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The Great Depression
All these changes affects the society in different ways .The Great
Depression caused many people to destruct businesses and led the government to regulate
the businesses and economic affairs. All this increased regulation led to the widespread
belief that the government should promise or guarantee citizens a good life, and high
employment. After the depression, many people no longer trusted employers to protect
workers.
As a result labor unions gained more members and grater public acceptance then ever
before. Depression makes some people lose there faith in government which then brings them
to not believe anybody who promises a change.
Can anyone tell me who you think was the two leaders that actually took part during the
depression was? (show overhead of the fifth paragraph) Leaders who actually took power
during the depression were Adolph Hitler and Benito Mussolini who of which was the
dictator of Italy from 1922 to 1943 just like Hitler was dictator of Germany from 1933 to
1945. Relation between the nations suffer during a depression. Basically each country
tries to protect its own interests without concerns of other nations.
Depression hurt a lot of people, especially working people who lose there jobs. Bank
failures clean out some depositors savings if funds are not ensured. When there was the
depression, most people can not meet the house or apartment payments so they lose there
homes and become homeless.
During a depression some people must live on charity just to support themselves and there
families. Sometimes the people who get the charity money, clothes, and food get kind of
embarrassed that they need the money and they feel ashamed that they can't afford to
support themselves which is basically not their fault. The Great Depression caused lots of
marriages and birth rates to decline. If you were a younger person and you didn't have a
job you would delay your wedding until you have enough money to pay for it just because of
the depression. Most of the time when your unemployed for a long time you lose faith in
yourself and in the future. After a depression many people value security more than
anything else.
Some people profit from the depression, like people with enough money can buy businesses,
stocks, or other property for a very low price.
From what I hear economists disagree on what causes depressions and how
they are or can be prevented .Some economists believe that psychological factors such as
peoples optimism or pessimism, determine decisions to save or spend.
Several theories maintain that population changes or inventions cause
periods of expansion and contractions-(depression or recession). When immigration or
higher birth rates cause a population to grow, demands tends to increase.
When population growth slows down, demands drop by huge amounts. Such inventions as the
automobile and color television spur business investments and consumer spending, causes
expansion. After demand for these products has been satisfied, spending drop offs
resulting in contraction. Still other theories suggest that during expansion, business
invest too heavily in buying.
The expanded role of the federal government came to be accepted by most all Americans by
the end of the 1930's. Even republicans who had bitterly opposed the new deal shifted
there stance.
Wendle Wilkie the republican president nominee in 1940 declared that he couldn't oppose
reform such as regulation of the security markets and the utility holding companies, the
legal recognition of unions, or social security and unemployment allowances. What bothered
him so much and not just him but other critics was extensions of the federal bureaucy. In
March of 1933 president Roosevelt declared "There is nothing to fear but fear
itself."
The great depression was the worst economic slump ever in the U.S History, and one which
spread to virtually all of the industrialized world. ( show second paragraph of overhead)
However, the main causes for the depression was the combination of the greatly unequal
distributions of wealth throughout the 1920s, and the extensive stock market
speculation that took place during the latter part that same decade. The maldistribution
of wealth in the 1920s existed on many levels. Money was distributed disparately
between the rich and the middle - class, between industry and agriculture within the
United States, and between the U.S. and Europe. This imbalance of wealth created an high,
but eventually lead to large market crashes. These market crashes, combined with the
maldistribution of wealth, caused the American economy to capsize.
Another main cause of the great depression happened during the roaring twenties. The
"roaring twenties" was an era when our country prospered tremendously. The
nations total realized that the income had rose from 74.3 billion dollars in 1923 to
89 billion dollars in 1929. However, the rewards of the "coolidge prosperity" of
the 1920s were not shared evenly among all Americans. According to a study done by
the Brooking Institute, in 1929 the top .1 percent of Americans had a combined income
equal to the bottom 42 percent. That same top .1 percent of Americans in 1929 controlled
34 percent of all savings, while 80 percent of Americans had no savings at all. ( show
third paragraph of overhead) This might have sounded very confusing so I made an overhead
showing what I explained.
A major reason for this large and growing gap between the rich and the working - class
people was that the increased manufacturing output throughout this period. From 1923 -
1929 the average output per worker increased 32 percent in manufacturing. During that same
period of time average wages for manufacturing jobs increased only 8 percent. Thus, wages
increase at a rate as fourth as fast as productivity increased. As production costs fell
quickly, wages rose slowly, and prices remained constant, the bulk benefit of the
increased productivity went into corporate profits. In fact, from 1923 - 1929 corporate
profits rose 62 percent and dividends rose 65 percents.
