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

Similar documents
Causes of the Great Depression

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

The Great Crash Ch 21-1

The 1920s: Crash & Depression

! March 1929-Pres. Herbert Hoover. ! Credit

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

Why did the Great Depression Happen?

Causes of The Great Depression

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

Causes of the Great Depression

The Great Depression

Great Depression Economic history Timing and severity

What you should have learnt so far:

Essential Question: What caused the Great Depression?

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

The Great Depression and the New Deal

WHAT IS STOCK? COMPANY INVESTOR

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

CAUSES of the GREAT DEPRESSION s

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

The Great Depression

The Great Depression Descends Upon America

The Great Depression. Unit 7: National Crisis

APUSH POLITICS OF THE TWENTIES & START OF THE GREAT DEPRESSION

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

World Book Online: Overview of the Great Depression

Causes of the Great Depression, Part II. After the stock market crash, people fear a business slump.

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

Great Depression Vocabulary

The Politics of Boom and Bust Chapter 32

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

The Great Depression. Chapter 11

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

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

The Great Depression: An Overview by David C. Wheelock

The Great Depression & New Deal

THE GREAT DEPRESSION. Unit VII: New World Power

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

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

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

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

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.

VUS.10b-d: The Great Depression

CH 32- Beginning of the Great Depression

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

HOW DID THE GREAT DEPRESSION EFFECT AMERICA? SS8

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

WWI Effects Nations Economies and Governments. Mr. Deger

Lessons from the Great Depression

The World Before The Great Depression

relationship does there seem to be between deficit spending and unemployment? in regards to the New Deal programs? (page 516)

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

Section 5 - The Financial Sector

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

Causes of the Great Depression. World History 3201

Great Depression. The Beginning

The Great Depression Canadian History 1201

Economic History of the US

Don t Raise the Federal Debt Ceiling, Torpedo the U.S. Housing Market

THE GREAT DEPRESSION

Unit VII: The Great Depression and the New Deal

BOOMS & BUSTS. Supplementary lesson 4. Includes: Student lessons. Teacher notes & answers

Chapter 10: Money and Banking Section 1

buying stock on the margin means

Econ 323 Economic History of the U.S. Prof. Eschker Fall 2018

Problem Set Suggested Answers. These answers were thought out as a guide of what a correct answer could have been. Do not consider them exhaustive.

Can the Republicans lose?

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

Hoover s Attempts to End the

Crash and Depression. Bust and Bummer

THE GREAT DEPRESSION

The Financial System. Sherif Khalifa. Sherif Khalifa () The Financial System 1 / 55

Depression, Dust & Dictators. The 1930 s in Canada & Abroad

AP Gov Chapter 17 Outline

A Difficult Puzzle. Social Assistance Caseloads in the Great Depression and Three Major Post-war Recessions John Stapleton Open Policy May 3, 2012

Do now: From Boom to Bust

Money, Banking, and Finance PLATO Global Government and Economics Mastery Test

FAQ: Money and Banking

The Long View Rates, GDP & Challenges

The Interwar Years: Econ 113: March 12, A Bit of Macro AD = C + I + G + (EX IM) 3/10/2015 2:46 PM.

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

happy days ARE HERE AGAIN BY ANNETTE HANSHAW

The Causes of the Great Depression

Economic History of the US

Chapter 10: Money and Banking Section 2

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

President Hoover s Programs

Protectionism. The term free-trade describes the process of lowering protectionist barriers and thereby realizing those gains from trade.

Economics of Money, Banking, and Fin. Markets, 10e (Mishkin) Chapter 9 Financial Crises. 9.1 What is a Financial Crisis?

Business Fluctuations: Aggregate Demand and Supply

Capitalism - Pros and Cons

THE GREAT DEPRESSION BEGINS. Photos by photographer Dorothea Lange

Anatomy of the Bear Lessons from Wall Street s Four Great Bottoms Russell Napier 2005

Reading Essentials and Study Guide

HSC Modern History. Year 2017 Mark Pages 24 Published Apr 5, Option I: USA Notes. By Sophie (99.5 ATAR)

Unit 4 Great Depression Canadian History 1201

Chapter 11: Financial Markets Section 3

Clue Sheet #2 Answer Sheet

Exam ch 16 PRACTICE 2014

2011 Bear Markets: Both Cyclical and Secular

Transcription:

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 and buying stock on margin would lead to the Stock Market Crash (Black TUESDAY 10/29/1929) Over reliance on unprotected loans We still had countries paying debt from WWI Too much speculation & borrowing

STOCK MARKET CRASH 1920's had been a period of good economic times However on Tuesday Oct. 29th, 1929 - NYC Stock market crashed, causing a depression that would last until 1940

HOW THE STOCK MARKET WORKED the public invests in companies by purchasing stocks; in return for this they expect a profit b/c of booming 1920's economy, profit was plentiful, so banks were quick to make loans to investors Stock Market Rap

STOCK MARKET also investors only had to pay for 10% of the stock's actual value at time of purchase this was known as BUYING ON MARGIN, and the balance was paid at a later date

STOCK MARKET this encouraged STOCK SPECULATION - people would buy and sell stocks quickly to make a quick buck because of all this buying & selling, stock value increased The prolonged Bull Market of the 1920's saw stock prices rocket from an average of $50 per share in 1922 climbing to a massive $350 per share in 1929. Stock prices began to rise sharply in 1926-1927. The high point for the 1929 market was August 1929 at $350. this quick turnover didn't aid companies they needed long term investments so they could pay bills (stock value was like an illusion)

INEQUALITY CAUSES A RIPPLE EFFECT a major problem: uneven distribution of wealth 42% of the population was below poverty line Top 1% owned most of the wealth of the 58% above the poverty line, most fell into the middle class category they were not wealthy; they had jobs b/c of the industrialization & consumerization of the American marketplace

INEQUALITY CAUSES A RIPPLE EFFECT this middle class depended on their salaries and when productivity declined they lost their jobs and because of low savings, they had to cut back on their purchases this decline in spending among the middle class ruined the whole country

PRESIDENT HOOVER Opposed direct federal aid Instead he believed in: Self-help & volunteerism Self-help cooperatives This means the government did not think it was their job to help the people financially

PRESIDENT HOOVER S RESPONSE He didn't believe that the gov't should play an active role in the economy He persuaded bankers/business to follow his policy of VOLUNTARY NON - COERCIVE COOPERATION where he gave tax breaks in return for private sector economic investment Hoover also organized some private relief agencies for the unemployed Believed it was the Church's job to aid those in need not the Government

HOOVER S RESPONSE: RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION Established in 1932 by Hoover Gave emergency loans to banks and businesses because Hoover believed cheap loans would spur business It granted over 2 billion dollars to the local and state governments Hoover believed the money invested would trickle down to average Americans Too little, too late

PRESIDENT HOOVER S RESPONSE He worked out a system with European powers that owed U.S. money as a result of WWI debts = HOOVER MORATORIUM put a temporary stop to war debt & reparations payments European countries were to purchase American goods instead to stimulate American economy

GOOD IDEA IN THEORY In early 1931 these measures appeared successful, but then...the TARIFF WARS began Democrats in Congress passed a high tariff (SMOOT- HAWLEY) to protect U.S. industry (hoped to stimulate purchasing of U.S. goods) this turned out to be a fatal error... Congress did not understand that the world had become a GLOBAL ECONOMY In retaliation other countries passed high tariffs and no foreign markets purchased American goods, so U.S. productivity decreased again

FEDERAL RESERVE POLICY In the 1930s, the United States was on the gold standard. This means the U.S. government would exchange paper dollars for gold at a fixed price Commercial banks and the Federal Reserve held a portion of their reserve as gold coin and bullion. A decrease in gold reserves would lower the amount of money in circulation Therefore, large withdrawals of gold from banks could reduce bank reserves so much that banks would be forced to call in their outstanding loans.

FEDERAL RESERVE POLICY During the 1920s the Federal Reserve cut interest rates to stimulate economic growth In 1929 the Federal Reserve worried investors were speculating too much with borrowed money so they decided to limit the money to supply to discourage lending THEY DID THIS BY RAISING INTEREST RATES As a result there was too little money in circulation to help the economy after the stock market crash

BANK FAILURES The failure of the Bank of the United States, the failure of other banks and the suspension of operations by nearly 7,000 banks created a bank panic. If depositors lose confidence in their banks, people will rush to withdraw their money from the bank to avoid losing their funds. When depositors remove money from the system, banks may be forced to reduce their outstanding loans; requiring full payment or foreclosure.

HOOVERVILLES

SEATTLE, 1931