1 / 17

The Great Depression and the New Deal 1933-1939

The Great Depression and the New Deal 1933-1939. Objective: Students will understand the purposes and effectiveness of the New Deal and the shift of power from state to federal government . . FDR: Politician in a wheel Chair. Polio helped build his character

avital
Download Presentation

The Great Depression and the New Deal 1933-1939

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Great Depression and the New Deal 1933-1939 Objective: Students will understand the purposes and effectiveness of the New Deal and the shift of power from state to federal government.

  2. FDR: Politician in a wheel Chair • Polio helped build his character • Eleanor his wife, was a champion of the poor • Their relationship was rocky at best, he had several affairs • FDR was a great speaker and he used speeches often to communicate directly to the people over the radio • Nominated in 1932 on a wet platform that also promised to balance the budget • FDR toured the country assailing Hoover while Hoover stayed in the White House trying to consul the people • 22-15 million for FDR and 472 to 59 • 1932 election saw the shift of blacks to the Democratic party • In the lame duck period Hoover and FDR refused to work together and it made the Depression much worse

  3. FDR and the 3 R’s: Relief, Reform, and Recovery • Nationwide Banking Holiday March 6-10 • 100 days March 9-June 16 1933 • Passed much of his alphabet legislation • Brain Trust • Congress gave FDR more power than the Constitution allows, Americans were just happy they were moving even if it was in the wrong direction

  4. Roosevelt Manages the Money • Banking Holiday was ready in 8 short hours • Gave the president power to regulate bank transactions and reopen solvent banks when they were ready • Glass-Steagall Banking Reform Act 1933 • FDIC—insured individual investments up to $5,000 • Gave Americans their faith back in the banking system • Took the nation off the gold standard • Was hoping inflation would occur to help the debtors

  5. Creating Jobs for the Jobless • ¼ of Americans were unemployed • Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) 1933 • Employed more than 3 million young men: reforestation, firefighting, flood control, etc • Federal Emergency Relief Act (Agency) 1933 (FERA) • Harry Hopkins at the head • Gave $3 billion to states to distribute to the poor • Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA) 1933 • Helped farmers pay their mortgages • Homeowners Loan Corporation (HOLC) 1933 • Refinanced mortgages on non farm houses • Helped 1 million families • Helped banks from closing and made many homeowners democrats • Civil Works Administration (CWA) 1933 • Temporary jobs during the 1933-34 winter

  6. Helping Industry and Labor • National Recovery Administration (NRA) 1933 • Designed to help industry, labor, and unemployed • Long term and short term goals • Industry were to work out codes of fair competition, reduce hours of labor thus spreading out employment, set minimum wages • Labor was guaranteed the right to organize and bargain collectively • Philadelphia Eagles were created and named after the NRA—eagle was the NRA’s mascot • Schechter decision • Supreme Court declared NRA unconstitutional • Public Works Administration (PWA) • Intended for industrial recovery and unemployment relief • Headed by Secretary of Interior Harold L. Ickes • $4 billion spend on 34,000 projects, buildings, highways, etc • Grand Coulee Dam on the Columbia River • Liquor Industry was one of the few that recovered • Repeal of Prohibition

  7. Paying Farmers not to Farm • Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA) 1933 • Establish parity prices through artificial scarcity • Paid farmers to reduce acreage • Declared unconstitutional in 1936 • Actually did bring prices up • Soil Conservation and Domestic Allotment Act of 1936 • Paid farmers to plant crops that conserved soil like soybeans or let it lie fallow, unplanted • Second AAA • Still focused on conservation but had parity price bonuses on specific crops—wheat and cotton

  8. Dust Bowls and Black Blizzards • Drought in great plains from Colorado to Missouri • Dust Bowl • Made worse by overproduction, dry farming • Hundreds of thousands fled the dust bowl to California • Frazier-Lemke Farm Bankruptcy Act 1934 • Allowed a suspension of mortgage payment for 5 years, declared unconstitutional by courts until it was changed to 3 years • Resettlement Administration 1935 • Moved farmers onto better land and planted 200 million trees by CCC to act as wind breaks • Indian Reorganization Act 1934 • Tribes could establish local gov’t and preserve native cultures • Helped stop loss of Indian lands due to the Dawes Act

  9. Battling Bankers and Big Business • Federal Securities Act • Had to prove the soundness of stocks and bonds sold on the market • Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) • Watchdog for stock market

  10. TVA • Tennessee Valley Authority was created in 1933 • Most revolutionary of all New Deal programs—“planned economy” • Government owned utilities, cheap, no taxes • Couldn’t be done privately—too expensive • Full employment to the area along with cheap electricity, low cost housing, cheap fertilizer, stopped erosion, reforestation, etc

  11. Housing and Social Security • Federal Housing Administration (FHA) 1934 • Loans to homeowners for improvements or new houses • Very popular and outlasted FDR’s administration • United States Housing Authority (USHA) 1937 • Money to states or communities for low cost construction—low income housing • 1st time in America slum areas shrank • Social Security Act 1935 • Federal state unemployment insurance • Pensions for retired workers and disabled

  12. A New Deal for Labor • 1934 saw a lot of strikes as the New Deal legislation helped unemployment • 1935 Wagner or National Labor Relations Act • Created the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) • Rights to labor to organize and bargain collectively • Milestone in the labor movement • John L. Lewis—boss of United Mine Workers • 1935 he formed the Committee for Industrial Organization (CIO) inside the AF of L • AF of L pushed out the CIO and the CIO headed to the auto industry • CIO used sit in strikes in Michigan • CIO was recognized by GM as the sole bargaining agent for its employees • This was followed by several others granting CIO right to bargain collectively for it employees • Fair Labor and Standards Act 1938 • Minimum wage and maximum hours • Ended child labor in dangerous occupations • Left agriculture out

  13. Landon Challenges the Champ • Landon vs. FDR in 1936 • Republican platform against the debt of the New Deal • Republican carried only 2 states—Maine and Vermont • 27-16 million 523-8 for FDR • Rich vs. Poor • FDR formed a coalition with blacks, South, urbanites, and poor that lasts today

  14. 9 Old Men on the Bench • Supreme Court stood in FDR’s way • Turned down 7 of 9 New Deal legislation • Ultraconservative, none appointed by FDR • Court packing • FDR asked congress to allow him to appoint a new judge for everyone over 70—6 raising the court to 15 • FDR’s most costly political mistake • Seen as a dictator, tried to end separation of powers • Some of the judges started voting more liberal • “A Switch in Time Saves Nine” • Upheld minimum wage, Wagner Act, and Social Security • One judge also resigned and was replaced by Hugo Black

  15. Twilight of the New Deal • Unemployment dropped from 25-15% • 1937 economy took another downturn, depression in a depression dubbed the Roosevelt recession • Gov’t cut back on spending to balance the budget • Keynesianism—deficit spending • Became the policy of the gov’t • Hatch Act 1939 • Barred federal administrators from campaigning actively • Couldn’t use gov’t money for campaigning • Limited campaign contributions • By 1938 the New Deal lost steam and was all but over

  16. New Deal or Raw Deal? • Many criticized FDR for not doing enough while others said he did too much • Debt rose from 20 billion in 1932 to 40 billion in 1939 • Business was frustrated at FDR for his planned economy programs • Failed to cure the depression only acted as a band aid to it • WWII ended it not the New Deal

  17. FDR’s Balance Sheet • Waste and graft was fairly common • Most $ spent under the New Deal was on relief • Helped relieve the worst crises in US, saved economy, led to fairer distribution of wealth, gave people self respect, etc • FDR carried out a bold reform without revolution

More Related