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The Great Depression

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Title: The Great Depression


1
The Great Depression
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vJDcR-ZS5fyw

2
Historians disagree as to the causes of the Great
Depression. Most scholars would include
STOCK MARKET CRASH AND FINANCIAL PANIC
MONETARY POLICY
INDUSTRY
3
  • Lack of Diversification
  • Prosperity of 1920s had been based largely upon
    certain industries (automobiles and construction)
    that were starting to decline
  • Construction fell from 11 billion to 9 billion
    from 1926 to 1929
  • Newer emerging industries (petroleum, chemicals,
    plastics, consumer) had not developed enough to
    combat decline of others

4
  • Misdistribution of Wealth
  • Vast majority of wealth and increase in income in
    upper 1
  • Half of families lived at or below minimum
    subsistence level

5
Chart showing wages of unskilled workers. Notice
how little the wages changed during the supposed
prosperity of the 1920s.
6
  • Overproduction of goods and food products and
    decline in purchasing power
  • Extra manufactured goods mean cause layoffs,
    which make the recession more severe
  • Newer technology helped caused massive increases
    in farm production, causing vast decreases in
    prices of crops

7
Table shows the sharp decline in the prices of
various products from American farms
Agricultural product 1912-1913 1932-1933
Corn (per bushel) 0.56 0.20
Wheat (per bushel) 0.88 0.41
Oats (per bushel) 0.34 0.17
Butter (per lb) 0.21 0.13
Butterfat (per lb) 0.25 0.16
Wool (per lb) 0.24 0.10
Hogs (per cwt) 7.50 3.80
Milk (per cwt) 1.79 0.90
8
  • Consumer debt and the credit culture
  • Buying on credit throughout 1920s caused great
    expansion of debt
  • Farmers were deeply in debt from farm crisis in
    the 1920s

9
  • International trade and debt structure
  • Debt structure from World War I disrupted world
    economy
  • Allies struggled to pay back United States since
    Germany/Austria also unable to pay
  • US made new loans to Allies to pay older debts,
    furthering debt cycle
  • Fordney-McCumber Act in 1922 put high tariffs on
    industrial goods
  • Other countries used retaliatory tariffs
  • Decrease in foreign demand for US goods

10
  • Stock Market Crash
  • Sept. 1929 stock prices had peaked, rising over
    40 since May 1928
  • On Oct. 21 and 23, 1929 thousands of stocks were
    sold, which caused stock prices to fall
  • Black Tuesday Oct. 29, 1929 the bottom drops
    out of the market
  • Stocks lost 10-15 billion dollars that day
  • The crash brought an end to the prosperous 1920s

11
  • Speculation and the margin
  • Speculation-buying stocks at great risks hoping
    for prices to rise
  • Many banks invested unwisely in the stock market
  • Margin-investors purchase stocks by only making
    small initial payment and taking out loans for
    the rest
  • Margin call-banks could call in loans at anytime
    forcing quick sales of stocks and often inability
    to pay
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vDXFAf-V9Qpksafety_
    modetruepersist_safety_mode1

12
  • Stock Market Crash
  • Many of causes already in existence, but acts as
    catalyst for further chain of events

13
  • Poor banking practices and policies
  • Over 9000 banks go bankrupt or close their doors
    to avoid bankruptcy between 1930 and 1933
  • Money in the bank was not guaranteed and many
    experience runs on the bank that help force
    closures
  • Banks unable to loan more money due to losses
    from loans to speculators
  • Federal Reserve
  • Federal Reserve before Depression keeps interest
    rates very low which encourages more speculation
  • After Depression starts, Federal Reserve raises
    interest rates making it harder to pay

14
  • Collapse of American economy
  • Gross national product declines from 104 billion
    in 1929 to 76.4 billion in 1932
  • Capital investment decreased from 16.2 billion
    in 1929 to around 350 million in 1933
  • Consumer price index declined 25
  • Gross farm income dropped from 12 to 5 billion

15
Vast unemployment
  • Unemployment statistics
  • Roughly 25 of workforce was unemployed
  • 1/3 of workers experienced cuts in wages or hours
  • Unemployment averages 20 for 1930s

16
  • Conditions for unemployed
  • Unemployment viewed as personal failure, shame,
    and challenge to masculinity
  • State and local relief agencies unable to serve
    vast numbers
  • Charities attempt to support, but struggle
  • Nearly 2 million take to the roads and rails

17
Conditions for minorities and women
  • Often excluded from relief programs
  • Racist hiring practices in the South lead to 50
    African-American unemployment
  • Many blacks move north, but economic conditions
    little better
  • Hispanics in west displaced from jobs, many
    deported and given little access to relief or
    services in the Southwest
  • Chinese and Japanese in West are displaced and
    attempt assimilation efforts
  • Many women discouraged from working if married,
    but female employment actually increases by 20
  • Jobs held by women were less effected and men
    often less interested in the positions

18
Farming Crisis and the Dust Bowl
  • Farmers already struggling and 1/3 lost land
  • Drought known as the Dust Bowl began in the
    Great Plains in 1930 from Texas to the Dakotas
  • Sweeping winds carried soil away or buried
    beneath dust
  • Grasshoppers destroyed many remaining crops
  • Many abandoned farming to move to California in
    search of jobs (the Okies)
  • Okies portrayed in Grapes of Wrath
  • Malnutrition and hunger become increasing
    problems due to financial and farm crises
  • http//www.history.com/shows/america-the-story-of-
    us/videos/the-hoover-damamerica-black-blizzard

19
(No Transcript)
20
States Affected by Dust
21
Politics of Hoover
  • Hoover was elected in 1928 after overseeing
    growth of economy as Secretary of Commerce
  • Believed US economy was strong and could recover,
    initially without much government aid

