The USA in the 1930s - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

The USA in the 1930s

Description:

The USA in the 1930s Kevin J. Benoy * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Approaching Disaster When Hoover became president in 1928, he was seen as ideal for the job. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:135
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 27
Provided by: Kev982
Category:
Tags: 1930s | usa | republican

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The USA in the 1930s


1
The USA in the 1930s
  • Kevin J. Benoy

2
Approaching Disaster
  • When Hoover became president in 1928, he was seen
    as ideal for the job.
  • His outstanding reputation was richly earned from
    such work as heading post-war relief of war-torn
    Europe.
  • Even his future opponent, Franklin Delano
    Roosevelt earlier said of him he is certainly a
    wonder and I wish we could make him president of
    the United States. There could be no better one.

3
Approaching Disaster
  • Coolidge had been a hands-off president.
  • Hoover was anything but.
  • He was a tireless worker who saw government as
    having a role to play in creating business
    confidence and in maintaining a prosperity that
    was already slipping when he assumed office.

4
Approaching Disaster
  • He turned out to be the right man at the wrong
    time.
  • His belief in his own abilities rendered him
    inflexible.
  • He noted of himself, when you know me better,
    you will find that when I say a thing is a fact,
    it is a fact.
  • When a failing economy did not respond to his
    policies, he became increasingly frustrated.

5
Approaching Disaster
  • Slumping sales in 1928 reflected a basic problem.
    American prosperity was not broadly based
    enough. Many workers really could not afford to
    buy the products they made.
  • Huge levels of productivity required widespread
    wealth, yet too few earned enough to sustain
    consumption and perceived wealth was often just
    paper.

6
The Crash
  • Despite the slump, stock prices continued to
    rise, fueled by borrowing. In 1929 2 of every 5
    borrowed went into buying stocks.
  • Markets peaked on September 3, 1929. Banks
    failed, steel production dropped, home
    construction tailed off yet investors ignored
    it all.
  • At the end of the trading day on October 23,
    prices plummeted.

7
The Crash
  • When trading opened the following day, the plunge
    continued. Fear and panic set in.
  • 13 million shares changed hands but at fire
    sale prices. The market lost 11 of its value.
  • Herbert Hoover addressed the American public the
    following day, saying The fundamental business
    of the country...is on a sound and prosperous
    basis.
  • Black Monday, October 28, made it clear that
    investors were not reassured.
  • It is said that the opening bell the next day was
    not heard over the shouts of Sell! Sell! Sell!
    This was Black Tuesday. The market lost another
    12 of its value. Big investors tried to pump
    the market with major purchases at inflated
    values. They failed.

8
Hoovers Response
  • Hoover initially moved to cut taxes and ease
    interest rates.
  • Inflation should spur spending and increase
    business confidence.
  • In addition, the infamous Smoot Hawley Tariff of
    1930 was passed raising tariffs and wrecking
    international trade.
  • None of these moves were enough to staunch the
    business bloodletting.

Effect of the Smoot Hawley Tariff on US Trade
9
Hoovers Response
  • US protectionism exported the Depression to
    Europe.
  • In mid 1931, the largest Austrian bank Credit
    Anstalt collapsed, triggering a chain reaction
    with other European financial institutions.
  • The downward spiral gathered momentum.
  • Unable to pay their American loans, Europeans
    defaulted and put US institutions at risk.

Bank run in Berlin
10
Hoovers Response
  • In retrospect, Hoover seems to have mishandled
    the crisis.
  • Easy credit fanned speculation when the marked
    clearly needed a correction.
  • The 40 drop in share prices in the first weeks
    of the panic was made worse by there not being a
    smaller drop earlier.
  • His attempt to reflate the economy immediately
    seemed to deny that a correction was needed.
  • His tax cuts only made it necessary to increase
    taxes more two years later after public works
    spending put the US into deficit spending with no
    apparent end in sight.

11
Unemployment
  • Unemployment rose from 3.2 of the workforce in
    1929 to 24.9 in 1933.
  • 34 million people, roughly 28 of the US
    population, had no income.
  • Tenants could not pay therir rent.
  • Mortgageholders defaulted.
  • Taxpayers couldnt meet their obligations.
  • Authorities could not afford to pay their
    workers. In New York 300,000 children went
    unschooled because there was no money to pay for
    schools. The city of Chicago owed 20 million in
    back pay to its teachers.
  • The entire capitalist system teetered on the edge
    of total collapse or so it seemed.

12
The Dust Bowl
  • If the crash did not make things bad enough,
    nature conspired to increase human suffering.
  • 150,000 square miles of Oklahoma, Texas,
    Colorado, Kansas and New Mexico saw light topsoil
    blown away when rains persistently refused to
    fall between 1934 and 1937.
  • 60 of the population of these areas were turned
    into exodusters, refugees from environmental
    catastrophe.

