The Great Depression

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "The Great Depression"

Transcription

1 The Great Depression

2 Causes: Economic problems (late 1920 s): 1. Post war economic boom is slowing down: War related industries suffer Consumer spending levels off Less foreign markets for goods (tariffs)

3 2. Agricultural slump: WWI boom is over & demand dropped (prices fell by as much as 40%) So Farmers increased production (to pay off loans) Increased supply caused prices to fall faster From 1919 to 1921 total farm income fell from $10 billion to $4 billion Banks began to foreclose on the farmers (seize their farms) As farmers began to default on their loans many rural banks failed (went out of business) Causing a ripple effect throughout the economy

4 Wheat Prices Year Price per Bushel (in dollars)

5 3. Consumers have less money to spend: Consumers faced: Rising prices Stagnant wages Unbalanced distribution of income (70% of the country earned $2,500 per year This meant 70% of the country lived at the poverty line) Credit problems (consumers bought too much on credit during the 1920 s, had to pay it back and cut out other spending)

6 Income Distribution, $10,000 and Over $5,000-$9,999 $2,000-$4,999 $1,999 and under

7 1928 Presidential Election 1. Hoover (R) won the Blue States and his opponent, Alfred E. Smith (D) won the Red States 2. Hoover got 58% of the popular vote and 83% of the Electoral Votes.

8 Terms: Stock: Stock Market Collapses: buying a % of a Company Stock Market (NY Stock Exchange): Where stocks are traded Dow Jones Industrial Average: A compilation of industry leading companies, an economic indicator Speculation: involvement in a risky economic proposition, you think it will be worth more later Buying on Margin: purchase a stock by paying a small amount of the cost, borrow the rest

9 Stock Market Collapses: Black Tuesday (Causes & effect): As the economy slowed, so did sales Over production meant companies were overvalued Once investors began to dump stocks, it couldn t be stopped 16.4 million stocks were dumped in one day By mid-november, investors had lost $30 billion As companies and investors lost everything, the crash sped up the economic collapse-helping to make the Great Depression worse

10

11

12 Stock Prices Average Montly Value $ Year

13 Bank failures: As the economic panic set in, people rushed to banks to get their savings Banks only keep a % of the money deposited on hand, the rest is lent out or was invested in the Stock Market banks closed. By ,000 out of the countries 25,000 banks had failed Millions of people lost their life savings Business failures: Between 1929 and 1932 the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) was cut in half (from $104 billion to $59 billion) About 90,000 businesses go bankrupt Unemployment went from 3% (1.6 million workers) in 1929 to 25% (13 million workers) in 1933

14 Bank Failures Business Failures Banks (in thousands) '29 '30 '31 '32 '33 Businesses (in Thousands) '29 '30 '31 '32 '33

15 Unemployed (in millions) Unemployment Year

16 Causes of the Great Depression (US): 1. Tariffs & war debts cut down on foreign markets for US goods 2. Crisis in the farm sector 3. Overuse of credit 4. Unequal distribution of income BUT, this was a global depression The economies of Europe, Asia, Latin America and the US had become interconnected. When one suffered, they all suffered

17 World wide depression: Europe suffered throughout the 1920 s (high debts, lack of trade and reconstruction cost) 1930 Congress passed the Hawley-Smoot Tariff Act: Highest protective tariff in US history US trade fell by 40% within 3 years

18 Hardship and Suffering

19 Hardship and Suffering Cities: Shanty Towns (later called Hoovervilles ): Soup Kitchens/Bread lines: Rural areas: From 1929 to ,000 farms were lost from foreclosure

20

21

22 Caused by: Dust Bowl: Drought (early 1930 s) Native prairie grasses and trees gone Farmers had exhausted the land (overproduction) Farmers lost their farms and moved west

23

24

25 American Family Families broke a part Men went looking for jobs Women would stay behind a try to raise/survive the family Children Worked (sweatshops) Malnutrition, diet related diseases

26 Hoover s Response

27 Herbert Hoover: Born: Iowa Education: Stanford, degree in engineering Elected 31 st President of the U.S. Hoover s Views America must remain optimistic Economy was going to fixed itself Hands off government Encourage cooperation No direct relief or welfare

28 Hoover s response: 1. At first, President Hoover was against offering direct government relief Instead, he asked private charities, such as the YMCA & Red Cross to help

29 2. Used limited government relief in the form of works projects : Boulder Dam (re-named Hoover Dam) $700 million project to provide electricity to the Colorado river area This provided much needed jobs and hoped to jump-start the economy Hoover s response :

30 Hoover s response: 3. More direct government intervention: Federal Home Loan Bank Act (1932): lowered mortgage rates in an effort to stop bank foreclosures on farms Reconstruction Finance Corporation (1932):authorized $2 billion for emergency relief to banks, insurance companies, RR s and other large businesses ( Trickledown economics )

