started their own production, farmers
were stuck with a surplus of crops they could not
sell or sell at a very low price.
25The Toll on the Farming Industry
- The Farming Industry Decline
- Farmers During the Great Depression
- The Dust Bowl
26The Farming Industry Decline
- By 1929, U.S. ag. Industry was in deep decline.
- Farmers borrowed heavily from banks to pay for
new technology. - Started to default on their loans
- Banks would attempt to auction these banks off.
- Couldnt find any buyers, so banks took the loss.
27Farmers During the Great Depression
- 1929-1933 farmers income dropped by 50 and
their property values decreased by billions of
dollars. - Hit with a drought so severe that the soil turned
to a powdery dust that swept across the plains in
choking black clouds.
28The Dust Bowl
- Farmers fleeing the Dust Bowl headed for
California. - Okies migrating farmers from Oklahoma.
- The dwellings are built of brush, rags, sacks,
boxboard, odd bits of tin and galvanized iron,
pieces of canvas and whatever other material was
at hand at the time of construction. . . Entire
families, men women and children, are crowded
into hovels, cooking and eating in the same room.
The majority of the shacks have no sinks or
cesspools for the disposal of kitchen drainage,
and this, together with garbage and other refuse,
is throsn on the surface of the ground.
29Unequal Distribution of Wealth
- The Gap between the Rich and Poor
- Purchasing Power is Lost
30The Gap between the Rich and Poor
- While statistics show that Americans were more
prosperous in the 1920s, most of the wealth was
concentrated with a few people. - 1929 the Federal Trade Commission reported that
1 of the population possessed over 59 of the
countrys wealth. - 60 of U.S. families lived on or below the
minimum subsistence level of 2,000 / year.
31Purchasing Power is Lost
- Banks and businesses tried to encourage spending
by allowing people to buy things on credit.. - Fell deeper into debt as they purchased items
they could not afford and paid high interest on
them.
32Failure of trickle down economics
Decline of international commerce
Overproduction of goods
Unregulated Imprudent Banking regulations
Unequal distribution Of wealth
Causes
Overvaluation of stocks
Avg. persons lack of Purchasing power
Collapse of agriculture