Chapter 23 - The Great Depression and New Deal
Chapter 23 - The Great Depression and New Deal
Chapter 23 - The Great Depression and New Deal
Chapter 23
New Deal Acronyms
2. Decline in Trade
•US raised tariffs to protect American businesses
•Other nations responded by limiting trade with the US
•Europe also struggled with reparations and War debt
3. Consumer Debt
•Installment buying and buying on margin
•Buying on Margin…. Like buying stocks with a down payment
•Everything from cars/radios/tractors to stocks
4. Wealth inequality
•Poverty rate in 1930 was 40%
•If impoverished people lose jobs, their “purchasing
power” reduces
• then the economy collapses
Catalyst: Stock Market Crash, 1929
• 1920s speculation:
– Investors buy stocks hoping price increases
resulting in dividends
– Stock prices “artificially inflated” and did not
reflect true value of company (equipment,
property, sales, profit)
• Margin buying
– Borrow money to pay for stock, pay it back
with dividends
• Black Thursday - October 24, 1929
– Stock prices begin to fall
– This was a “catalytic event”
• Bankers met and agreed to buy stocks at inflated
prices to stop panic
– Temporarily worked
• Black Tuesday - October 29, 1929
– Severe drop in the market
– General Motors dropped from $73 to $8
– $40 billion lost in 2 months
Great Depression by the numbers:
•Gross National Product – from $104B (1929) to $56B (1932)
•20% of all banks closed
•30% of money supply evaporated
•25% unemployment (13m people) (not including farmers)
•1932 the worst year of the depression
Hoover and the Depression
• Did not believe government should get involved
in “direct relief”
– Tried to distribute aid to companies and state/local govt’s
– Philosophically opposed to the sort of government-people
relationship that FDR would use
• Election of 1932
– FDR wins in dramatic landslide, 60% popular vote
– Victory demonstrated Americans’ call for a new style
of government
– FDRs reform policies begin to encourage blacks to
shift from Republican to Democrat party
– “New Deal Coalition” lasted until 1968
• Farmers
• African-American (southern and urban)
• Labor unions
• Banking
• Wealthy liberals
• Women
First Inaugural Address
• “I am certain that my fellow Americans expect that, on my
induction into the Presidency, I will address them with a candor
and a decision which the present situation of our people impel.
This is preeminently the time to speak the truth, the whole truth,
frankly and boldly. Nor need we shrink from honestly facing
conditions in our country today. This great nation will endure as
it has endured, will revive and will prosper. So, first of all, let me
assert my firm belief that the only thing we have to fear is fear
itself—nameless, unreasoning, unjustified terror which
paralyzes needed efforts to convert retreat into advance. In
every dark hour of our national life a leadership of frankness
and vigor has met with that understanding and support of the
people themselves which is essential to victory. I am convinced
that you will again give that support to leadership in these
critical days.”
FDR and the Three R’s: Relief, Recovery, Reform
• People take money out of banks causing the banks to go
out of business
– “Bank Run” (4,000 banks closed)
– FDR declares 4 day bank holiday (March 6-10) to stop
• Managed Currency
– FDR ordered all gold to be surrendered to Treasury
1st New Deal (1933-34): Direct Relief
• Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC)
– Provided 3 million jobs working in national forests, flood control,
swamp drainage
– Required to send majority of wages to their families
• Frances Perkins
– First female member of cabinet
as Secretary of Labor
Frances Perkins
– Helped write Social Security
Act and Fair Labor Standards
Act
Cracks in the New Deal
Roosevelt Recession, 1937
•1933-37, GDP grew by 10% annually
•Unemployment dropped from 25% to 14%
•SO…. Congress defunded New Deal programs…
•Levels went back up