Transcript File

INTERWAR YEARS
Causes of the Great Depression
Recession/Depression
• What is it?
• What are some examples that we have seen?
• What is going on in Canada today? What about China?
The Business Cycle
The Business Cycle
• The economy tends to experience different trends. These can
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be categorized as the trade cycle and may feature boom,
slump, recession and recovery
BOOM: A period of fast economic growth. Output is high due to
increased demand, unemployment is low. Business confidence
may be high leading to increased investment. Consumer
confidence may lead to extra spending.
SLUMP: A period when output slows down due to a reduction
in demand. Confidence may begin to suffer.
RECESSION: A period where economic growth slows down
and the level of output may actually decrease. Unemployment
is likely to increase. Firms may lose confidence and reduce
investment. Individuals may save rather than spend.
RECOVERY: A period when the economy moves between
recession and a boom.
What happens in a Boom?
- Businesses produce more goods
- Businesses invest in more machinery
- Consumers spend more money. There is a FEELGOOD
FACTOR
- Less money is spent by the Government on
unemployment benefits
- More money is collected by the Government in income tax
and VAT
- Prices tend to increase due to extra demand
What happens in a Recession?
- Businesses cut back on production
- Some businesses may go bankrupt
- Consumers spend less money. Fall in FEELGOOD
FACTOR
- Individuals may lose their jobs
- More money is spent by the Govt on unemployment
benefits
- Less money is collected by the Govt in income tax
- Prices start to fall
REASONS FOR DEPRESSION
1.
STOCK MARKET CRASH
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buying on margin (buying shares
with 10% down and using stock
profits to repay loans
Loans very easy to obtain
Stock prices over inflated
October 29, 1929 New York Stock
Exchange collapsed and others
followed
Investors bankrupt in a day
REASONS FOR DEPRESSION
2.
PRICE OF WHEAT FALLS
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1927 price of wheat plummets globally
Farmers unable to pay mortgages and loans
Leads to decrease in production, economy slows, layoffs occur
US tariffs (taxes on imported goods) and protectionism slows trade
Canada dependent on export of primary resources (wheat prairies, newsprint
BC, Ontario, Quebec)
REASONS FOR DEPRESSION
3.
REPARATION PAYMENTS
 Germany burdened with
reparation payments
 France and Britain have
major loans to United
States (money to
rebuild after WWI)
REASONS FOR DEPRESSION
4.
DROUGHT
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1928 – 1936
Wind blew topsoil away –
constant dust storms
Grasshopper infestation
No irrigation systems and
reservoirs
Causation: Immediate Vs Underlying
• Of the causes that we looked at, what were “immediate” and
what were “underlying” causes?
• The criteria for Immediate Causes:
• Immediate Causes are often the most obvious and easily identifiable.
• Immediate Causes directly cause the event in question.
• Often, the removal of the immediate cause will do little to prevent a
similar event from occurring again. For this reason, immediate causes
are often seen as being less important than underlying.
• The criteria for Underlying Causes:
• The underlying cause is usually less obvious and more difficult for the
historian to identify
• The underlying cause is often an underlying belief, ideal, or practice
amongst a group of people, and not isolated to a single historical
event.
• Often, the removal of the underlying cause will prevent a similar event
from occurring again. For this reason, underlying causes are often
seen as being more important than immediate.
For example…
• Instructions: Read the following case study
and decide which of the mentioned causes are
underlying, and which causes are immediate.
Prepare to defend your position.
• Case Study: March 8, 2004
• During a hockey game between the Vancouver
Canucks and the Colorado Avalanche,
Canucks player Todd Bertuzzi skated behind
Avalanche player Steve Moore, grabbed his
jersey, and punched him in the head. After
crumbling to the ice, doctors found that
Moore’s neck had been broken in the scuffle.
Almost immediately after the incident people
began to ask the question “what caused this
event?”
Causation: Immediate Vs Underlying
• Which one is which?
• Todd Bertuzzi was a vicious and violent player.
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_______________________________
The punch was retaliation for a hit Moore had laid on one
of Bertuzzi’s teammates the prior game.
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Coach Marc Crawford had encouraged his players to hurt
Moore __________________________
The incident was a result of the violent culture in the NHL.
_______________________________
The incident was caused by the removal of the instigator
rule. ____________________________
Now it’s your turn…
• Fill out the worksheet with underlying or immediate
causes.
• Support your answers using evidence from the text.
EFFECTS OF DEPRESSION
1.
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MIDDLE CLASS WIPED
OUT
Canadians lost their jobs,
homes, farms, businesses,
high suicide rate
Pogey, relief, dole,
welfare, vouchers, soup
kitchens
Reliance on charities and
gov’t aid not enough
EFFECTS OF DEPRESSION
2.
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ANGER AND DESPAIR
1933 – ¼ of Canadians unemployed
Young, homeless, jobless men drifting, hopping trains (riding
the rods), looking for work
Arrested for vagrancy for not having addresses
Shanty towns (jungles)
EFFECTS OF DEPRESSION
3.
DISADVANTAGED HURT
EVEN MORE
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Fewer jobs for women
(domestic service)
Aboriginal families expected
to ‘live off land’ so received
less relief
Chinese population:
starvation not uncommon
Immigrants viewed with
hostility as seen as threats
to jobs
Jewish anti-Semitism (no
Jews allowed signs)