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

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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 to a Prolonged Great Depression High Consumer Debts - Spending by average Americans of the 1920 s artificially pumped up the economy (and inflated stock prices) because many purchases were made on over extended credit. Despite superficial business boom, most Americans do not have savings to ride out hard times. Lack of Government Regulation A return to the Laissez Faire approach following an end of progressive influence allows stock market, banks & consumers to get out of control. Over Production on Farms & in Factories Too many products grown and made but not enough American buyers with real money by the late 1920s. High Tariffs Conservative, isolationist 1920s politicians attempt to protect American businesses with high tariffs (taxes on foreign imports). In turn, European countries retaliated with high tariffs on US products and the possibility of selling surplus American goods overseas reduced. REVIEW QUESTION: In retrospect, what factors listed above that contributed to the Great Depression might have been most preventable? 1929 Stock Market Panic of October, 1929 Catalyst for Chain Reaction of Event Summarized Below Panicked investors (many of whom bought stocks on credit) sell at low prices to recover some cash Potential new investors lose confidence in the stock market (ex: Richer people who still have real money) Less new stock investments Less $ for publicly traded bigger businesses (ex: Ford Automobile) Big businesses produce & spend less Smaller Mom & Pop businesses that depend on bigger businesses hurt (ex: Detroit area clothing store) Big & small businesses cut wages and/or reduce employees (ex: Ford assembly line workers & Detroit clothing store clerks laid off) Unemployed workers cannot pay back bank/consumer loans (ex: cars & homes repossessed ) Banks (who invested depositors $ in stocks cannot pay depositors (ex: Retired people living off savings) Many depositors Run on Banks leading to more banks failures (ex: thousands of banks close permanently) Depositors at failed banks lose savings (No government insurance) Remaining banks nervous and less credit available for new investment (ex: Construction loans) Less New Spending = More Wage/Job Cuts = Deflation & Long Term Depressed Economy REVIEW QUESTION: How could people who did not own stocks themselves still have been hurt by the Crash of 1929? As a review, watch The Great Depression: Crash Course US History #33 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gcqfmwaikyu&index=36&list=pl8dpuualjxtmwmepbjtsg593eg7obzo7s

Social Impacts of the Great Depression

Great Depression Facts and Figures Which grabs your attention most why? 13 million people (24 % of all workers) became unemployed by late 1932. In 1932, 34 million Americans (28%) belonged to families with no regular full-time wage earner. American industrial manufacturing fell by nearly 45% between the years 1929 and 1932. The number of new houses built annually dropped by 80% between 1929 and 1932. By 1933, one third of the banks in the US had failed wiping out almost 9 million savings accounts. Between 1929 and 1933, the New York stock exchange lost 80% of its value. Over one million families lost their farms between 1930 and 1934. Between 1929 and 1932 the income of the average American family was reduced by 40%. There were two million homeless people migrating around the country in 1933. Over 60% of Americans were categorized as poor by the federal government in 1933. In 1929, there were about 300,00 immigrants to the US, but in 1933 only 23,000 came to the U.S.

Economic problems leads to nationwide psychological depression = hopelessness & despair The Invisible Scar of the Great Depression http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wil1eplt1xs The Century: America s Time Stormy Weather (1929-1936) Part 2:30 15 min

Escapist Entertainment becomes popular and movie attendance goes up in 1930 s

Midwest Dust Bowl hurts already weak farming sector and sparks an exodus out of hardest hit areas (mostly to California)

President Herbert Hoover & Early Reactions to the Great Depression Briefly discuss the - Point of View of the following documents relating to Herbert Hoover and his policies in the early years of the Great Depression

#1 - Point of View NY World 4/11/30

#2 - Point of View The resourcefulness of America when challenged has never failed. Success is not gained by leaning upon government to solve all the problems before us. That way leads to undermining of individual will and destruction of character. Victory over this depression and over our other difficulties will be won by the resolution of our people to fight their own battles in their own communities, by stimulating their ingenuity to solve their own problems, by taking new courage to be masters of their own destiny in the struggle of life.... (President Herbert Hoover -- Address by radio - Feb. 12, 1931)

#3 - Point of View

This advertisement was financed by the Hoover administration during the early stages of the Great Depression. #4 - Point of View

#5 - Point of View

#6 - Point of View New federally funded dam near Las Vegas, Nevada Washington Post 9/22/31

#7 Cartoon relating to Hoover Administration programs including the Reconstruction Finance Corporation (RFC)* - Point of View * The Reconstruction Finance Corporation (RFC) was a government agency established late in the administration of Herbert Hoover in 1932. The agency gave $2 billion in aid to state and local governments and made loans to banks, railroads, and other businesses to prevent them from bankruptcy. The agency did not distribute direct relief (welfare) to citizens.

- Point of View Background: Images on the right were taken in the summer of 1932 during the Bonus Army protests. The Bonus Army was a group of about 17,000 WWI veterans and their supporters who gathered in Washington DC as the Senate was getting ready to vote on a proposed bill which would have moved forward the date when WWI veterans could received a federal bonus for their service (law originally passed during the 1920s). #8 The protesters hoped that they could convince Congress to make the bonus payments to veterans immediately, many of whom were unemployed due to the Depression. The bill was defeated in Congress, but some of the veterans stayed in a shanty town and continued to protest. President Hoover eventually ordered federal troops to remove the protesters from their encampment and violence ensued. Hundreds people were injured and two protesters were reported dead as a result of the confrontation.

#9 - Point of View Date of Election Hoover Roosevelt