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

Similar documents
Causes of The Great Depression

The Great Depression

! March 1929-Pres. Herbert Hoover. ! Credit

CAUSES of the GREAT DEPRESSION s

Why did the Great Depression Happen?

The Great Depression. Unit 7: National Crisis

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

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

Great Depression Economic history Timing and severity

Essential Question: What caused the Great Depression?

The 1920s: Crash & Depression

The Great Depression

The Great Depression Canadian History 1201

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

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

Causes of the Great Depression. World History 3201

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

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

VUS.10b-d: The Great Depression

The Great Crash Ch 21-1

HOW DID THE GREAT DEPRESSION EFFECT AMERICA? SS8

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

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

CH 32- Beginning of the Great Depression

APUSH POLITICS OF THE TWENTIES & START OF THE GREAT DEPRESSION

What you should have learnt so far:

Causes of the Great Depression

Unit VII: The Great Depression and the New Deal

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

The Great Depression. Chapter 11

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

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

The World Before The Great Depression

World Book Online: Overview of the Great Depression

THE GREAT DEPRESSION. Unit VII: New World Power

The Great Depression and the New Deal

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

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

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 GREAT DEPRESSION

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

The Great Depression: An Overview by David C. Wheelock

Hoover s Attempts to End the

Do now: From Boom to Bust

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

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

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

WHAT IS STOCK? COMPANY INVESTOR

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

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

Can the Republicans lose?

Great Depression. Brother can you spare a dime?

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

The Great Depression Descends Upon America

Great Depression Vocabulary

The Causes of the Great Depression

WWI Effects Nations Economies and Governments. Mr. Deger

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

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

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

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

Unit 4 Great Depression Canadian History 1201

Global Financial Crisis. Econ 690 Spring 2019

VUS.10b-d: The Great Depression

Clue Sheet #2 Answer Sheet

Causes of the Great Depression

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

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.

The Politics of Boom and Bust Chapter 32

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

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

Lessons from the Great Depression

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

buying stock on the margin means

Topic 8 : The Interwar Globalization Backlash

Business Fluctuations: Aggregate Demand and Supply

THE GREAT DEPRESSION & NEW DEAL

Economic History of the US

Chapter 10. The Great Recession: A First Look. (1) Spike in oil prices. (2) Collapse of house prices. (2) Collapse in house prices

Business Fluctuations: Aggregate Demand and Supply

Suggested Answers. Department of Economics Economics 115 University of California. Berkeley, CA Spring *SAS = See Answer Sheet

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

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

The Long View Rates, GDP & Challenges

10.2 Recent Shocks to the Macroeconomy Introduction. Housing Prices. Chapter 10 The Great Recession: A First Look

Federal Spending to Top a Record $4 Trillion in FY2017

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

Lecture 7. Unemployment and Fiscal Policy

The Great Depression & New Deal

THE GREAT DEPRESSION

Low point in Hoover's Presidency

Feel No Pain: Why a Deficit In Times of High Unemployment Is Not a Burden

CHAPTER 12 SECTION 1 The First New Deal

The Great Depression

Economic History of the US

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

Financial Crises: A Focus on the Great Depression

What Caused the Great Depression? /13/2017

Common Sense Economics: What Everyone Should Know About Wealth and Prosperity (Gwartney, Stroup, Lee, and Ferrarini - St. Martin s Press, 2010)

Transcription:

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 his hands-off economic policies dragged America into the Depression Not accurate. The Great Depression was a worldwide event. By 1929, the world suffered a major rise in unemployment.

The Great Depression was not the country s first depression, though it proved to be the longest and most severe.

Many did not realize how severe the downturn was until 1932, when the economy had technically hit bottom.

But the human misery continued long into the late 1930s

1. Over-production:

A high demand for consumer goods led companies to produce more and more, in order to meet demand. But in reality there existed: * Under consumption of these goods here and abroad, because people didn t have enough cash to buy all they wanted * There still existed an uneven distribution of wealth and income.

Americas farms were overproducing, as well. During World War I, with European farms in ruin, the American farm was a prosperous business. Increased food production during World War I was an economic boom for many farmers, who borrowed money to enlarge and modernize their farms.

So, to summarize it, HIGH DEMAND for consumer goods and agricultural products led to OVERPRODUCTION.

2. Banking & Money Policies

The uneven distribution of wealth didn t stop the poor and middle class from wanting to possess luxury items, such as cars and radios

But, wages were not keeping up with the prices of those goods and that created problems!

