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THE GREAT DEPRESSION 1929

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Title: THE GREAT DEPRESSION 1929


1
THE GREAT DEPRESSION 1929
Photos by photographer Dorothea Lange
2
THE NATIONS SICK ECONOMY
As the 1920s advanced, serious problems
threatened the economy while Important industries
struggled, including
  • Agriculture
  • Railroads
  • Textiles
  • Steel
  • Mining
  • Lumber
  • Automobiles
  • Housing
  • Consumer goods

3
FARMERS STRUGGLE
  • No industry suffered as much as agriculture
  • During World War I European demand for American
    crops soared
  • After the war demand plummeted
  • Farmers increased production sending prices
    further downward

Photo by Dorothea Lange
4
CONSUMER SPENDING DOWN
  • By the late 1920s, American consumers were buying
    less
  • Rising prices, stagnant wages and overbuying on
    credit were to blame
  • Most people did not have the money to buy the
    flood of goods factories produced

5
GAP BETWEEN RICH POOR
  • The gap between rich and poor widened
  • The wealthiest 1 saw their income rise 75
  • The rest of the population saw an increase of
    only 9
  • More than 70 of American families earned less
    than 2500 per year

Photo by Dorothea Lange
6
HOOVER WINS 1928 ELECTION
  • Republican Herbert Hoover ran against Democrat
    Alfred E. Smith in the 1928 election
  • Hoover emphasized years of prosperity under
    Republican administrations
  • Hoover won an overwhelming victory

7
THE STOCK MARKET
  • By 1929, many Americans were invested in the
    Stock Market
  • The Stock Market had become the most visible
    symbol of a prosperous American economy
  • The Dow Jones Industrial Average was the
    barometer of the Stock Markets worth
  • The Dow is a measure based on the price of 30
    large firms

8
STOCK PRICES RISE THROUGH THE 1920s
  • Through most of the 1920s, stock prices rose
    steadily
  • The Dow reached a high in 1929 of 381 points
    (300 points higher than 1924)
  • By 1929, 4 million Americans owned stocks

New York Stock Exchange
9
SEEDS OF TROUBLE
  • By the late 1920s, problems with the economy
    emerged
  • Speculation Too many Americans were engaged in
    speculation buying stocks bonds hoping for a
    quick profit
  • Margin Americans were buying on margin
    paying a small percentage of a stocks price as a
    down payment and borrowing the rest

The Stock Markets bubble was about to break
10
THE 1929 CRASH
  • In September the Stock Market had some unusual up
    down movements
  • On October 24, the market took a plunge . . .the
    worst was yet to come
  • On October 29, now known as Black Tuesday, the
    bottom fell out
  • 16.4 million shares were sold that day prices
    plummeted
  • People who had bought on margin (credit) were
    stuck with huge debts

11
By mid-November, investors had lost about 30
billion
12
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13
THE GREAT DEPRESSION
  • The Stock Market crash signaled the beginning of
    the Great Depression
  • The Great Depression is generally defined as the
    period from 1929 1940 in which the economy
    plummeted and unemployment skyrocketed
  • The crash alone did not cause the Great
    Depression, but it hastened its arrival

14
FINANCIAL COLLAPSE
  • After the crash, many Americans panicked and
    withdrew their money from banks
  • Banks had invested in the Stock Market and lost
    money
  • In 1929- 600 banks fail
  • By 1933 11,000 of the 25,000 banks nationwide
    had collapsed

Bank run 1929, Los Angeles
15
GNP DROPS, UNEMPLOYMENT SOARS
  • Between 1928-1932, the U.S. Gross National
    Product (GNP) the total output of a nations
    goods services fell nearly 50 from 104
    billion to 59 billion
  • 90,000 businesses went bankrupt
  • Unemployment leaped from 3 in 1929 to 25 in
    1933

16
HAWLEY-SMOOT TARIFF
  • The U.S. was not the only country gripped by the
    Great Depression
  • Much of Europe suffered throughout the 1920s
  • In 1930, Congress passed the toughest tariff in
    U.S. history called the Hawley- Smoot Tariff
  • It was meant to protect U.S. industry yet had the
    opposite effect
  • Other countries enacted their own tariffs and
    soon world trade fell 40