13
A Banking Collapse
  • In 1931-32, 5,096 American banks collapsed
    (compared to 700 in a normal year).
  • Industrial production dropped by half.
  • Housing construction fell in value from 8.7
    billion to 1.4 b. In 1933.
  • Though real wages rose for those who had work,
    misery and deprivation fell to those who did not.

14
A Global Depression
  • The international system, so dependent on
    America, fell also in no small part because of
    Americas tariff offensive.
  • In June, 1931 Hoover announced a moratorium on
    reparation and war debt payments which likely
    saved the financial systems of several European
    countries, but was not enough to fix the problem.
  • European and American investors sat on their
    money.
  • Most countries abandoned the gold standard,
    seeking export relief by devaluing their
    currencies.
  • It didnt work. World trade shrank and so did
    the prospect of global recovery.

15
Bonus Expeditionary Force
  • Hoovers tarnished image took another hit when US
    war veterans, calling themselves the Bonus
    Expeditionary Force, numbering 20,000, camped out
    in the middle of Washington, calling for help in
    hard times.
  • Hoover stood firm and called on the army to
    disperse the rabble.
  • Cavalry major Patton, on the orders of General
    MacArthur, dispersed the crowd.
  • Apocryphal stories spoke of bayonet charges into
    hungry, but peaceful, crowds while the President
    dined in luxury.

16
1932 Election
  • The cards were stacked against Hoover in the
    election.
  • His opponent and former admirer, Franklin D.
    Roosevelt masterfully outflanked him.
  • Formerly the reformist party, FDR now called for
    dramatic action to deal with the crisis.
  • Though both men now understood intervention was
    needed, Roosevelt packaged his ideas brilliantly
    in his New Deal.

17
1932 Election
  • Roosevelt was no doubt aided by the Republicans
    unfortunate choice of Rudy Vallees Brother Can
    You Spare a Dime as their campaign song.
  • The Democrats used Happy Days Are Here Again.

18
The New Deal
  • The newly minted President moved fast.
  • In the first hundred days he restored business
    confidence by strengthening the banking system
    with his Emergency Banking Bill.
  • He directly addressed the public with his
    fireside chats on American radio, convincing
    them to put their savings back into banks.

19
The New Deal
  • Hoover favoured creating good credit conditions
    for banks and companies a top-down approach.
  • Roosevelt preferred to stimulate consumption from
    the bottom-up through government relief
    programmes.
  • In the height of Depression, American were
    prepared to accept direct state intervention.

20
The New Deal
  • Not all of Roosevelts ideas were accepted.
  • The Supreme Court rejected his National Recovery
    Agency as unconstitutional, but the voters wanted
    action and felt they were getting it.
  • The Tennessee Valley Authority and other
    so-called alphabet agencies the Agricultural
    Adjustment Act, the National Industrial Recovery
    Act, the Works Progress Administration and others
    -- offered hope.

21
The New Deal
  • One of Roosevelts most popular moves was to
    repeal the 18th Ammendment.
  • On the 22nd of March, 1923, Roosevelt allowed the
    sale of 3.2 beer and wine thought too weak to
    be very intoxicating.
  • After securing the agreement of many states, the
    21st Ammendment was passed which repealed the
    18th.
  • It took some time before all states were wet
    again. Mississippi was the last, in 1966.

22
The New Deal
  • Republicans railed against Roosevelts big
    government some calling him socialist and
    others calling him fascist, but it was impossible
    to argue with his success.
  • In 1936, he ran for re-election and won in a
    landslide.

23
Roosevelts Legacy
  • FDR inherited a mess and, though he did not fix
    it, he did enough to win the confidence of the
    American public.
  • The next 50 years would see government
    involvement in the economy grow in the form of
    regulation and in providing services and
    programmes.
  • Inequality would shrink.

24
Roosevelts Legacy
  • He was much reviled in his time, as that
    megalomaniac cripple in the White House or that
    swollen-headed nit-wit.
  • One Connecticut club forbade the mention of his
    name on their property, as a health measure
    against apoplexy.
  • Today he is considered one of the top two or
    three presidents of all time.
  • Even arch-conservative Conrad Black s biography
    of the man was sub-titled Champion of Freedom.

25
Roosevelts Legacy
  • In the final analysis, it was not Roosevelts New
    Deal that ended the Depression.
  • Bad times were somewhat alleviated by government
    efforts, but the ten lost years continued.
  • It took the massive spending of the World War II
    years to finally change things.

26
finis
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com