31

32 The Bonus Army: Veterans of WW I promised a bonus to be paid in 1945 (cash and a life insurance policy) They wanted the bonus in 1932 Congress rejected the idea Most of the 10,000 to 20,000 marchers left. After Congress voted not to pay the bonus, but about 2,000 stayed

33 Bonus Army Marchers (con t) Army was sent in under the command of General Douglas MacArthur and Major Dwight D. Eisenhower Orders to contain the protesters MacArthur decided to remove them from Washington DC They gassed the former soldiers and their families An 11 month old baby died and an 8 year old was blinded Americans were outraged and blamed Hoover

34

35

36

37

! March 1929-Pres. Herbert Hoover. ! Credit

! March 1929-Pres. Herbert Hoover. ! Credit ! March 1929-Pres. Herbert Hoover! Credit Credit reached $7 Billion Dollars Government encouraged borrowing by keeping low interest rates Experts warned: in an economic downturn, such debt would cripple

More information

Essential Question: What caused the Great Depression?

Essential Question: What caused the Great Depression? Essential Question: What caused the Great Depression? CPUSH Agenda for Unit 10.5: Clicker Questions Causes of the Great Depression activity and notes Today s HW: 22.1 Unit 10 Test: Monday, February 4 The

More information

The Great Depression is one of the most misunderstood events in American history

The Great Depression is one of the most misunderstood events in American history The Great Depression is one of the most misunderstood events in American history Some point to the Crash of the Stock Market as the cause of the Depression Not true. Some blame Herbert Hoover, claiming

More information

The Great Depression. Chapter 11

The Great Depression. Chapter 11 The Great Depression Chapter 11 Herbert Hoover - HE S FROM IOWA! Ran against Smith Won 444 electoral votes to Smith s 87 Won the election while things were still really good! Very prosperous time. It would

More information

Can the Republicans lose?

Can the Republicans lose? Can the Republicans lose? Coolidge: I choose not to run Republicans: Herbert Hoover (Secretary of Commerce) Seen as capable administrator Had never run for elected office New York Governor Al Smith Problem

More information

Why did the Great Depression Happen?

Why did the Great Depression Happen? Why did the Great Depression Happen? 1920s 1930s What Happened? 1 Things were good during the 1920s Republican Presidents = Laissez faire economics = little to no regulation of businesses, low taxes Businesses

More information

Essential Declarative: Analyze 5 main causes of the Great Depression.

Essential Declarative: Analyze 5 main causes of the Great Depression. Essential Declarative: Analyze 5 main causes of the Great Depression. Oklahoma Standards Content Standard 3: The student will analyze the cycles of boom and bust of the 1920s and 1930s on the transformation

More information

APUSH REVIEWED! POLITICS OF THE TWENTIES & START OF THE GREAT DEPRESSION. Politics of the 1920s HANDLING BUSINESS 2/4/16

APUSH REVIEWED! POLITICS OF THE TWENTIES & START OF THE GREAT DEPRESSION. Politics of the 1920s HANDLING BUSINESS 2/4/16 2/4/16 APUSH 1920-1932 POLITICS OF THE TWENTIES & START OF THE GREAT DEPRESSION REVIEWED! American Pageant (Kennedy) Chapter 32 American History (Brinkley) Chapter 22-23 America s History (Henretta) Chapter

More information

The 1920s: Crash & Depression

The 1920s: Crash & Depression The 1920s: Crash & Depression Legacy of the 1920 s The Business of America is Business. Calvin Coolidge How does this statement explain the decade of the 1920 s? The Business of America The Business Cycle

More information

Causes of the Great Depression

Causes of the Great Depression The Great Depression What caused the most severe economic crisis in American history? What impact did the Great Depression have on Americans? How did the federal government respond to the economic collapse

More information

Hoover and the Crash. Chapter 23, Section 1. Why the economy collapsed after the stock market crash. Yet stock prices continued to skyrocket.

Hoover and the Crash. Chapter 23, Section 1. Why the economy collapsed after the stock market crash. Yet stock prices continued to skyrocket. Why the economy collapsed after the stock market crash. Hoover and the Crash Chapter 23, Section 1 The prosperity many Americans enjoyed came to a sudden halt in 1929. During the Great Depression, poverty

More information

The Great Depression

The Great Depression The Great Depression 1929-1933 Causes Bank Failures Business Failures Unemployment Income & Spending Stock Market Speculation Bank Failures Banks had invested in the Stock Market Couldn t get the money

More information

The Great Depression ( )

The Great Depression ( ) The Great Depression (1929-1942) Essential Question: How did the Great Depression cause a complete halt in the active cultural life of the Roaring Twenties? Credit Debt (p. 337) Many people did not want

