Causes of the Great Depression
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Transcript Causes of the Great Depression
Causes of the Great Depression
Understanding the Economic Collapse of
1929
Causes of the Great Depression
The “Short List”
1920’S Prosperity (“False” or otherwise)
Republican Policies
The Business Cycle
Excessive Speculation (The “Crash” goes
here)
A Banking Crisis and “Panic”
1920’s Prosperity: Some Say
“False”
GNP rose 40%
Industrial production doubled
Construction boom: beginnings of
“suburbia”
Electrification
1902: 2% of U.S. power from electricity
1929: 80%
1907: fewer than one in ten homes
1929: 2/3 have it
1920’s Prosperity
Consumer Economy
“Chain” stores
16% of national
retail business
30,000 to 160,000
chains in the 1920’s
A&P, J.C. Penny,
Woolworth’s
1920’s Prosperity
Automobile sales
1900: 4,100
1929: 4,800,000
Ford Model T
Changes Wrought by Automobiles
Changed landscape
Stimulated other
industries: oil, steel,
glass, rubber
Highway construction:
Federal Road Act of
1916
Use of Credit
60% of all car
purchases
75% of radios
Republican Economic Policies
High Tariffs: Return to protectionism
Fordney-McCumber (1922)
Highest rate to that time
President authorized to raise rates still further
Hawley-Smoot Tariff Act (1930)
Highest in U.S. History
1000 economists signed petition against it
Republican Economic Policies: Tax Cuts
Sec. of Treasury Andrew
Mellon: Revenue Acts of
1921, 1924, and 1926 all
reduced tax rates
73% to 58% in 1922
50% in 1923
46% in 1924
25% in 1925
24% in 1929
“The history of taxation shows that
taxes which are inherently excessive
are not paid. The high rates inevitably
put pressure upon the taxpayer to
withdraw his capital from productive
business.”
Republican Economic Policies
Non-enforcement of anti-trust laws
Business-friendly appointments to FTC, ICC
Encouraged mergers and over production
6000 mergers, 1925-1931
Effective monopolies in aluminum, salt, sugar,
tropical fruit
Oligopolies in oil, steel, glass, cement, copper,
tobacco, meatpacking – even bread and milk!
“Easy Money”
Low Interest Rates
Fed loaned at 3.5%
Expanded use of credit
Speculation
Charles Mitchell of National City Bank: "I know of
nothing fundamentally wrong with the stock market."
(Oct. 21, 1929)
Buying “on margin”
Goldman Sachs investment trusts: 50% margin trading
at 5% interest
$19 billion in stock w/ only $3 billion in assets
“Easy Money”
“Big business
in America
today is
producing
what
socialists had
as their goal;
food clothing
and shelter
food all”.
The Business Cycle
The United States
Business Cycle,
1950-1990
How Bad Was It?
The Business Cycle
Unregulate
d capitalism
is prone to
“boom and
bust”
The Business Cycle
Stock Market Crash (speculation)
Speculation drives market higher and higher
Banks: $6,000,000,000 in loans to stockbrokers
Sep. 3 Dow high of 381
Sep. 6 “Babson break” - market became erratic
Roger Babson, economist and “father of economic
forecasting”
September 5th, 1929: "Sooner or later a crash is
coming, and it may be terrific". Later that day the stock
market declined by about 3%.
Stock Market Crash (speculation)
Oct. 23 - J.P. Morgan buys to stop price
decline
Oct. 24 - panic selling began - 12.8 million
shares (some say “Black Thursday”)
Oct. 29 - "Black Tuesday" - 16.4 million
shares
$14,000,000,000 in losses
Prices decline to Dow low (from 381) 41.22
on July 8, 1932
The Banking Crisis
Banks caught up in speculative wave
Loaned $6 billion to brokers
Federal Reserve (the Fed) didn’t act until
too late, then overreacted
The Banking Crisis
The Money Supply
The “Ripple Effect”: Unemployment
Year
1929
1930
1931
1932
1933
Number
1,550,000
4,340,000
8,020,000
12,060,000
12,830,000
%
3.2
8.7
15.9
23.6
24.9
Unemployment
High (or low, depending on POV) was 25%
Toledo and Akron, Ohio: 60-80%
100,000 jobs lost every week (avg), 1929-1932
200,000 families evicted in NYC in 1931
International Conditions
Dawes Plan/Young Plan
The Dawes Plan: 1924
Lowered German reparations payments to GBR
and France
U.S. would loan $$ to Germany
GBR AND France could repay war debts to U.S.
The Young Plan: 1929
Reparations lowered again to $26,350,000,000 to
be paid over a period of 58½ years
New U.S. loans to finance
Dawes Plan/Young Plan
International Conditions
Excessive loss of life and destruction of
WWI: No full economic recovery ever
happened internationally
Dislocation of Trade: Never reached pre1914 levels
USSR: A closed society and economy
The Hoover Response
Used “depression” instead
of “panic”
Made optimistic
statements in public
Conference w/ business
leaders: don’t lay off
Some public works $$ to
states
“Rugged Individualism”
Depression Deepens
The Hoover Response
“Hoovervilles”
The Hoover Response
The Hoover Response
1931-1932: Hoover Acts more forcefully
6000 banks had failed by 1932
100,000 business failures
Depression clearly worldwide event
The Hoover Program
$2.25 Billion in public works
Federal Farm Board: subsidize agriculture
Reconstruction Finance Corporation: $500 million to
business; borrowed $1.5 billion more
Raised taxes to compensate/balance budget
Norris-LaGuardia Act: no injunctions against labor
Vetoed Norris-Muscle Shoals Bill (later TVA)
The Hoover Response
1932
1933
12,060,000
12,830,000
23.6
24.9
The Election of 1932
Deceptive platforms
Democrats
Active aid to the unemployed
25% cut in federal spending
Repeal Prohibition
Lower tariff
Republicans
Balanced budget
Gold Standard
Public Confidence
The Election of 1932
1918: Hoover Feeds Belgium
1932: Migrant Mom Worries
The Realignment of 1932
Red States v. Blue States
1928
1932
The Realignment of 1932
See the map!
The New Deal Coalition: Modern Liberalism
African Americans
Urban America, esp. NE
Organized Labor
Farmers
Solid South (until 1968)
The Realignment of 1932
What’s Left for Republicans?
Not Much: Democrats win every
presidential election from 1932-1964
except 1952/56
Republican “strongholds”
Big Business
Small Town America
Social/Fiscal Conservatives
The New Deal
Campaign Slogan in 1932
No ideology at first: Experimentation
Becomes synonymous with “liberalism”