UWGB LifeLong Learning Presenter. Bob Srenaski
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1 UWGB LifeLong Learning Presenter Bob Srenaski
2 Those who do not remember the past are condemned to repeat it. George Santayana,
3 THE GREAT DEPRESSION The Greatest Tragedy and World- Changing Event of the 20 th Century
4 Worldwide Devastation Production collapsed down 40% Germany and U.S. Prices collapsed 25% plus Mass bankruptcies across the world Mass unemployment all major countries Agriculture Price Collapse bankruptcies & rural unemployment Civil unrest food riots strikes crime Vagrant encampments Collapsed banking systems Coups in Portugal, Brazil, Argentina, Peru, Spain Government changes in UK, France, U.S., Germany
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6 Worldwide Economic Devastation One vivid, gruesome moment of those dark days we shall never forget. We saw a crowd of some fifty men fighting over a barrel of garbage which had been set outside the back door of a restaurant. Americans fighting for scraps of food like animals. Louise Armstrong 1932
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10 Depression Causes Stock Market Crash Gold Standard WWI Debts and Reparations Agriculture Failure Trade War Smoot Hawley Weak Banking System Federal Reserve s Failures Lack of International Cooperation Bankers Who Broke the World Economic Ignorance Monetary & Fiscal Policy - Real Bills Doctrine
11 The Stock Market
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13 The Gold Standard
14 The Gold Standard System Most major countries (1800 s) England 1717, U.S de facto, 1900 de jure (59 countries on gold by 1914) Quantity of country s money supply proportional to quantity of country s gold Country s economic well-being dependent upon its money supply which varied with its gold stock.
15 The Gold Standard System Grain : a unit of weight = grain taken from the middle of an ear of wheat British Pound Sterling = 113 grains of pure gold US Dollar = grains of pure gold Dollar to Sterling exchange rate: 113/23.22 = $4.86/Pound Gold in US: $20.67 oz.
16 Rules of the Gold Standard System Rate of exchange between countries fixed Countries must exchange their currencies for gold on demand Imbalances of payments between countries were settled by gold payments between countries Exports/imports trade activity must be free of artificial interference Bank lending interest rates were the balancing mechanism
17 Upside of the Gold Standard Worldwide Price Stability
18 The Downside of the Gold Standard Bank Panics & Failures Recessions Depressions Unemployment & Poverty
19 The War
20 WWI The War to end all Wars Austria/Hungary Germany Italy Serbia Russia France Belgium United Kingdom United States
21 5000 Gold Reserves: 1913, 1923 ($000) Germany UK France U.S
22 The Bankers Who Broke The World United Kingdom - Montagu Norman Royal Bank of England United States Germany - Benjamin Strong New York Federal Reserve Bank - Hjalmar Schacht - Reichsbank France - Emile Moreau - Banque de France
23 Early 20 s Post War United States 1920 Fed Raises interest rate to 7% - recession 1922 Reduces rate to 4% - economic recovery U.S. Housing and real estate market boom U.S. stocks move up reasonable P/E ratios Stock Investment Trusts and Margin Loans to Brokers emerge
24 Late 20 s Post War United States 1927 Strong, Norman, Schacht, and Moreau Meeting August 1927 Fed lowers rate from 4.0 to 3.5 Broker Loans: $3.3 B 1927 to $7.0 Billion March 1929 Stocks: 150 in 1927 to 380 in September March thru May, rate increase from 3.5 to 5.0%
25 Strong Dies, Replaced by Harrison Hoover elected in 1928 Believes in market forces as cure and balancing the budget Smoot-Hawley Signs Revenue Act of 1932 Individual lowest rate 1% to 4%, top rate 25% to 63% Estate tax doubled, Corporate 12% to 13.5% Federal Reserve increases Interest Rate again to 6% Europeans increase rates to protect their gold Financial System Crashes
26 Post War Germany
27 Post War Germany 1914: 4.2/1 1920: 67/1 Jan 22: 190/1 Jun 22: 7,600/1 Aug 23: 620,000/1 Nov 23: 630 Billion/1 2 lb butter: 250 Billion Dec 10, 1923: 1 Trillion Reischmarks/ 1Rentenmark 1924 Germany returns to 4.2
28 Post War Germany 1924 to 1929 Hyperinflation ends War Reparations Reduced U.S. Bank Lending Begins Return to the Gold Standard Budget Balanced Still short of gold Economy takes off on short-term U.S. loans Boom continues until 1928 when Fed ups interest rates
29 Post War Germany The Party s Over Short-Term U.S. Lending dries up as money goes into booming U.S. stock market German Depression Begins
30 German Recession Impacts National Elections 1929 Election: Nazis capture only 2.6% of the vote 12 of 491 Reichstag Seats Recession Deepens massive unemployment and misery 1930 Election: Nazis capture 107 Reichstag Seats May 8, 1931: Credit Anstalt fails causing bank failures throughout Austria and Germany Deep depression, running out of gold 1933, January 30, Hitler becomes Chancellor
31 Back In The United States
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33 Back in the United States Disease of Bank Failures Sets in 1929: : 1, : 2, : 1, : 4,000 Total 9,755 Approximately ½ of all banks Several states with no operating banks 25% Mortgages in Default
34 Treasury Secretary Andrew Mellon Believed the stock market speculators who had lost money deserved it and the U.S. economy was sound and would rebound on its own. The best policy according to Mellon was to: liquidate labor, liquidate stocks, liquidate the farmers, liquidate real estate. It will purge the rottenness out of the system. People will work harder and live a moral life. Values will be adjusted, and enterprising people will pick up the wrecks from the less competent people.
