The Great Depression
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Transcript The Great Depression
The Great Depression
General Causes of the Great Depression
Global Depression
European World War I debts went unpaid
Consumer debt
Credit
Lack of government regulation
Stock market crash/ over-speculation/ margin buying
“Less” Income Spending Employment
Cycle
Business failures
Unemployment
Good Good Times!
1920’s
Public
Perception:
Economy
would continue to grow
No fear of unemployment
Low taxation
Credit
Faith
in the stable economy
In
having a job
In a growing economy
Made
people feel safe borrowing
BUT
PEOPLE
BORROWED TOO MUCH
Uh Oh…
Easy
credit means loans to people
who might not be qualified, or able,
to pay loans back.
Little regulation by the government to make
sure loans are only made to those who would
be able to pay them back.
The Consumer
Used credit (borrowed money)
Did not have the money to pay it back
People wanted to buy things
Banks wanted to lend (make money on loans)
Government wanted credit to continue
Consumer spending = strong economy
People were in debt
Eventually this debt had to be paid-off, then
the “less” cycle began.
The Stock Market
Bull Market – upward trend in stock prices
1920’s was a continuous bull market
Bear Market – downward trend in stock
prices
The Great Depression marked the
beginning of a severe Bear Market
Stock Speculation
Speculating “playing” the market.
Buying and selling for quick profit.
Buy to create demand
Demand means price goes up
Sell stock at high price
(but the stock was not TRULY worth that high
price)
Problem?
Over Speculation
As long as demand continued there was
no problem with speculation – UNTIL
DEMAND ENDED.
Once demand calmed, overinflated stocks
dropped significantly in value.
People owned stock, but no one wanted to buy it.
When demand for a stock falls, what happens to the
price?
Margin Buying
Purchasing
stocks with borrowed
money
Believing
one could take a loan, invest it,
and make back the loans money plus
profit.
The Stock Market Crash
Black
Thursday
October 24, 1929
Nervous investors begin to sell their
stocks
No buyers
Stocks fall in value
Black Tuesday
October
29, 1929
16
Million shares of stock are dumped by
investors.
Prices of stocks plunge.
Margin
Buyers found themselves in
severe debt.
Herbert Hoover
“We
have passed the worst and… shall
rapidly recover.”
Business
leaders, public officials
claimed:
Only a minor setback
Banking Crisis
The Run on the Banks
Borrowers defaulted on
loans
Banks lost money
Went out of business
Public saw the writing on the wall
Individuals wanted to get their money out of
the banks before their bank closed for good!
The Banking Crisis
1930-1932
5,000+
banks fail
Collapse
Left
of 1 large New York Bank
400,000 depositors without their
savings.
The Run on the Banks
People
ran to banks to withdraw money.
Money
leaving the banks meant banks had
no money to invest, or make loans with.
Therefore,
banks had no means of making
money.
Banks
were forced to close.
Business Failures
Less consumer
spending
Less consumption of
products
Less profit/money
for businesses.
Business Response:
Trimmed inventories
Scaled back production
Laid off employees
Business Failures
1930:
26,000 Businesses went bankrupt
1931:
28,000
Factories and mines were empty.
GNP – Gross National Product
Total value of goods and services produced in a
given year
1929 $103 Billion
1933 $56 Billion
Unemployment
1932
(for
– 23.6% Unemployment
every 100 people, 23 were jobless)
Global Depression
Massive
war debts of Europeans went
unpaid.
Foreign
consumers were unable to
purchase U.S. goods
Factories
that sold to foreign countries
were forced to shutdown.
Income Gap
Growing income gap
Rich getting richer, poor getting more poor.
Farmers; Laborers
Unable to repay loans
Farmers; Laborers
Not getting a high enough wage to meet the
increasing cost of living.
Credit
Some Americans
used credit as a
means to bridge the income gap, or
maintain themselves with the rising cost
of living.
Many
consumers found themselves
unable to pay off their debts.
The (Good) Business Cycle
People
spend
Spending creates demand
Businesses have to hire more workers
to meet demand
More people spend.
Demand creates jobs
The (Bad) Business Cycle
People
do not spend
No demand
Businesses have to lay-off workers
because there is no demand
Less people spend
Less people have jobs
Review
Buying on Margin
Bull Market
Bear Market
Black Thursday
Black Tuesday
Explain how the Banking Crisis contributed to
the Great Depression.
Explain how business failures contributed to
the Great Depression
General Causes of the Great Depression
Essay Question
State
the 3 general causes of the Great
Depression, provide an EXAMPLE of
each, how each contributed to the
greatest economic slowdown in
American history.