Title: Great%20Depression%20
1Great Depression Part II
2Impact of the Great Depression Increased Govt
Powers
- End of a laissez faire approach
- Increase in government participation in the
economic life of the nation - Increased federal powers, action and agencies in
the U.S.
3Impact of the Great Depression Social Reform
- Unemployment insurance
- Social security
- Minimum wage
- Restrictions on child labor
- Set a maximum number of hours of labor (so that
more people could be hired) - Labor was given the right to organize, bargain
collectively, and antiunion contracts were not
allowed
4Impact of the Great Depression Agricultural
Reform
- Agricultural Adjustment Administration (AAA)
- Was to establish parity prices for basic
commodities. Parity was the price set for a
product that gave it the same value as between
the years 1909 to 1914 - The AAA would also eliminate surpluses by paying
growers to reduce their crops
5Impact of the Great Depression Fiscal Reform
- Glass-Steagall Banking Reform Act of 1933
- Created the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
(FDIC), which insured individual deposits up to
5,000 - Took the nation off the gold standard (everything
was to be paid be for by paper money from now on)
6Impact of the Great Depression Job Creation
- Hoover Dam
- Constructed from 1930-1936
- Created a huge man-made lake for purposes of
irrigation, flood control, and electric power
7Impact of the Great Depression Job Creation
Through Alphabet Agencies
- Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC)
- Provided employment for 3 million youths who
mightve turned to crime - They were employed in reforestation,
firefighting, flood control, and swamp drainage - Works Progress Administration (WPA)
- Objective was employment on useful projects
- Spent about 11 billion on thousands of public
buildings, bridges, and hard-surfaced roads
8Impact of the Great Depression Housing Reform
- Federal Housing Administration (FHA)
- Building industry was stimulated by small loans
to people who owned houses, to improve their
house or for completing new ones - U.S. Housing Authority (USHA)
- Designed to lend money to States or communities
for low-cost construction - 650,000 units were completed
- Slums shrank for the first time
- Predecessors of Housing and Urban Development
(HUD)
9How Successful Was the Trickle-Down Policy Under
Hoover?
- Hoover decided to assist the hard-pressed
railroads and banks in the hope that if financial
health were restored at the top of the economic
pyramid, unemployment would be relieved at the
bottom on a trickle-down basis - Proved that non-government interference wouldnt
help the economy. Most presidents before Hoover
had a policy of sweating it out when it came to
economic woes
10How Successful Were Public Works Project Under
Hoover?
- Got 2.25 billion for public works projects from
Congress - His efforts, when he intervened in the economy,
probably prevented a more serious collapse than
what happened - His expenditures for relief were revolutionary
for that day and paved the way for FDRs New Deal - However, they werent enough to improve the
economy
11How Successful Was the New Deal Under FDR?
- Advocates of the New Deal
- Some liked that Roosevelt was trying to do
something about the situation - Admitted some waste, but said that relief was the
primary objective - New Deal relieved the worst of the crisis in 1933
- Roosevelt accepted the principle that the
government was morally bound to help the welfare
of the people by managing the economy - The total collapse of Americas economic system
was averted Roosevelt saved the free enterprise
system
12How Successful Was the New Deal Under FDR?
- Advocates of the New Deal
- Unemployment went from 25 in 1933 to 15 in 1936
- A fairer distribution of the national income to
the workers, farmers, and poor was achieved - Citizens were given the opportunity to regain and
retain their self-respect - The socialist tendencies of the New Deal were
overblown and actually helped big businesses - Roosevelt preserved democracy and prevented
revolution when some countries were going down
the road of dictatorships
13How Successful Was the New Deal?
- Critics of the New Deal
- Some of the work that was being done was
wasteful it was just to give people jobs - Employed people who were not suited for the jobs
- Creating a lot of programs and employing people
doesnt necessarily mean that theres progress - The bureaucracy was growing the federal
government employed hundreds of thousands. The
State governments, on the other hand, were
becoming weaker
14How Successful Was the New Deal?
- Critics of the New Deal
- National debt
- 1932 - 19.5 billion
- 1939 - 40.5 billion
- Americans were becoming less self-reliant and
more reliant on government handouts - Too much planned economy and socialism
- Roosevelt was trying to run a dictatorship
- Better results couldve been achieved if more
deficit spending wouldve occurred Roosevelt
was merely applying bandaids - The New Deal didnt cure the depression WWII
cured it
15WWII Ended the Great Depression
- Billions of dollars in military orders (100
billion in 1942 alone) - Higher taxes paid for 41 of the war
- War bonds government savings bonds that
financed the war. Brought in about 156 billion.
Propaganda posters pushed the bond drive
16WWII Ended the Great Depression
- War Production Board
- Set up in January 1942 to direct the conversion
of peacetime industries to those that made war
goods - Typewriter plants were converted to machine guns
- Car factories were converted to bombers
- It assigned priorities for transportation and
access to raw materials - Gasoline was rationed
- Rubber was rationed (national speed limit)
- Office of Price Administration (OPA)
- Purpose was to prevent shortages from sending up
prices, which would cause inflation. It set
prices and could also distribute rationed items,
such as cars
17WWII Ended the Great Depression
- Farmers
- Although the soldiers drained food from farms,
heavy new investment in agricultural machinery
and improved fertilizes made up the difference - In 1944 and 1945, farmers brought in a record
billion bushels of wheat
18WWII Ended the Great Depression
- Armed Services
- Unemployment decreased as men were drafted
- Enlisted 15 million men and 216,000 women (for
noncombat duties) - WAACs (army), WAVES (navy), and SPARS (Coast
Guard)