More information

The Great Depression. Unit 7: National Crisis

The Great Depression. Unit 7: National Crisis The Great Depression Unit 7: National Crisis Standard SSUSH17- The student will analyze the causes and consequences of the Great Depression. a. Describe the causes, including overproduction, underconsumption,

More information

APUSH POLITICS OF THE TWENTIES & START OF THE GREAT DEPRESSION

APUSH POLITICS OF THE TWENTIES & START OF THE GREAT DEPRESSION APUSH 1920-1932 POLITICS OF THE TWENTIES & START OF THE GREAT DEPRESSION REVIEWED! Watch the video American Pageant Chapter 32 starting at 10:08 and annotate the slides Read pages 462-523 in The Americans

More information

VUS.10b-d: The Great Depression

VUS.10b-d: The Great Depression Name: Date: Period: VUS10b-d: The Great Depression Notes VUS10b-d: The Great Depression 1 Objectives about The Great Depression VUS10 The student will demonstrate knowledge of key domestic events of the

More information

Do now: From Boom to Bust

Do now: From Boom to Bust Do now: From Boom to Bust The Roaring 20 s was one of the most prosperous times in American History, however much of that prosperity disappeared almost as quickly as it appeared during the 1930 s. 1) How

More information

THE GREAT DEPRESSION. Unit VII: New World Power

THE GREAT DEPRESSION. Unit VII: New World Power THE GREAT DEPRESSION Unit VII: New World Power CONTRIBUTIONS: SPECULATION Speculation: The practice of buying stocks in order to resell for a profit. Dramatically increased demand Stock prices triple Marginal

More information

The Great Depression and the New Deal

The Great Depression and the New Deal The Great Depression and the New Deal The Causes and Consequences of America s most significant economic downturn Mr. Sean McAtee Iroquois High School Elma, New York The 1920s had been a period of prosperity

More information

CAUSES of the GREAT DEPRESSION s

CAUSES of the GREAT DEPRESSION s CAUSES of the GREAT DEPRESSION 1929-1930s Tuesday, October 29,1929 Black Tuesday stock market plunges Stocks lost their value because all at once, many people wanted to sell shares and very few buying

More information

THE GREAT DEPRESSION & NEW DEAL, UNIT 7: CAUSES OF THE GREAT DEPRESSION

THE GREAT DEPRESSION & NEW DEAL, UNIT 7: CAUSES OF THE GREAT DEPRESSION THE GREAT DEPRESSION & NEW DEAL, 1929-1941 UNIT 7: CAUSES OF THE GREAT DEPRESSION ORIGINS AND CAUSES Extreme wealth inequalities Big difference between rich and poor Ballooning stock market Over speculation

More information

Unit 7. The Great Depression and the New Deal. Wednesday, February 29, 12

Unit 7. The Great Depression and the New Deal. Wednesday, February 29, 12 Unit 7 The Great Depression and the New Deal I. What was the Great Depression? A period lasting from 1929-1941 The longest, deepest and most damaging economic downturn in the 20th Century A time in which

More information

Causes of The Great Depression

Causes of The Great Depression Causes of The Great Depression The Great Depression was a worldwide event: By 1929, unemployment increases worldwide A Slow Lead-Up In the first 4 years of the GD (1929-1933) GDP fell by 30% (real economic

More information

VUS.10b-d: The Great Depression

VUS.10b-d: The Great Depression Name: Date: Period: VUS10b-d: The Great Depression Filled In Notes VUS10b-d: The Great Depression 1 Objectives about The Great Depression VUS10 The student will demonstrate knowledge of key domestic events

More information

World Book Online: Overview of the Great Depression

World Book Online: Overview of the Great Depression World Book Online: The trusted, student-friendly online reference tool. Name: Date: Overview of the Great Depression The Great Depression changed the lives of millions of people around the world who were

More information

The World Before The Great Depression

The World Before The Great Depression The World Before The Great Depression The Great Depression can be described as the total collapse of the US economic system of Capitalism, laissez faire and everything we believed in as a country. Our

More information

Hoover s Attempts to End the

Hoover s Attempts to End the Hoover s Attempts to End the Depression Chapter 9, Lesson 3 Front side of pages 89 and 90 Rugged Individualism Basically Americans fend for themselves no matter the obstacles. We could fix the economywithout

More information

4/29/16. Mr. McMurray Honors US History

4/29/16. Mr. McMurray Honors US History Mr. McMurray Honors US History The superficial economy shows its true colors!!! The massive amount of credit inflated personal debt for American families What problem does lending create for banks? Post-WWI

More information

Low point in Hoover's Presidency

Low point in Hoover's Presidency President Hoover By the last year of his Presidency, Hoover becomes widely unpopular. Insisted state and local government should handle relief. Responsible for the Hawley-Smoot tariff, highest import tax