One solution was to let products be purchased on credit. The concept of buying now and paying later caught on quickly. There had been credit before for businesses, but this was the first time personal consumer credit was available. By the end of the 1920s, 60% of the cars and 80% of the radios were bought on installment credit.

The Federal Reserve Board was created by Congress in response to the Banking Crisis of 1907. The Federal Reserve was suppose to serve as a protective watchdog of the nation s economy. It had the power to set the interest rate for loans issued by banks.

In the 1920s, the Fed set very low interest rates which encouraged people to buy on the installment plan (on credit.) More buyers meant more profit for companies, so they produced more and more so much that a surplus of goods was created! In 1929, the Fed worried that growth was too rapid, so it decided to raise the interest rates and tighten the supply of money. This was a bad miscalculation!

Facing higher interest rates and accumulating debt, people began to slow down their buying of consumer goods

Buying on Credit increased personal debt. Higher interest rates caused LESS DEMAND for goods.

3. STOCK MARKET ACTIONS

The Stock Market was an indicator of national prosperity.

The Stock Market growth in the 1920s tells a story of runaway optimism for the future.

Just as one could buy goods on credit, it was easy to borrow money to invest in the stock market; This was called margin investing (or buying on margin. ) Small investors were more apt to invest in the Stock Market in large numbers because the margin requirement was only 10%.

As business was booming in the 1920s and stock prices kept rising with businesses growing profits, buying stocks on margin functioned like buying a car on credit. The extensive speculation that took place in the late 1920s kept stock prices high, but the balloon was due to burst

The crucial point came when banks began to loan money to stock-buyers. Wall street investors were allowed to use the stocks themselves as collateral. If the stocks dropped in value, the banks would be left holding near-worthless collateral.

The Crash: Black Tuesday Oct. 29, 1929, the Stock Market crashed.

Over 16 million shares sold in massive selling frenzy. Losses exceeded $26 billion.

Actually, the crash was by no means a one-day event. A month earlier, trading increased rapidly as stock values dropped and people panicked, trying to sell their stocks before losing too much of their investments. Again, the Stock Market Crash of 1929 was only a symptom- not the cause of the Great Depression.

Buying on Margin was a risky market practice. Bank loans for stock purchases was an unsound practice.

More Poor Banking Policies

Another function of the Federal Reserve was to prevent bank closings. It was suppose to serve as the last resort lender to banks on the verge of collapsing. However, the Federal Reserve had lowered its requirement of cash reserves to be held by banks. Many banks didn t have enough cash available to match the amount of money in customers accounts.

With the loss of confidence in stocks, people began to lose confidence in the security of their money being held in banks. Customers raced to their banks to withdraw their savings. In early 1930, there were 60 bank failures per month. Eventually, 9,000 banks closed their doors between 1930 and 1933.

1922 1924 1926 1928 1930 1932 1934 1936 1938 1940 1942 1944 Bank Failures 4500 4000 3500 3000 2500 2000 1500 1000 500 0

As banks closed their doors and more people lost their savings, fear gripped depositors across the nation - panic

Business also lost its money and could not finance its activities More businesses went bankrupt and closed their doors, leaving more people unemployed causing unemployment to reach even higher levels.

Deflationary Spiral Growing unemployment. Loss of confidence in economy. Too many products available. Big sales to try to sell high inventory. Assets lose value. Loans are called.

The Causes of the Great Depression Tariffs, taxes, banking Fordney-McCumber & Hawley-Smoot tariff (SUPER HIGH) Mellon Tax Federal reserve kept interest rates low T Overproduction Machines increase production O Installment buying Durable goods decline- (falling demand) Agricultural slump and surplus A Disparity of wealth - D Rich got richer and the poor got poorer Who is going to buy the products??? Speculation - Stock market crash S Margin, Margin call, bull Market, Bear Market

Life in 1930s Additional powerpoint

4. Political Decisions:

The Depression could have been less severe had policy makers not made certain mistakes Leaders in government and business relied on poor advice from economic & political experts...

Herbert Hoover

Hoover's "Voluntarism" Hoover maintained that the economy was on a sound and prosperous basis. Hoover s attempt to fight the depression: 1)Restore Business Confidence 2)Fight calls for government intervention 3)Voluntarism 4)Localism Ineffectual due to: 1)Government Blunders (raised interest rate & tariff) 2)Federal aid offset by cuts in state spending 3)Persistence of depression undermined local charity

The sole function of the government is to bring about a condition of affairs favorable to the beneficial development of private enterprise. Herbert Hoover (1930)

Hoover did take action to intervene in the economy, but it was too little too late- Hoover dramatically increased government spending for relief, doling out millions of dollars to wheat and cotton farmers.

