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Essential Question: What caused the Great Depression & how did the federal government respond?. The Great Depression. The Great Depression. The Depression of the 1930s came as a shock to Americans: The consumer revolution led to confidence that 1920s economic prosperity would continue
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Essential Question: • What caused the Great Depression & how did the federal government respond?
The Great Depression • The Depression of the 1930s came as a shock to Americans: • The consumer revolution led to confidence that 1920s economic prosperity would continue • When the stock market crashed in 1929, businesses closed & millions were unemployed • Americans began to look to the gov’t for unprecedented support
The Great Crash • Prelude to the stock market crash • In 1927, the economy had a recession but gov’t & business leaders ignored warning signs • The Federal Reserve lowering interest rates for loans would stimulate the economy, but this easy credit led speculators to buy stock on-the-margin
The Great Crash • An initial stock market crash on Oct 24, 1929 (Black Thursday) led to a catastrophic drop in stocks on Oct 29 (Black Tuesday) • Panicked investors sold stocks, causing stock prices to plummet • Banks lent less money, factories produced less, workers were fired or paid less → consumers had less money to spend → factories & businesses closed
Unemployment, 1929-1942 This downward spiral continued for 4 years; By 1932 unemployment was at 25%
The Great Crash • Reasons for the depression: • U.S. factories overproduced consumer durable goods • The post-war conditions in Europe decreased foreign trade • Unequal distribution of wealth, high consumer debt, stock market over speculation led to an overall decrease in consumer purchase power Consumers already owned durable goods & were not buying more
In 1929, the total market debt of the USA was 210% of the value of GDP By 1934, U.S. debt rose to 265% of GDP In 2005, the value of U.S. debt was 303% of GDP
Effects of the Great Depression • The Depression hit all classes: • Many families lost their homes or farms & were forced to live in “Hoovervilles” • The U.S. saw unprecedented poverty & suicide rates; fathers abandoned their families; lawlessness ensued • The U.S. gov’t offered relief checks to the unemployed
Effects of the Great Depression • African-Americans who had migrated to North were laid off • Mexican immigrants faced competition & deportation from angry Americans • The middle class was hit hard: • Refused relief checks & charity • Many lost their homes • Health care declined; doctor & dentist visits were “luxuries”
Hoover and Voluntarism “Rugged individualism” • Hoover’s initial response was to reassure Americans that prosperity would return • Hoover rejected bold gov’t action & called for volunteerism among charities, local gov’t, & business • As the depression worsened, Hoover called for gov’t projects like the Reconstruction Finance Corps (RFC) which loaned money to failing businesses
The Hoover administration initiated job-creation programs, like building the Hoover Dam
Hoover and Voluntarism • In 1932, President Hoover suffered two final blows: • When 22,000 war veterans marchedtothecapitaltodemand their WW1 bonus checks early, Hoover ordered this Bonus Army to be forcibly removed • The steady rise of bank failures led to a complete collapse of the U.S. banking system
Bonus Army Douglas MacArthur Dwight Eisenhower
Fighting the Depression • The inability of Republicans to resolve the economic depression opened the door for a Democratic takeover in politics • Once in power, Democrats succeeded in relieving some suffering, restored hope, & created an unprecedented level of gov’t intervention in the process