More information

THE GREAT DEPRESSION & NEW DEAL

THE GREAT DEPRESSION & NEW DEAL THE GREAT DEPRESSION & NEW DEAL 1929-1940 I. Intro As the Roaring Twenties came to a close, the downturn in the economy signaled the end of an era. The stock market crash of 1929 marked the beginning of

More information

Unit 7. The Great Depression and the New Deal. Thursday, March 1, 12

Unit 7. The Great Depression and the New Deal. Thursday, March 1, 12 Unit 7 The Great Depression and the New Deal I. What was the Great Depression? A period lasting from 1929-1941 The longest, deepest and most damaging economic downturn in the 20th Century A time in which

More information

Unit VII: The Great Depression and the New Deal

Unit VII: The Great Depression and the New Deal Unit VII: The Great Depression and the New Deal Essential Questions: 1. What were the causes of the Great Depression? 2. What is the role of government during a crisis? 3. How do people respond to economic

More information

The Great Depression Descends Upon America

The Great Depression Descends Upon America The Great Depression Descends Upon America 1929-1939 The Post-War Economic Boom Twenties Prosperity Our American experiment in human welfare has yielded a degree of well- being unparalleled in the world.

More information

Causes of the Great Depression Only about 3-4% of Americans owned stocks in 1929, but about 25% of Americans were unemployed by Why???

Causes of the Great Depression Only about 3-4% of Americans owned stocks in 1929, but about 25% of Americans were unemployed by Why??? Causes of the Great Depression Only about 3-4% of Americans owned stocks in 1929, but about 25% of Americans were unemployed by 1932. Why??? Contributing Background Factors Developing During 1920s Leading

More information

Great Depression = economic hardship during the 1930s with high unemployment and poverty (very poor)

Great Depression = economic hardship during the 1930s with high unemployment and poverty (very poor) 1929-1939 the economic boom of the 1920s caused problems an economic BUST in the 1930 and changed people s the attitudes about the role of government in controlling the economy Great Depression = economic

More information

HOW DID THE GREAT DEPRESSION EFFECT AMERICA? SS8

HOW DID THE GREAT DEPRESSION EFFECT AMERICA? SS8 HOW DID THE GREAT DEPRESSION EFFECT AMERICA? SS8 WARM UP: Complete Your Stock market simulation Turn it in WRAP UP OF ECONOMY (DO NOT WRITE THIS) War time production made the US s economy go BOOM Middle

More information

Things were going well, everyone wanted in Many borrowed money to buy more stocks

Things were going well, everyone wanted in Many borrowed money to buy more stocks Chapters 30-33 Bull Market Steady rise in stock prices Speculative Buying Things were going well, everyone wanted in Many borrowed money to buy more stocks Bear Market Steady drop in stock prices Fearful

More information

What Caused the Great Depression? /13/2017

What Caused the Great Depression? /13/2017 1929-1939 1939 What Caused the Great Depression? 1.Not Enough Buyers 2.Too Much Debt 3.Over-Speculation in Stocks 4.Overproduction & Layoffs 5.Farming Crisis 6.Government Mistakes 1 1. Not Enough Buyers

More information

Great Depression Economic history Timing and severity

Great Depression Economic history Timing and severity 1 Great Depression Worldwide economic downturn that began in 1929 and lasted until about 1939. It was the longest and most severe depression ever experienced by the industrialized Western world. Although

More information

Great Depression Vocabulary

Great Depression Vocabulary Yee Haw Game Welcome Back Bell Ringer: Great Depression Vocabulary List 4-5 things you did over your break! FYI: Spiral Check Jan 12 This shows how many points for each round in Round 1-3 based on your

More information

The Great Crash Ch 21-1

The Great Crash Ch 21-1 The Great Crash Ch 21-1 The Main Idea The stock market crash of 1929 revealed weaknesses in the American economy and trigger a spreading economic crisis. Learning Goal/Content Statement Content Statement

More information

CH 32- Beginning of the Great Depression

CH 32- Beginning of the Great Depression CH 32- Beginning of the Great Depression Analyze the factors that Caused the Great Depression, how American lives were negatively impacted, and Government s negligence in reacting to help Americans in

More information

The Causes of the Great Depression. A Depressing Power Point Presentation Brought to You by Ms. Shen

The Causes of the Great Depression. A Depressing Power Point Presentation Brought to You by Ms. Shen The Causes of the Great Depression A Depressing Power Point Presentation Brought to You by Ms. Shen What is the difference between a recession and a depression? Recession: A period of temporary economic

More information

The Great Depression. What caused the greatest economic disaster in American History, and how were people affected?

The Great Depression. What caused the greatest economic disaster in American History, and how were people affected? The Great Depression What caused the greatest economic disaster in American History, and how were people affected? Learning Target Explain how the Great Depression started. The Roaring Twenties In the

More information

Chapter 17 Section 1 Causes of the Depression. Click on a hyperlink to view the corresponding slides.