The large and growing disparity of wealth between the well - to - do and the middle -
income citizens made the U.S. economy unstable. This made the economy function poorly
which also lead to the great depression. For an economy to function properly, total demand
must equal total supply. In an economy with such disparate of income it is not assured
that demand will always equal supply. Essentially what happened in the 1920s was
there was an oversupply of goods. It was not that the surplus products of industrialized
society were not wanted, but rather that those whose needs were not satisfied could not
afford more, whereas the wealthy were satisfied by spending only a small portion of their
income.
( show overhead of fourth paragraph) Through such a period of imbalance, the U.S. came to
rely upon two things in order for the economy to remain on an even keel which helped to
decrease the chances of going through the depression: credit sales, and luxury spending
and investment from the rich.
One obvious solution which might have stopped the depression was to let those who wanted
goods to buy the products on credit. The concept of buying now and paying later caught on
quickly. By the end of the 1920s, 60 percent of cars and 80 percent of radios were
bought on installments credit. Between 1925 and 1929 the total amount of outstanding
installment credit more than doubled from 1.38 billion dollars to around 3 billion
dollars. Installment credit allowed on to "telescope the future into the
present", as the presidents committee on Social Trends noted. This strategy
created artificial demand for products which people could not ordinarily afford. It put
off the day of reckoning, but it made the downfall worse when it came. By telescoping the
future into the present, when the "future" arrived, there was little to buy that
hadnt already been bought. In addition, people could no longer use their regular
wages to purchase whatever items they didnt have yet, because so much of the wages
went to paying back past purchases.
The U.S. economy was also reliant upon luxury spending and investment from the rich to
stay afloat during the 1920s. The significant problem with this reliance was that
luxury spending and investment were based on the wealths confidence in the U.S.
economy. If conditions were to take a downturn ( as they did with the market in fall and
winter 1929) , this pending and investment would slow to halt. While savings and
investment are important for an economy to stay balanced, at excessive levels that are not
good. Greater investment usually means greater productivity which were not being
distributed equally, the problems of income distribution were only made worse. Lastly, the
search for ever greater returns on investments lead to wide - spread market speculations.
So far, all these causes of depression might not be familiar with you but, they could
affect the economy in great ways and that is why the Us. Economy has studied these causes
so that they are prepared for the future. All of the causes that I have listed above are
just the few causes to the Great depression. In fact, there are lots of other minor or
major causes. Can anyone at least name one cause. (show overhead of main causes).
To understand the Great Depression, it is important to know the theories of John Maynard
Keynes. (show overhead of sixth paragraph) Keynes is known as the "Father of modern
Economics" because he was the first to accurately describe some of the causes and
cures for recessions and depressions.
In a normal economy, Keynes said, there is a circular low of money. MY spending becomes
part of your earnings, and your spending becomes a part of my earnings. For various
reasons. However, this circular flow can falter. People start hoarding money when times
become tough; but times become tougher when everyone starts hoarding money. This breakdown
results in recession.
To get the circular flow of money started again, Keynes suggested that the central
bankin the U.S., the Federal Reserve System should expand the money supply.
This would put more money in peoples hands, inspire consumer confidence, and compel
them to start spending again.
A depression, Keynes believed, is an especially severe recession in which people hoard
money no matter how much the central bank tries to expand the money supply.(show overhead
of seventh paragraph) In that case, he suggested that government should do what the people
were not: start spending. He called this "priming the pump" of the economy.
Indeed, most economists believe that only massive U.S. defense spending in preparation for
World War II cured the Great Depression.
(Show overhead of Chart)
3.20 % Hoover era, Great Depression begins
24.9 FDR, New Deal begins; contraction ends, March
19. Recession begins, May
As you can see, Roosevelt began relatively modest deficit spending that arrested the slide
of the economy and resulted in some astonishing growth numbers. When 1936 saw a phenomenal
record of 14 percent growth. Roosevelt eased back on the deficit spending, overly worried
about balancing the budget. But this only caused the economy to slip back into a
recession, as the above chart shows.
I have been unable to find reliable economic growth figures from World War II, but as a
generalization it is safe to say the economy exploded, experiencing its greatest
growth in the U.S history. Between 1940 and 1945, the GDP nearly doubled in size, form 832
billion dollars to 1559 billion dollars in constant 87 dollars. And this occurred as
deficit spending soared, to levels Keynes had earlier and unsuccessfully recommended to
Roosevelt.
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