35 Back in the United States Roosevelt wins 1932 election, in office March 4, 1933 get people back to work and strict supervision of all banking and credits and investments. Immediate Bank Holiday Bank Stress Tests Reopening restores confidence Takes U.S. off Gold January 1934, U.S. goes back on a devaluation of over 52%
36 U.S. Recovery During FDR s first term: Industrial Production doubled GDP expanded 40% Unemployment 24.9% (1933) to 14.3% (1937)
37 U.S. Government Stimulus Programs : $3.5 Billion Spent (5.4% of GNP) Aid to states & local Gov ts: $134 million (1932), $1.7 Billion (1935) Programs employing people CCC Civilian Conservation Corp CWA Civil Works Administration PWA Public Works Administration WPA Works Progress Administration 4 million people employed, 1/6 of population $6.50/week on program, private sector $15-$20/week
38 The Second U.S. Recession: Recovery Aborted by pressure to balance the budget, FDR folded Fed Reserve raised bank reserves Raised interest rates Fed Gov t raised taxes Social Security payroll tax kicked in Economy driven into recession Growth resumed in 1939 war in Europe
39 New Deal Notable Legislation FDIC Federal Deposit Insurance Program FCIC Federal Crop Insurance Program NHA National Housing Act (1934) FHA Federal Housing Authority Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae) Social Security Act (1935) TVA Tennessee Valley Authority Securities Act of 1933: Truth In Securities Act SEC Security and Exchange Commission (1934) Banking Act (1933) Glass-Steagall
40 Depression Causes Religious Belief in the Gold Standard Weak Banking System Real Bills Doctrine Greed & Lack of Rules Lack of International Cooperation Trade War Economic Ignorance & Bad Judgement
41 Questions?
42 Love Money Makes the World go round.
43 ARTICLE VI, United States Constitution All debts contracted and Engagements entered into, before the Adoption of this Constitution, shall be as valid against the United States under this Constitution, as under the Confederation.
44 Federal Reserve System
45 The Federal Reserve System Congress passed the Federal Reserve Act on December 23, 1913 Response to the 1907 Financial Crisis First Official Central Bank for the country Lender of Last Resort Establish a stable banking system Independent with the government, it has the authority to act on its own without prior approval of the Congress Maximize Employment Stable Prices Reasonable Long-term Interest Rates
46 Federal Reserve System Structure Board of Governors Leadership of entire Reserve System 7 Governors Appointed by the President, approved by the Senate Serve 14 year staggered terms Chairman and Vice-Chairman appointed by President for 4 yr. terms subject to their terms as governors Chairman reports twice a year to Congress on Fed policies Meets periodically with Secretary of the Treasury
47 Federal Reserve System Structure Board of Governors Federal Reserve System is independent and profitable Board operations funded by assessing Federal Reserve Banks Also makes money on the assets it holds such as U.S. Treasury Bonds In 2013, the Fed made $79.5 billion and sent $77.7 billion to the U.S. Treasury $350 billion to the Treasury since 2009 Financial accounts audited annually by Public Accounting Firms and results made public Also subject to audits by The U.S. General Accounting Office
48 The Federal Reserve District Banks Atlanta Chicago Dallas Minneapolis Philadelphia San Francisco Boston Cleveland Kansas City New York Richmond St. Louis
49 Federal Reserve District Banks 24 Total Branches Private Entities Generate the Fed s revenue through service charges and interest Profits are paid to the U.S. Treasury annually 9-member Board President elected by the bank s board President must also be approved by Federal Reserve Board
50 Federal Reserve System Structure Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) Seven members of the Board of Governors Plus Five Reserve Bank Presidents President of New York Fed serves on a continuous basis Serve one-year terms, each year one member is elected by the boards of directors of four regional groups of Reserve Banks Must meet at least four times a year by law Has met eight times annually since 1981 Meeting participation is limited Minutes are released to the public three weeks after the meetings
51 Federal Reserve System Structure Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) By law, the Board of Governors must keep a record of the actions taken by the FOMC on all questions of policy in its Annual Report to Congress including the votes on and reasons for each action. Goal: Price Stability - Inflation Control Goal: Encourage, sustain, and control economic growth Goal: Maximize employment
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54 200% 180% 160% 140% 120% 100% 80% 60% 40% 20% 0% US Public National Debt % Increase
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