Chapter 17 Section 1 Causes of the Depression. Click on a hyperlink to view the corresponding slides. Chapter 17 Section 1 Causes of the Depression Click on a hyperlink to view the corresponding slides. continued on next slide Guide to Reading Main Idea Inflated stock prices, overproduction, high tariffs,

More information

THE GREAT DEPRESSION

THE GREAT DEPRESSION THE GREAT DEPRESSION PROBLEMS ARE BREWING! Uneven distribution of wealth- huge gap between rich and poor- rich incredibly wealthy while poor saw only minor growth Rising prices swallow up any increase

More information

The Great Crash Chapter 11 Sect. 1. Prosperity. The Stock Market

The Great Crash Chapter 11 Sect. 1. Prosperity. The Stock Market The Great Crash Chapter 11 Sect. 1 Prosperity GDP went up 30% from 1922-1928 People bought cars and appliances like crazy; in turn these companies hired workers and kept them prosperous. Unemployment was

More information

Unequal Distribution of Wealth High Tariffs and War Debts Overproduction in Industry and Agriculture 1928 Presidential Election Farm crisis Federal

Unequal Distribution of Wealth High Tariffs and War Debts Overproduction in Industry and Agriculture 1928 Presidential Election Farm crisis Federal 1 Unequal Distribution of Wealth High Tariffs and War Debts Overproduction in Industry and Agriculture 1928 Presidential Election Farm crisis Federal Reserve Monetary Policy Stock Market Crash and Financial

More information

Great Depression. Brother can you spare a dime?

Great Depression. Brother can you spare a dime? Great Depression Brother can you spare a dime? OBJ #1 - Describe the CAUSES and START of the Great Depression. How did Overproduction affect both farmers and industry? What system collapsed and caused

More information

Name Class Pd Teacher Units 9 & 10 - Great Depression/New Deal Test Review

Name Class Pd Teacher Units 9 & 10 - Great Depression/New Deal Test Review Name Class Pd Teacher Units 9 & 10 - Great Depression/New Deal Test Review I. Who to know: Herbert Hoover Franklin D. Roosevelt Francis Perkins Okie Father Charles Coughlin Francis Townshend Bonus Army

More information

Causes of the Great Depression

Causes of the Great Depression Monday December 1, 2014 1. Why do you think people invest in stocks (the stock market)? 2. Complete the statement: What goes up must. 3. Describe what you think depression means? Causes of the Great Depression

More information

Clue Sheet #2 Answer Sheet

Clue Sheet #2 Answer Sheet Clue Sheet #2 Answer Sheet Labor & Employment Directions: Visit the website associated with each topic. Answer the questions in a complete sentence. Go to Overall Unemployment Rate in Civilian Labor Force,

More information

The Great Depression & The New Deal. Chapters 9 & 10

The Great Depression & The New Deal. Chapters 9 & 10 The Great Depression & The New Deal Chapters 9 & 10 The Great Depression-Causes Not agreed upon by all historians Combination of domestic and worldwide conditions including Stock Market Crash of 1929 Bank

More information

Causes of the Great Depression. World History 3201

Causes of the Great Depression. World History 3201 Causes of the Great Depression World History 3201 Unit Overview World-wide economic downturn from 1929-1939 Began with the crash of the stock market on October 29, 1929 (Black Tuesday) Dirty Thirties Breadlines,

More information

The Causes of the Great Depression

The Causes of the Great Depression The Causes of the Great Depression Adapted from http://subscriptions.teachtci.com/teacher/learn/sections/8358, http://www.pbs.org/kenburns/dustbowl/legacy/, and a prior History Alive lesson The door to

More information

Crash and Depression. Bust and Bummer

Crash and Depression. Bust and Bummer Crash and Depression Bust and Bummer Song: We'd Like to Thank You Lyrics Today we're living in a shanty Today we're scrounding for a meal Today I'm stealing coal for fires Who knew i could steal? I used

More information

The Economy of the 1920s and the Market Crash of Introduction: The Second Industrial Revolution

The Economy of the 1920s and the Market Crash of Introduction: The Second Industrial Revolution The Economy of the 1920s and the Market Crash of 1929 Introduction: The Second Industrial Revolution 1 Learning Objectives Explain the elements of the economic changes of the 1920s. Analyze the weaknesses

More information

Financial Crises: A Focus on the Great Depression

Financial Crises: A Focus on the Great Depression Financial Crises: A Focus on the Great Depression Economies can register boom and bust Crises in History: Tulip mania - Netherlands 1637 South Seas Bubble, UK 1720 The Mississippi Bubble, France 1720 Panic

More information

What you should have learnt so far:

What you should have learnt so far: What you should have learnt so far: What was the Wall Street Crash? What were the causes of the Wall Street Crash? What you re going to learn this week and next: What was the Great Depression? Why did

More information

WHAT IS STOCK? COMPANY INVESTOR

WHAT IS STOCK? COMPANY INVESTOR WHAT IS STOCK? COMPANY INVESTOR WHAT IS STOCK? COMPANY INVESTOR WHAT IS STOCK? COMPANY INVESTOR PROFITS WHAT IS STOCK? COMPANY INVESTOR INVESTOR #2 PROFITS WHAT IS STOCK? COMPANY INVESTOR INVESTOR #2 PROFITS

More information

President Coolidge decided not to run again in the 1928 for President. This cleared the way for Herbert Hoover to run on the Republican ticket.

President Coolidge decided not to run again in the 1928 for President. This cleared the way for Herbert Hoover to run on the Republican ticket. The Causes of the Great Depression President Coolidge decided not to run again in the 1928 for President. This cleared the way for Herbert Hoover to run on the Republican ticket. Herbert Hoover Background

More information

The Great Depression

The Great Depression The 1920s were a time of great prosperity in the United States, but a series of events throughout the decade would later lead to the Great Depression of the 1930s. The Stock Market Crash of 1929 was the

More information

THE GREAT DEPRESSION BEGINS. Photos by photographer Dorothea Lange

THE GREAT DEPRESSION BEGINS. Photos by photographer Dorothea Lange THE GREAT DEPRESSION BEGINS Photos by photographer Dorothea Lange 1920 s Problems Factories making too Much; Farms growing too much BANKS Have NO $$ PEOPLE LOST SAVINGS & JOBS NO ONE TO HELP! Factories

More information

The Great Depression & New Deal

The Great Depression & New Deal The Great Depression & New Deal The Great Depression Causes of the Great Depression Overproduction/Underconsumption Led to mass unemployment. High Tariffs High tariffs protected American markets, but restricted

More information

Unit 4 Great Depression Canadian History 1201

Unit 4 Great Depression Canadian History 1201 Unit 4 Great Depression 1929-1939 Canadian History 1201 Stock Market: From Boom to Bust The boomtime of the 1920s created such confidence in the economy that many people bought stocks in businesses Stocks:

More information

WWI Effects Nations Economies and Governments. Mr. Deger

WWI Effects Nations Economies and Governments. Mr. Deger WWI Effects Nations Economies and Governments Mr. Deger Buh-bye Absolute Monarchs Russia: Provisional Government Germany/Austria: new democratic governments after strong tradition of absolute rule France/Italy:

More information

The Politics of Boom and Bust Chapter 32

The Politics of Boom and Bust Chapter 32 The Politics of Boom and Bust 1920-1932 Chapter 32 Republican Old Guard Returns Harding s presidency = corrupt Ohio Gang corrupt cabinet members Harding is not corrupt, just not smart Similar to Grant

More information

Freedom from Fear: Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal. Four major problems Roosevelt has to address upon taking office:

Freedom from Fear: Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal. Four major problems Roosevelt has to address upon taking office: History 271 Devine Spring 2015 Freedom from Fear: Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal Four major problems Roosevelt has to address upon taking office: 1) a failing banking and financial system 2) unemployment

More information

The Great Depression. Chapter 12

The Great Depression. Chapter 12 The Great Depression Chapter 12 Name the causes of the Great Depression? 1) Maldistribution of Wealth 2) Stock Market Crash 3) Overproduction of Goods 4) Buying on Credit Maldistribution of Wealth oby

More information

CHAPTER 12 SECTION 1 The First New Deal

CHAPTER 12 SECTION 1 The First New Deal CHAPTER 12 SECTION 1 The First New Deal Roosevelt s Rise to Power Big Ideas: Franklin Roosevelt, former Secretary of the Navy and Governor of New York, campaigned on a promise of a new deal between Americans

More information

CALIFORNIA AND THE GREAT DEPRESSION,

CALIFORNIA AND THE GREAT DEPRESSION, CALIFORNIA AND THE GREAT DEPRESSION, 1929-1939 Overview of the Great Depression Impact of the Depression on California California and the New Deal State Politics in the Great Depression A. Overview of

More information

October, Did not cause the Depression Had earlier beginnings and more important causes

October, Did not cause the Depression Had earlier beginnings and more important causes October, 1929 Did not cause the Depression Had earlier beginnings and more important causes Stock Market Speculation Lack of Diversification Mistakes by the Federal Reserve Board An Ill-Advised Tariff

More information

The U.S A in the 1920s BOOM BUST BOOM. A time of BUST BUST. A time of BOOM

The U.S A in the 1920s BOOM BUST BOOM. A time of BUST BUST. A time of BOOM The U.S A in the 1920s BOOM BUST A time of BOOM BUST A time of BUST BOOM What was happening in the U.S.economy in the 1920s? It was a time of BOOM What does this mean? What sort of industries were booming?

