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Chapter 23 Section 3. The Last days of the New Deal. Recession. A period of slow business activity The U.S. entered a recession in 1937 when the economy collapsed again. Why did the U.S. slide back into a recession in 1937?.
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Chapter 23 Section 3 The Last days of the New Deal
Recession • A period of slow business activity • The U.S. entered a recession in 1937 when the economy collapsed again
Why did the U.S. slide back into a recession in 1937? • Social security taxes meant workers had less money to spend and bought fewer goods • Consumers had less money because programs such as the WPA had been reduced in size
National Debt • The total amount of money the federal government borrows, and has to pay back • The government has to borrow whenever the amount of money it brings in is less than the amount it spends • The New Deal increased the national debt by $22billion
Why did FDR become concerned about the national debt? • New Deal programs had required borrowing massive amounts of money, causing the national debt to rise dramatically
Revenue • Income • Due to the New Deal, American spending surpassed its revenue
From reading section 3, explain why unemployment rose during 1937? • New Deal jobs programs provided initial relief, but only for certain segments of society. • Critics charged that government spending on jobs programs and public works projects wasted resources, interfered with free market economics, and expanded government bureaucracy
Coalition • An alliance of groups with similar goals • The CIO (Congress of Industrial Organizations) was a coalition of la or unions representing unskilled labor • The aim of this coalition was to challenge conditions in industry
Sit-down strike • A strike in which laborers stop working but refuse to leave the building. • Supporters outside would set up a picket line
What made sit-down strikes effective to some extent? • Together, sit-down strikers and picket line protesters would prevent companies from bringing in replacement workers
What gains and setbacks did unions experience during the New Deal Era? • Wagner Act protections and activism by union leaders allowed unions to grow dramatically. • Strikes were used as a tool, sometimes successfully. But sometimes leading to violent opposition • Eventually sit-down strikes were outlawed by the Supreme Court
What impact did the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO) have on union strategies? • The CIO helped to unite and organize the nation’s unskilled workers in mass-production industries, using the strike as the main tool in the quest for better wages and working conditions
Why did the federal government fund new arts programs during the Depression? • FDR believed that the arts were necessities, not luxuries. • Art and theater could create awareness of social problems, while employing many and fostering hope.
What did critics dislike about the Social Security System? • The payments were low • Women were discriminated against • It took from the paychecks of some, that had worked for it, in order to give to others