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The Great Depression 1928 Election • Herbert Hoover (R) • Alfred E. Smith (D) The Campaigning Issues • Prohibition – Hoover wanted ban, Smith did not • Religion – Smear campaign was launched against Smith b/c he was Catholic • Prosperity of the 20’s – Republicans took full credit • Hoover won in a landside The Stock Market • A system for buying and selling shares of companies • Bull Market vs. Bear Market • Buying on margin • Margin call • Speculation • No research and poor investments Black Tuesday The Roots of the Depression • Overproduction • Uneven distribution of wealth – Top 5% earned 30% of countries income – 2/3 of U.S. families earned <$2,500/year • Low consumption = low wages/decrease in jobs/low prices = vicious cycle • Installment plan = high debt/less money • Hawley-Smoot Tariff (raised tariffs) • Federal Reserve lowered interest rates • Money in the bank was not guaranteed The Depression Worsens • 1933, thousands of banks closed, millions out of work • Bread lines • Soup Kitchens • Shantytowns/Hoovervilles • Hobos • Dust Bowl • Many moved to CA Escaping the Depression • Movies and radio helped people forget • Walt Disney – Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937) • Movies: The Wizard of Oz, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, Gone With the Wind • Radio: George Burns (comedy), The Lone Ranger, Soap Operas Art During the Depression • Artists tried to capture the drama of the Depression – Thomas Hart Benton – Grant Wood • Authors wrote of poverty, misfortune, and social injustice – John Steinbeck’s The Grapes of Wrath (1939) – William Faulkner (exposed race issues in the South) Promoting Recovery • Hoover met w/ heads of banks, RR, big business, labor and gov’t to keep factories open and stop cutting wages • These pledges failed • Public works • Refused deficit spending • Republicans were blamed for the Depression and in 1930 they lost the majority in the H of R Pumping Money into the Economy • Federal Reserve Board refused to put more $ into circulation • National Credit Corporation (NCC) – Pool of money t rescue banks (failed) • Reconstruction Finance Corporation (1932) – Federal loans to banks, RR and agriculture – Too cautious and failed • Denied relief • Emergency Relief and Construction Act (1932) – $ for public works and direct relief Violence Erupts • Looting, rallies and hunger marches occurred • Foreclosures • Farmers kamikaze themselves • Bonus Army Time for Change • Herbert Hoover (R) • Franklin Delano Roosevelt (D) Roosevelt is Inaugurated • Lame duck period – Unemployment rose – Bank runs increased – $ converted into gold • Fear of an end to the gold standard • 4,000+ banks collapse by March 1933 • Bank holidays The First Hundred Days • The First New Deal • Advisors in the fields of: academia, business, agriculture, government, law and social work • New Nationalism: gov’t and businesses work together to manage economy • Government planners run key parts of the economy • New Freedom: gov’t should restore competition to the economy Fixing the Problems • National bank holiday • Emergency Banking Relief Act – Licenses to sound banks • Fireside chats (first one ended the bank crisis) • Securities Act of 1933 – Companies that sold stock had to provide info. to investors Fixing the Problems (cont’d) • Glass-Steagall Banking Act – Commercial vs. investment banking – Created the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) • Government insurance for bank deposits up to a certain amount • Securities and Exchange Commission – Regulated the stock market and prevented fraud Managing Farms and Industry • Agricultural Adjustment Act – Paid farmers not to raise certain crops – Administered by the Agricultural Adjustment Administration (+/-) • National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA) – Suspended anti-trust laws – Codes of fair competition b/w business, labor and gov’t – Section 7(a) – Run by the National Recovery Administration – Found Unconstitutional in 1935 Providing Debt Relief • Home Owners’ Loan Corporation (HOLC) – Bought mortgages and restructured them – Only applied to the employed • Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) – Government sponsored regional development and public energy • Farm Credit Administration (FCA) – Helped farmers refinance mortgages – May have prolonged the depression Work Programs • Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) – Unemployed men 18-25 could: work with national forestry service planting trees, fighting forest fires, and building reservoirs – Employed 3M men by the time it closed • Federal Emergency Relief Administration (FERA) – Channeled $ to state and local agencies to fund relief projects Work Programs (cont’d) • Public Works Administration – Construction projects • Civil Works Administration (CWA) – Workers placed on the gov’t payroll – Later shutdown b/c of costs • Prohibition repealed • People became hopeful and optimistic, and there was a renewed faith in America Challenges of the New Deal • New Deal policies were ? by the right and left • Deficit spending • American Liberty League – Created to oppose the New Deal • Huey Long • Father Charles Coughlin • Dr. Francis Townsend – Proposed an early form of Social Security The Second New Deal • Programs and reform to speed up recovery • Hoped it would improve the chances of reelection in 1936 • Works Progress Administration (WPA) – Offered work to artists, musicians, theatre people and writers • Schechter v. United States – NIRA was found unconstitutional – Congress could not delegate powers to the executive branch The Rise of Industrial Unions • Roosevelt believed in higher union wages to allow for more spending power • Wagner Act – Workers had to the right to organize w/o interference – Est. the National Labor Relations Board • Organized factory elections by secret ballot – Binding arbitration • Committee for Industrial Organization – Formed to organize industrial unions The Rise of Industrial Unions (cont’d) • General Motors sit-down strike • The plant in Flint, Michigan followed suit • Violence broke out and the company gave-in • United Auto Workers (UAW) was formed – One of the most powerful unions in the country The Social Security Act • Provided security for: – – – – Elderly Unemployed Women with dependent children Others in need that qualified • Provided monthly retirement benefit and unemployment insurance • Benefits were received by paying premiums • Helped many but left out farmers and domestic workers among others Roosevelt’s Second Term • Millions owed their jobs to the New Deal • To win women’s support Frances Perkins was appointed to a cabinet post • Roosevelt won the 1936 election in a landslide over Alfred Landon (R) • The Supreme Court began to find New Deal programs unconstitutional • Court-packing – Split the Democratic party Roosevelt’s Second Term (cont’d) • 1937 unemployment rose • FDR cut spending and the economy plummeted and 2M were out of work • Henry Morgenthau wanted to balance the budget • John Maynard Keyes: gov’t spending to jump start the economy • 1938 Roosevelt asked for $3.75B for the WPA, PWA and other programs The Last New Deal Reforms • National Housing Act (1937) promoted by Eleanor – United States Housing Authority: rebuilt slums • Farm Security Administration – Loans to tenant farmers • Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 – Protection for workers, abolished child labor, 40 hr. work week • Congress began to vote against New Deal • New Deal era ended by 1939 The Legacy of the New Deal • The New Deal had limited success but was a psychological boost • New Deal balanced competing economic interests • Broker state: gov’t worked out conflicts among different interests • The gov’t became a safety net