More information

The Great Depression Canadian History 1201

The Great Depression Canadian History 1201 The Great Depression 1929-1939 Canadian History 1201 Unit Overview After the boom years of the 1920s, a dramatic economic shift in 1929 would change the Canadian economy and society The good times of the

More information

Worksheet Answers: Economist s Worksheet:

Worksheet Answers: Economist s Worksheet: Economist s Worksheet: Worksheet Answers: 1) How were Americans buying so many automobiles and household appliances during the Roaring Twenties? They were borrowing the money. 2) The mechanization of manufacturing

More information

CHAPTER 34 THE NEW DEAL

CHAPTER 34 THE NEW DEAL CHAPTER 34 THE NEW DEAL Election of 1932 GOP re-nominates Hoover why? Dems nominate Franklin Roosevelt Gov. of New York Heavy state spending Repeal prohibition Very vague about plans Young advisors known

More information

The Nation s Sick Economy

The Nation s Sick Economy The Nation s Sick Economy WHY IT MATTERS NOW Terms & Names As the prosperity of the 1920s ended, severe economic problems gripped the nation. The Great Depression has had lasting effects on how Americans

More information

THE FIRST NEW DEAL. Chapter 12 Section 1 US History

THE FIRST NEW DEAL. Chapter 12 Section 1 US History THE FIRST NEW DEAL Chapter 12 Section 1 US History THE FIRST NEW DEAL ROOSEVELT S RISE TO POWER MAIN IDEA Franklin D. Roosevelt was governor of New York, when he was elected president in 1932, promoting

More information

The Great Depression & New Deal ( ) Part 1: Basic Economics + Causes of GD

The Great Depression & New Deal ( ) Part 1: Basic Economics + Causes of GD The Great Depression & New Deal (1929-1941) Part 1: Basic Economics + Causes of GD Introduction The nation, like all capitalist nations, had suffered economic downturns many times, including longterm depressions

More information

KEY QUESTION 5 : The end of prosperity

KEY QUESTION 5 : The end of prosperity COMPONENT 1 - NON-BRITISH STUDY IN DEPTH 1H. THE USA: A NATION OF CONTRASTS, 1910-1929 KEY QUESTION 5 : The end of prosperity What factors led to the end of prosperity in 1929? I confess I was not prepared

More information

Lessons from the Great Depression

Lessons from the Great Depression Used with permission from Cengage Lessons from the Great Depression Textbook authors: James Gwartney, Richard Stroup, Russell Sobel, & David Macpherson Slides authored and animated by: James Gwartney &

More information

The New Deal. Life, Causes, and Effects

The New Deal. Life, Causes, and Effects Today s Questions 2. What were 3 problems many Americans faced that required a New Deal? 3. How did the New Deal work? 4. Why did banks fail & close during the Great Depression? The New Deal Life, Causes,

More information

Name: Class: U.S. History 2 Date:. Mr. Wallace. 1. is buying stocks with loans from brokers. (Buying on margin/buying short)

Name: Class: U.S. History 2 Date:. Mr. Wallace. 1. is buying stocks with loans from brokers. (Buying on margin/buying short) Name: Class: U.S. History 2 Date:. Mr. Wallace Vocabulary Builder Section 1 DIRECTIONS: Read each sentence and fill in the blank with the term in the term pair that best completes the sentence. 1. is buying

More information

3/25/2017 THE GREAT DEPRESSION. STOCK MARKET SPECULATION How it worked. STOCK MARKET SPECULATION How it worked. STOCK MARKET SPECULATION How it worked

3/25/2017 THE GREAT DEPRESSION. STOCK MARKET SPECULATION How it worked. STOCK MARKET SPECULATION How it worked. STOCK MARKET SPECULATION How it worked THE GREAT DEPRESSION It affected every region and state in the U.S. It began with SPECULATION, the buying and selling in hopes of turning a quick profit, in the stock market which led to the Crash of 1929

More information

Essay 3: Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal represented a radical departure from previous American traditions in government and political economy.