Within a month of the crash, Hoover met with key business leaders to urge them to keep wages high, even though prices and profits were falling.

Public Works Projects Government did create some jobs but only a small part of what was needed to fight the high unemployment. Used tax dollars. How to get the money? Raise taxes? less money to spend Keep taxes low? increases budget deficit

Strongly Opposed Direct Relief Believed it would cause dependence on the dole Charities could not keep up with need Emergency Relief and Construction Act for the first time in history the federal government was supplying direct relief funds to citizens

Hooverville What message did this name send to the president?

Hoover flags Hoover blankets Hoover wagons Hoover leather - cardboard

Poor People's Movements People protested and marched, demanding help. 1. Unemployed Councils 2. Rent Parties 3. Farmer s Holiday 4. Sharecropper s Unions 5. Southern Tenant Farmer s Union 6. Ford Hunger March 7. Bonus Army

Bonus Army The popular name of an assemblage of some 43,000 marchers 17,000 World War I veterans, their families, and affiliated groups who gathered in Washington, D.C., in the spring and summer of 1932 to demand immediate cash-payment redemption of their service certificates

Farmer's Holiday Why would farmers dump milk and destroy crops?

1930 Congressional Elections Angry voters blamed the party in power for problems. The Republicans lost 49 seats

Banking National Credit Corporation (NCC) created a pool of money that allowed troubled banks to lend money in the community Reconstruction Finance Corporation make loans to businesses to keep them from going under. Overly cautious, not enough

The greatest mistake of the Hoover administration was passage of the Hawley-Smoot Tariff, passed in 1930. It raised tariffs on U.S. imports up to 50%.

Officials believed that raising trade barriers would force Americans to buy more goods at home, which would keep Americans employed. But they ignored the principle of international tradeit is a two-way street; If foreigners can t sell their goods here, they will shut off our exports there! It virtually closed our borders to foreign goods and ignited a vicious international trade war.

Foreign nations curtailed their purchase of Americans goods. For example, American farmers lost 1/3 of their market. Farm prices plummeted and thousands of farmers went bankrupt.

To compound the effects of the economic slump, farmers would experience one of the worst, longest droughts in history during the 1930s

...creating a Dust Bowl of unproductive, eroded farmland.

The Dust Bowl

"Black Sunday"

Another aspect of the Great Depression was deflation. Prices for goods fell 30-40% in the four largest world economies- the U.S., United Kingdom, Germany, and France. Deflation caused bankruptcies; millions of people and companies were wiped out completely.

Percent Billions of Dollars Great Depression 30 1200 25 1000 20 800 15 600 Unemployment Real GDP 10 400 5 200 0 1929 1930 1931 1932 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939 1940 0

Because nothing else seemed to be working, the federal government decided it was prudent to balance the federal budget. President Hoover, with the support of a Democratic House of Representatives, passed the largest peacetime tax increase in history, the Revenue Act of 1932.

Income taxes were raised from 1% to 4% at the low end and from 23% to 63% at the top of the scale. Hoover s advisors hoped this tax increase could cover the mushrooming deficit of government spending for relief. But the decision was disastrous. The tax increase took money out of people s hands which only curtailed their spending.

30 25 20 15 10 5 0 1929 1930 1931 1932 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939 1940 20 18 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 Unemployment Rate Personal Taxes as a Percent of Total Personal Income

The Hawley-Smoot Tariff created trade wars and worsened world economic conditions. Huge increase in taxes hurt companies and individuals.

Bonus Army WWI veterans bonus to be paid in 1945 Wanted to be paid early Began marching to Washington, DC from all over the country Camped in Hoovervilles in the city Hoover ordered buildings cleared. Shooting began. Hoover ordered the army to clear all the veterans out. Douglas MacArthur burn, tear gas, shocked the nation

Let s Review the MAJOR CAUSES for the Great Depression:

1. Overproduction (responding to high demand for goods) 2. Banking & Money Policies (low interest rates, buying on credit, raise in interest rates, low reserve rates for banks.) 3. Stock Market Practices (buying on margin, bank loans for stock purchases) 4. Political decisions (Hawley-Smoot Tariff, Increase Income Tax)