17
CAUSES OF THE GREAT DEPRESSION
  • Tariffs war debt policies
  • U.S. demand low, despite factories producing more
  • Farm sector crisis
  • Easy credit
  • Unequal distribution of income

18
HARDSHIPS DURING DEPRESSION
  • The Great Depression brought hardship,
    homelessness, and hunger to millions
  • Across the country, people lost their jobs, and
    their homes
  • Some built makeshifts shacks out of scrap
    material
  • Before long whole shantytowns (sometimes called
    Hoovervilles in mock reference to the president)
    sprung up

19
SOUP KITCHENS
  • One of the common features of urban areas during
    the era were soup kitchens and bread lines
  • Soup kitchens and bread lines offered free or
    low-cost food for people

Unemployed men wait in line for food this
particular soup kitchen was sponsored by Al Capone
20
CONDITIONS FOR MINORITIES
  • Conditions for African Americans and Latinos were
    especially difficult
  • Unemployment was the highest among minorities and
    their pay was the lowest
  • Increased violence
  • Many Mexicans were encouraged to return to
    their homeland

As conditions deteriorated, violence against
blacks increased
21
RURAL LIFE DURING THE DEPRESSION
  • While the Depression was difficult for everyone,
    farmers did have one advantage they could grow
    food for their families
  • Thousands of farmers, however, lost their land
  • Many turned to tenant farming and barely scraped
    out a living

Between 1929-1932 almost ½ million farmers lost
their land
22
THE DUST BOWL
  • A severe drought gripped the Great Plains in the
    early 1930s
  • Wind scattered the topsoil, exposing sand and
    grit
  • The resulting dust traveled hundreds of miles
  • One storm in 1934 picked up millions of tons of
    dust from the Plains an carried it to the East
    Coast

Kansas Farmer, 1933
23
Dust storm approaching Stratford, Texas - 1934
24
Storm approaching Elkhart, Kansas in 1937
25
Dust buried cars and wagons in South Dakota in
1936
26
HARDEST HIT REGIONS
  • Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico, and Colorado
    were the hardest hit regions during the Dust Bowl
  • Many farmers migrated to California and other
    Pacific Coast states

Boy covers his mouth to avoid dust, 1935
27
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28
HOBOES TRAVEL AMERICA
  • The 1930s created the term hoboes to describe
    poor drifters
  • 300,000 transients or hoboes hitched rides
    around the country on trains and slept under
    bridges (thousands were teenagers)
  • Injuries and death was common on railroad
    property over 50,000 people were hurt or killed

29
EFFECTS OF DEPRESSION
  • Suicide rate rose more than 30 between 1928-1932
  • Alcoholism rose sharply in urban areas
  • Three times as many people were admitted to state
    mental hospitals as in normal times
  • Many people showed great kindness to strangers
  • Additionally, many people developed habits of
    savings thriftiness

30
HOOVER STRUGGLES WITH THE DEPRESSION
  • After the stock market crash, President Hoover
    tried to reassure Americans
  • He said, Any lack of confidence in the economic
    future . . . Is foolish
  • He recommended business as usual

Herbert Hoover
31
HOOVERS PHILOSOPHY
  • Hoover was not quick to react to the depression
  • He believed in rugged individualism the idea
    that people succeed through their own efforts
  • People should take care of themselves, not depend
    on governmental hand-outs
  • He said people should pull themselves up by
    their bootstraps

Hoover believed it was the individuals job to
take care of themselves, not the governments
32
HOOVER TAKES ACTION TOO LITTLE TOO LATE
  • Hoover gradually softened his position on
    government intervention in the economy
  • He created the Federal Farm Board to help farmers
  • He also created the National Credit Organization
    that helped smaller banks
  • His Federal Home Loan Bank Act and Reconstruction
    Finance Corp were two measures enacted to protect
    peoples homes and businesses

Hoovers flurry of activity came too late to save
the economy or his job
33
FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT- 1932
  • Roosevelt remained vague on the campaign trail,
    promising only that under his presidency
    government would act decisively to end the
    Depression.

