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7.2: Events Leading to the Great Depression

Events Leading to the Great Depression

stock market crash

  • black thursday

  • october 24, 1929

  • concern > panic

  • black tuesday

  • october 29, 1929

  • full-scale panic

  • "day the bubble burst"

  1. overproduction: american industries overexpanded

  2. surplus of goods

  3. eventually reduce production + lay off workers

  4. underconsumption: consumer buying drops

  5. consumer confidence declines

  6. farmers → had low incomes after wwi

  7. workers → wages failed to keep up with increased productivity

  8. overspeculation: investors playing the stock market

  9. "buying on margin" = 10% → margin calls: couldn't pay broker

  10. speculators bid up the price of stocks + real estate → "paper fortunes"

  11. worth of businesses → based on stock sold, actual worth inflated

  12. banks: made unsound loans → resulted in bank failures

  13. excessive borrowing of $ + investing in the stock market

  14. international trade declines → us cutbacks + tariff policies

  15. wwi hurt europe's economy

  16. $ spend on rebuilding countries + paying off debts

  17. european nations introduced tariff policies in reaction to us policies

differences from earlier depressions

  • worldwide

  • us urbanization + industrialization

  • no "safety valves"

  • natural disasters

  • midwest: dust bowl

  • south: droughts

immediate effects

  • value of stock continued to fall — wall street

  • small investors - lost savings / "nest egg"

  • new rich: "paper fortunes" → suicides

  • old rich: "deflation" - survived

  • run on the banks — get savings → panic

  • badly weakened → surplus cash invested in stock market

  • 6000 banks closed

  • 10 million savings accounts lost

  • people broke; no money

  • business/industries closed — no customers

  • 100,000 failed

  • corporate profits fell — $10 billion, $1 billion

  • gnp cut in half

  • unemployment rose — not sudden but gradual

  • by 1933 25% (1/4th of workforce unemployed)

  • women + minorities forced out

  • many workers underemployed

  • farmers → farm prices dropped 60% (product declined 6%)

  • unrest: destroyed crops, dumped milk, killed animals

  • threatened bank agents → foreclosure

personal impact

  • song: brother, can you spare a dime

  • hard times → making do, maintaining self respect, keeping up appearances, normality

  • invisible scar → private despair, would not accept handouts

  • soup line - bread lines - selling apples or pencils

  • poverty → humiliation + shame (especially hit the men), blamed themselves

  • hoovervilles - hoboes - sisters of the road (latter two - train hoppers, going west)

  • legacy of fear → losing control of their lives

  • demographic trends:

  • marriage rates fell

  • birth rates fell (birth control)

  • divorce rates dropped

hoover's response

America didn’t have time for "eventually"

beliefs

  • government: NO direct aid, laissez-faire

  • individuals: rugged individualism

  • businesses: voluntary program of cooperation (keeping factories open)

actions

  • government spending: public projects eg. Hoover Dam

  • agricultural marketing act + farm board: helping farmers by buying up surpluses

  • reconstruction finance corporation (RFC)

  • "pump priming" - government lending bank, indirect relief

  • insurance companies, banks, agricultural agencies, etc.

  • local + larger-scale governments

protests against hoover

  • hoover's unpopularity - unable to act effectively

  • heartlessness - "great humanitarian"

  • fed belgium + fed pigs but not people

  • hostile congress → democrats

  • won control by promising economic assistance

  • rfc → "millionaire's dole" (welfare)

  • only helped wealthy + corporations

  • failed to improve the economy — not enough relief

  • bonus army - march on washington dc

  • wwi veterans

  • hoover called out the army → macarthur + eisenhower

presidential election of 1932

  • republican party: president hoover

  • praised republican anti-depression policies

  • claimed that the worst was past + prosperity was just around the corner

  • reaffirmed faith in american free enterprise

  • attacked fdr + democrats as socialist

  • democratic party: franklin delano roosevelt

  • results of electoral vote — fdr 472 + hoover 59

R

7.2: Events Leading to the Great Depression

Events Leading to the Great Depression

stock market crash

  • black thursday

  • october 24, 1929

  • concern > panic

  • black tuesday

  • october 29, 1929

  • full-scale panic

  • "day the bubble burst"

