180 likes | 304 Views
FDR’s ‘New Deal’. The Depression Sets In. 1/4 of the American workforce was unemployed (15 million people) In rural areas in America prices for crops fell 40-60% and forced many farmers off their land
E N D
The Depression Sets In • 1/4 of the American workforce was unemployed (15 million people) • In rural areas in America prices for crops fell 40-60% and forced many farmers off their land • Not only did the depression affect American’s but it spread to Europe and eventually led to a collapse in the global economy
Dust Bowl • Series of Dust storms (1930-36) in the plains states resulting from sever drought and many years of over farming in the region • These storms forced people to move west, to California, a migration captured in John Steinbeck’s Grapes of Wrath
FDR’s Vision • Inaugurated in 1933-Franklin D. Roosevelt campaigned on the premise that he would reform the economic situation in America. • In is inauguration he asked for wide-sweeping executive power. • In his ‘first hundred days’ he implemented many new reforms
The First Round of New Deal Programs • 1933-aim was to provide short-term relief. • These reforms were wide-sweeping and meant to reach all areas of society • Created the AAA • Economy Act cut government pay and pensions
AAA(Agricultural Adjustment Administration) • Reduced the amount of crops grown through “domestic allotment” • Limited the production of: Corn, Cotton, Hogs, Dairy, Rice, Tobacco, and wheat • To supplement farmer’s income, the government paid farmers for the land they allowed to lay fallow
Constitutionality • The AAA provided relief in the agricultural sector. It started a trend toward the federal governments’ involvement in the agricultural sector • In 1936, concerns about the constitutionality of these programs • The AAA was ruled as unconstitutional: • "a statutory plan to regulate and control agricultural production, [is] a matter beyond the powers delegated to the federal government...” • The AAA was replaced with other programs that were deemed constitutionally sound
The Second Round of New Deal Programs • Took place in the period 1935–36 • Goal was to redistribute power away from the large corporations • Giving more power to farmers, coal workers, and consumers • The National Labor Relations Act (Wagner Act)-created the Works progress Administration and employed many in low-skill labor • The Second round of The New Deal also created the Social Security Act • Social Security gave pensions, unemployment insurance, and befits to the disabled
WPAWorks Progress Administration • Aim: To put people back to work • How the WPA did this: aimed to employ workers who lost their jobs during the depression • At it’s height the WPA employed over 3.3 million Americans • Jobs included everything from building bridges and parks to taking photographs and collecting stories of the depression.
CCC • Workers, almost all men, lived in army style camps and worked mostly outdoors. • Employed over 3 million people • The workers then sent back most of the wages earned to their families to support them. • The CCC workers planted trees, cleared forests, and constructed roads.
Political Impact on Texas • John Nance Garner “Cactus Jack” from Uvalde was Vice President during Roosevelt’s first term • Sam Rayburn was the Speaker of the House longer than any other legislator • Miram “Ma” Ferguson and W. Lee “Pappy”” O’Daniel were governors during the Depression
Economic Impact on Texas • New Deal programs employed over 100,000 Texans, built and repaired bridges, dams, roads and parks.
Lasting Effects of The New Deal • While programs like the CCC and AAA were cancelled during the depression or shortly after, others continue today in one form or another. • Social Security benefits for retired people, welfare, and medicare benefits all continue today.