34
NEW DEAL
  • New Deal-1(1933-35)
  • The Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA), passed in
    1933
  • government sought to stimulate increased farm
    prices by paying farmers to produce less.
  • It did little for smaller farmers and led to the
    eviction and homelessness of tenants and
    sharecroppers whose landlords hardly needed their
    services under a system that paid them to grow
    less

35
New Deal (1935-40s)
  • Aimed at restoring the economy from the bottom up
  • The Works Progress Administration was a huge
    federal jobs program that sought to hire
    unemployed breadwinners for the purpose
    strengthening their family's well-being as well
    as boosting consumer demand.
  • National Labour Relations Act of 1935

36
WORLDWIDE EFFECTS
  • Australia
  • Australia's extreme dependence on agricultural
    and industrial exports meant it was one of the
    hardest-hit countries in the Western world
  • Falling export demand and commodity prices placed
    massive downward pressures on wages
  • Further, unemployment reached a record high of
    almost 32 in 1932
  • After 1932, an increase in wool and meat prices
    led to a gradual recovery

37
WORLDWIDE EFFECTS(CONT)
  • Canada
  • Harshly impacted by both the global economic
    downturn and the Dust Bowl,
  • Canadian industrial production had fallen to only
    58 of the 1929 level by 1932, the second lowest
    level in the world after the United States
  • Total national income fell to 55 of the 1929
    level, again worse than any nation apart from the
    United States.

38
East Asia
  • The Great Depression in East Asia was of minor
    impact
  • The Japanese economy shrank by 8 192931
  • The invasion and subjugation of Manchuria into a
    Japanese puppet-state in September 1931, thus
    providing Japan with raw materials and energy,
    the Japanese economy was able to recover by 1932
    and continued to grow.

39
France
  • The Depression began to affect France from about
    1931
  • France's relatively high degree of
    self-sufficiency meant the damage was
    considerably less than in nations like Germany
  • Hardship and unemployment were high enough to
    lead to rioting and the rise of the socialist
    Popular Front.

40
Germany
  • Germany's Weimar Republic was hit hard by the
    depression, as American loans to help rebuild the
    German economy stopped.
  • Unemployment soared, especially in larger cities,
    and the political system veered toward extremism.
  • Hitler's Nazi Party came to power in January
    1933. In 1934 the economy was still not balanced
    enough for Germany to work on its own.

41
Latin America
  • Because of high levels of United States
    investment in Latin American economies, they were
    severely damaged by the Depression
  • Chile, Bolivia and Peru were particularly badly
    affected
  • One result of the Depression in this area was the
    rise of fascist movements.

42
Netherlands
  • From roughly 1931 until 1937, the Netherlands
    suffered a deep and exceptionally long
    depression.
  • This depression was partly caused by the
    after-effects of the Stock Market Crash of 1929
    in the United States, and partly by internal
    factors in the Netherlands.
  • Government policy, especially the very late
    dropping of the Gold Standard, played a role in
    prolonging the depression.
  • The Great Depression in the Netherlands led to
    some political instability and riots, and can be
    linked to the rise of the Dutch
    national-socialist party NSB.

43
End to Depression
  • Outbreak of World War II causes
  • US factories flooded with orders form armaments
    and munitions
  • Unemployment decreases and production increase
  • Depression ends completely by the time the US
    enters the war in 1941

44
What did we learn from the 1929 Crash?
  • Market can be very unpredictable
  • Investors must not get caught up in market bubble
    illusions
  • Market forces alone may be unable to achieve
    recovery from economic slump
  • Changes were needed in US economic structure

45
RECESSION 2008
  • The Lehman Bankruptcy
  • Effect on Indian economy
  • US debt rescue plan

46
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47
Does History repeat.?
ASHISH KUMAR 1ST SEMESTER
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