22
(No Transcript)
23
  • Hoover opposed deficit spending, fearing it would
    make the economy recover more slowly
  • Hoover also opposed direct relief (money) going
    from the federal government to the impoverished
  • http//www.history.com/shows/america-the-story-of-
    us/videos/the-hoover-damthe-hoover-dam

"I do not believe that the power and duty of the
General Government ought to be extended to the
relief of individual suffering. . . . The lesson
should be constantly enforced that though the
people support the Government the Government
should not support the people." (1930)
24
Policies of Hoover to end the Depression
  • Initially tried to downplay public fear
  • Volunteerism Got industries to pledge to keep
    factories open and not cut wages, but ultimately
    fails
  • Initially able to use business connections
  • Promises were broken by 1931 due to economic
    collapse

25
  • Use and rejection of public works projects
  • Encouraged state and local governments to use
    public works projects to create jobs
  • Initially proposed 423 million increase in
    federal spending on public works
  • Abandons when economy worsens in order to keep
    the budget balanced
  • Proposes tax increase in 1932 to help government
    avoid debt

26
  • Agricultural Marketing Act
  • Created federally sponsored Farm Board to make
    loans to marketing cooperatives or corporations
    to buy surpluses
  • Hawley-Smoot Tariff of 1930 increased tariffs on
    75 farm products to attempt to protect farmers

27
  • Reconstruction Finance Corporation, established
    in 1932
  • Made to provide federal loans to troubled banks,
    railroads, and other businesses
  • Loans generally only given to those with large
    collateral
  • Budgeted 1.5 billion for public works
  • Did not spend much of budgeted amounts and only
    really invested in projects that would eventually
    pay for themselves (toll bridges, public housing)

28
Backlash Against Hoover
  • Decline in popularity
  • Democrats gain control of House in 1930
  • Shanty towns established outside cities become
    known as Hoovervilles
  • Hoover only passes larger measures after economy
    experiences large drop in 1931
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vsfylLnHjcu0

29
Family
30
US Hooverville
31
  • Well, Everything Helps (1930 or 1931)
  • Herb Block, Chicago Daily News
  • Library of Congress
  • As the Depression tightened its hold on American
    life, avid angler President Herbert Hoover cast
    about for ways to improve the economy. He
    sometimes took working vacations at his fishing
    camp on the Rapidan River (now in Shenandoah
    National Park) with members of Congress and his
    administration.

32
  • Hunger Marches
  • Organized by American Communist Party to demand
    increased taxation of rich to feed poor
  • Revolts by farmers
  • Farmers had large mortgages to pay for land and
    equipment and had farms foreclosed
  • Farmers destroy crops in attempt to raise prices

33
Bonus Marchers
  • US government in 1924 had promised WWI veterans a
    bonus to be paid in 1945
  • Bill was in Congress to allow early payment due
    to the depression
  • More than 20,000 veterans march on Washington
    forming the Bonus Army, vowing to stay in
    Hooverville camps in Washington until the law was
    passed

34
  • Senate votes down the bill and many return home
  • Hoover ordered the camps to be cleared by police
    and two veterans die after resisting
  • Sends in US Army to clear out camps, with tanks
    sent down Pennsylvania Avenue and the tent city
    burnt to the ground
  • Acts as perhaps final blow to Hoovers public
    image
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vdWvCCxOUsM8safety_
    modetruepersist_safety_mode1

35
Election of 1932
  • Hoover ran for reelection from the Republican
    Party
  • Franklin Delano Roosevelt, governor of New York,
    runs for the Democrats
  • FDR popular for use of government funds in NY to
    help people and for struggle against polio
  • Emphasizes economic issues in the campaign
  • Promises a New Deal for the American people,
    but gives few specifics for plan

36
Hoover in 1928
37
  • Roosevelt wins in a landslide (472-59)
  • Democrats won majorities in both houses of
    Congress

38
The Interregnum or Lame Duck period
  • FDR had to wait until March 4, 1933 to take
    office
  • Hoover attempts to get FDR to promise traditional
    economic practices, FDR refuses
  • Banking collapse worsens in February 1933
  • Hoover asks FDR to make promises against
    adjusting currency, heavy borrowing, or increase
    in debt, FDR refuses
  • FDR survives assassination attempt in Miami on
    February 15, 1933 by Giuseppe Zangara, who
    accidentally kills the mayor of Chicago during
    the shooting

39
(No Transcript)
40
  • FDR inaugurated on March 4, 1933
  • 20th Amendment Ratified on January 23, 1933
  • Newly elected presidents take office on January
    20 instead of March 4
  • Congress starts their terms on January 3

41
"Brother, Can You Spare a Dime," Lyrics by Yip
Harburg, music by Jay Gorney (1931) They used
to tell me I was building a dream, and so I
followed the mob, When there was earth to plow,
or guns to bear, I was always there right on the
job. They used to tell me I was building a
dream, with peace and glory ahead, Why should I
be standing in line, just waiting for bread?
Once I built a railroad, I made it run, made it
race against time. Once I built a railroad now
it's done. Brother, can you spare a dime? Once I
built a tower, up to the sun, brick, and rivet,
and lime Once I built a tower, now it's done.
Brother, can you spare a dime? Once in khaki
suits, gee we looked swell, Full of that Yankee
Doodly Dum, Half a million boots went slogging
through Hell, And I was the kid with the
drum! Say, don't you remember, they called me Al
it was Al all the time. Why don't you remember,
I'm your pal? Buddy, can you spare a dime? Once
in khaki suits, gee we looked swell, Full of
that Yankee Doodly Dum, Half a million boots
went slogging through Hell, And I was the kid
with the drum! Say, don't you remember, they
called me Al it was Al all the time. Say, don't
you remember, I'm your pal? Buddy, can you spare
a dime?
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