Essay 3: Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal represented a radical departure from previous American traditions in government and political economy. Essay 3: Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal represented a radical departure from previous American traditions in government and political economy. Elizabeth Gabriel, Riely Clark, Paige Lonquist, Michael

More information

Chapter 11: Financial Markets Section 3

Chapter 11: Financial Markets Section 3 Chapter 11: Financial Markets Section 3 Objectives 1. Identify the benefits and risks of buying stocks. 2. Describe how stocks are traded. 3. Explain how stock performance is measured. 4. Describe the

More information

1 FDR & The New Deal , 1936 & 1938 ELECTIONS Election (D) Franklin Delano Roosevelt vs. (R) Herbert Hoover 1932 Presidential Election

1 FDR & The New Deal , 1936 & 1938 ELECTIONS Election (D) Franklin Delano Roosevelt vs. (R) Herbert Hoover 1932 Presidential Election 1 FDR & The New Deal 2 1932, 1936 & 1938 ELECTIONS 3 1932 Election (D) Franklin Delano Roosevelt vs. (R) Herbert Hoover 1932 Presidential Election revolved around The Great Depression FDR attacked Hoover

More information

President Hoover s Programs

President Hoover s Programs President Hoover s Programs Federal Home Loan Bank Act (1932): Lowered mortgage rates for homeowners and allowed farmers to refinance their farms loans to avoid foreclosure. Reconstruction Finance Corporation

More information

Alan Greenspan, current architect of The boom and bust of The Great Depression

Alan Greenspan, current architect of The boom and bust of The Great Depression Alan Greenspan, current architect of The boom and bust of 2001-2008 The Great Depression How the extraordinary economic boom of the 1920s led to the great economic disaster of the 1930s that reshaped the

More information

To understand where the U.S. Economy is going, we need to understand where we have been

To understand where the U.S. Economy is going, we need to understand where we have been To understand where the U.S. Economy is going, we need to understand where we have been From 2008:1-2009:2, the worst recession since Great Depression, with a slow recovery from 2009:3-2013:1. Historical

More information

Group 14 Dallas Hall, Chuck Dobson, Guy Tahye, Tunde Olabiyi

Group 14 Dallas Hall, Chuck Dobson, Guy Tahye, Tunde Olabiyi In order to understand how we have gotten to the point where government intervention is needed to save our financial markets, it is necessary to look back and examine the many causes that lead to this

More information

You are President and your country s unprecedented wealth suddenly evaporated.

You are President and your country s unprecedented wealth suddenly evaporated. You are President and your country s unprecedented wealth suddenly evaporated. 25% of US population unemployed Stock prices are greatly overvalued and the stock market is in ruins 5,000 banks closed because

More information

SECTION 1. A series of economic weaknesses led to the collapse of the stock market in October 1929.

SECTION 1. A series of economic weaknesses led to the collapse of the stock market in October 1929. Section 1 Step-by-Step Instruction SECTION 1 Hoover and the Crash Review and Preview Students have learned about the prosperity and booming economy of the 1920s. Now they will learn how hidden weaknesses

More information

Great Depression. Great Crash FDR & New Deal Response to New Deal Nation on Hard Times

Great Depression. Great Crash FDR & New Deal Response to New Deal Nation on Hard Times Great Depression Great Crash FDR & New Deal Response to New Deal Nation on Hard Times Great Crash Signs of trouble Crash! Depression begins Hoover s response Bonus Army Signs of trouble Some industries

More information

CAUSES OF THE GREAT DEPRESSION

CAUSES OF THE GREAT DEPRESSION CAUSES OF THE GREAT DEPRESSION Historical Context: Following the Presidential election of Hervert Hoover in 1928, most Americans were optimistic about the future of the country. With stock prices soaring,

More information

Economic History of the US

Economic History of the US Economic History of the US Depression and the World Wars, 1914-46 Lecture #4 Peter Allen Econ 120 Great Depression, 1929-1941 Largest economic contraction in US history Front-loaded collapse lasted 3 ½

More information

b. Financial innovation and/or financial liberalization (the elimination of restrictions on financial markets) can cause financial firms to go on a

b. Financial innovation and/or financial liberalization (the elimination of restrictions on financial markets) can cause financial firms to go on a Financial Crises This lecture begins by examining the features of a financial crisis. It then describes the causes and consequences of the 2008 financial crisis and the resulting changes in financial regulations.

More information

Making of the Modern World 15. Lecture #5: Global Depression and the Creation of the Welfare State

Making of the Modern World 15. Lecture #5: Global Depression and the Creation of the Welfare State Making of the Modern World 15 Lecture #5: Global Depression and the Creation of the Welfare State What I want you to know today And now for something completely different: the Great Depression First, a

More information

Chapter 18 Section 2 The First New Deal. Click on a hyperlink to view the corresponding slides.

Chapter 18 Section 2 The First New Deal. Click on a hyperlink to view the corresponding slides. Chapter 18 Section 2 The First New Deal Click on a hyperlink to view the corresponding slides. Guide to Reading Main Idea In the first 100 days of Roosevelt s presidency, his team initiated a series of

More information

Chapter 10 Section 1 The First New Deal" Pages: "

Chapter 10 Section 1 The First New Deal Pages: Chapter 10 Section 1 The First New Deal" Pages: 499-507" Big Ideas" n 1932- America wants and needs change" n FDR- Practical and willing to try anything to help American People" n 100 days- a fury of alphabet

More information