  1. overproduction: american industries overexpanded

  2. surplus of goods

  3. eventually reduce production + lay off workers

  4. underconsumption: consumer buying drops

  5. consumer confidence declines

  6. farmers → had low incomes after wwi

  7. workers → wages failed to keep up with increased productivity

  8. overspeculation: investors playing the stock market

  9. "buying on margin" = 10% → margin calls: couldn't pay broker

  10. speculators bid up the price of stocks + real estate → "paper fortunes"

  11. worth of businesses → based on stock sold, actual worth inflated

  12. banks: made unsound loans → resulted in bank failures

  13. excessive borrowing of $ + investing in the stock market

  14. international trade declines → us cutbacks + tariff policies

  15. wwi hurt europe's economy

  16. $ spend on rebuilding countries + paying off debts

  17. european nations introduced tariff policies in reaction to us policies

differences from earlier depressions

  • worldwide

  • us urbanization + industrialization

  • no "safety valves"

  • natural disasters

  • midwest: dust bowl

  • south: droughts

immediate effects

  • value of stock continued to fall — wall street

  • small investors - lost savings / "nest egg"

  • new rich: "paper fortunes" → suicides

  • old rich: "deflation" - survived

  • run on the banks — get savings → panic

  • badly weakened → surplus cash invested in stock market

  • 6000 banks closed

  • 10 million savings accounts lost

  • people broke; no money

  • business/industries closed — no customers

  • 100,000 failed

  • corporate profits fell — $10 billion, $1 billion

  • gnp cut in half

  • unemployment rose — not sudden but gradual

  • by 1933 25% (1/4th of workforce unemployed)

  • women + minorities forced out

  • many workers underemployed

  • farmers → farm prices dropped 60% (product declined 6%)

  • unrest: destroyed crops, dumped milk, killed animals

  • threatened bank agents → foreclosure

personal impact

  • song: brother, can you spare a dime

  • hard times → making do, maintaining self respect, keeping up appearances, normality

  • invisible scar → private despair, would not accept handouts

  • soup line - bread lines - selling apples or pencils

  • poverty → humiliation + shame (especially hit the men), blamed themselves

  • hoovervilles - hoboes - sisters of the road (latter two - train hoppers, going west)

  • legacy of fear → losing control of their lives

  • demographic trends:

  • marriage rates fell

  • birth rates fell (birth control)

  • divorce rates dropped

hoover's response

America didn’t have time for "eventually"

beliefs

  • government: NO direct aid, laissez-faire

  • individuals: rugged individualism

  • businesses: voluntary program of cooperation (keeping factories open)

actions

  • government spending: public projects eg. Hoover Dam

  • agricultural marketing act + farm board: helping farmers by buying up surpluses

  • reconstruction finance corporation (RFC)

  • "pump priming" - government lending bank, indirect relief

  • insurance companies, banks, agricultural agencies, etc.

  • local + larger-scale governments

protests against hoover

  • hoover's unpopularity - unable to act effectively

  • heartlessness - "great humanitarian"

  • fed belgium + fed pigs but not people

  • hostile congress → democrats

  • won control by promising economic assistance

  • rfc → "millionaire's dole" (welfare)

  • only helped wealthy + corporations

  • failed to improve the economy — not enough relief

  • bonus army - march on washington dc

  • wwi veterans

  • hoover called out the army → macarthur + eisenhower

presidential election of 1932

  • republican party: president hoover

  • praised republican anti-depression policies

  • claimed that the worst was past + prosperity was just around the corner

  • reaffirmed faith in american free enterprise

  • attacked fdr + democrats as socialist

  • democratic party: franklin delano roosevelt

  • results of electoral vote — fdr 472 + hoover 59