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The JAZZ Age

The JAZZ Age. 1920-1929. Causes of Prosperity. Government’s Role Limits Interference with Business Cuts taxes, debt and government spending Imposes higher tariffs to protect young industries. 2. Business Innovation and Technology

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The JAZZ Age

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  1. The JAZZ Age 1920-1929

  2. Causes of Prosperity • Government’s Role • Limits Interference with Business • Cuts taxes, debt and government spending • Imposes higher tariffs to protect young industries

  3. 2. Business Innovation and Technology • Mass production creates a wide range of consumer goods at low prices • Technology such as autos, airplanes, and radio leads to new industries and economic growth. • Business pays high wages

  4. 3. New Consumer Society • People have more disposable income and leisure time • Credit is more readily available • Mass advertising begins

  5. A Changing Society • Cultural Changes • New youth culture with a “new morality” develops • Young people and women gain independence • Working class enjoys more leisure time • New mass mediain radio, movies and sports develops

  6. 2. Changes for African Americans • Harlem Renaissance Begins • Literature reveals racial pride and contempt of racism • Jazz and Blues are popularized • Strong African American voting blocs in North • 1st African American from North elected to Congress • NAACP battles segregation and discrimination

  7. 3. Opposition to Change • Nativists and K.K.K. target immigrants, Catholics, Jews and African Americans • Gov. opposes new quotas on immigrants • Fundamentalists push for traditional values • Prohibition is implemented.

  8. Chapter 18 The Great Depression Begins

  9. Causes of the Great Depression LONG RANGE CAUSES • Uneven distribution of wealth ensures that many don’t have the $ to buy produced goods. • The FED keep interest rates too low, encouraging borrowing and businesses to produce more than market demands. • Overproduction floods market with goods that can’t be bought causing layoffs and closing of production.

  10. Immediate Causes • People and businesses borrow money to invest in the stock market • Speculation drives stock prices high and when they collapse many people lose all their money and many banks collapse when loans cannot be repaid. • Companies layoff workers so workers can’t buy goods. • This causes more layoffs and the cycle begins. • Government raises tariffs to protect American companies. • Foreign governments do the same and demand for American products falls, further hurting our companies.

  11. Effects of the Great Depression • Unemployment rises to record levels. • Many lose homes and farms • Homeless create “shantytowns” or “Hoovervilles” on edges of cities. • Hunger marches, farmer protests and veteran protests wanting their bonuses indicate the growing anger of the population. • Republicans rapidly lose support enabling Democrats to gain Congressional Control. • The Federal Government starts providing direct relief to citizens in need. • Movies, comic books and radio distract people from daily life.

  12. Random, yet Important • The stock market, prior to the crash in Oct. 1929, began to slide as investors began increasingly selling their stock. • The FED contributed to the weakness of the market by keeping interest rates low. • Before the FDIC, depositors lost their money when a bank collapsed. • The Securities and Exchange Commission was created to regulate the stock market. • Banks crashed due to investing their deposits in the market.

  13. More randomness • Farmers lost crops and profit due to the drought known as the dust bowl, which contributed to the Depression; the AAA paid farmers not to grow crops to try to help them recover • New Morality of the 1920s promoted individual freedom • Scopes was tried in court for teaching evolution. • Bonus Army- WWI Vets marched on Washington • Margin- investing in the market with borrowed money. • Bull Market- long period of rising stock prices

  14. Still Important • Ford used an efficient assembly line, separating specific and simple tasks for each person to do. • He developed his business model to make a cheap and affordable car, not to mass produce them. • Roosevelt thought that government need to intervene in the economy to help it, leading to Democrats gaining power. • 3 Rs: Recovery, Relief, Reform • Gold standard- every dollar was redeemable in gold before 1933

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