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Great Depression in the United States

In the United States, the Great Depression began with the Wall Street Crash of October 1929 and then spread worldwide. The nadir came in 1931–1933, and recovery came in 1940. The stock market crash marked the beginning of a decade of high unemployment, poverty, low profits, deflation, plunging farm incomes, and lost opportunities for economic growth as well as for personal advancement. Altogether, there was a general loss of confidence in the economic future.[1]

Great Depression era
1929–1941
Dorothea Lange's 1936 photo Migrant Mother is an iconic photograph associated with the Great Depression.
LocationUnited States
IncludingEarly New Deal Era
First Great Migration
Prohibition
President(s)Herbert Hoover
Franklin D. Roosevelt
Key eventsWall Street Crash of 1929
Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act
Widespread bank failures
Hitler's rise to power
Dust Bowl
New Deal
Recession of 1937–1938
← Preceded by
Roaring Twenties
Followed by →
World War II
New Deal Era
Unemployed men outside a soup kitchen in Chicago, 1931

The usual explanations include numerous factors, especially high consumer debt, ill-regulated markets that permitted overoptimistic loans by banks and investors, and the lack of high-growth new industries. These all interacted to create a downward economic spiral of reduced spending, falling confidence and lowered production.[2] Industries that suffered the most included construction, shipping, mining, logging, and agriculture. Also hard hit was the manufacturing of durable goods like automobiles and appliances, whose purchase consumers could postpone. The economy hit bottom in the winter of 1932–1933; then came four years of growth until the recession of 1937–1938 brought back high levels of unemployment.[3]

US annual real GDP from 1910 to 1960, with the years of the Great Depression (1929–1939) highlighted
Unemployment rate in the US 1910–60, with the years of the Great Depression (1929–39) highlighted; accurate data begins in 1939, represented by a blue line.

The Depression caused major political changes in America. Three years into the depression, President Herbert Hoover, widely blamed for not doing enough to combat the crisis, lost the election of 1932 to Franklin Delano Roosevelt by a landslide. Roosevelt's economic recovery plan, the New Deal, instituted unprecedented programs for relief, recovery and reform, and brought about a major realignment of politics with liberalism dominant and conservatism in retreat until 1938.

There were mass migrations of people from badly hit areas in the Great Plains (the Okies) and the South to places such as California and the cities of the North (the Great Migration).[4][5] Racial tensions also increased during this time.

The memory of the Depression also shaped modern theories of government and economics and resulted in many changes in how the government dealt with economic downturns, such as the use of stimulus packages, Keynesian economics, and Social Security. It also shaped modern American literature, resulting in famous novels such as John Steinbeck's The Grapes of Wrath and Of Mice and Men.

Causes

Monetary interpretations

Examining the causes of the Great Depression raises multiple issues: what factors set off the first downturn in 1929; what structural weaknesses and specific events turned it into a major depression; how the downturn spread from country to country; and why the economic recovery was so prolonged.[6]

Many rural banks began to fail in October 1930 when farmers defaulted on loans. There was no federal deposit insurance during that time as bank failures were considered a normal part of economic life. Worried depositors started to withdraw savings, so the money multiplier worked in reverse. Banks were forced to liquidate assets (such as calling in loans rather than creating new loans).[7] This caused the money supply to shrink and the economy to contract (the Great Contraction), resulting in a significant decline in aggregate investment. The decreased money supply further aggravated price deflation, putting more pressure on already struggling businesses.

 
A $10 US gold certificate. The U.S. used the gold standard until 1934 and controlled nearly half of the global gold supply during the inter-war period.

The U.S. Government's commitment to the gold standard prevented it from engaging in expansionary monetary policy.[clarification needed] High interest rates needed to be maintained in order to attract international investors who bought foreign assets with gold. However, the high interest also inhibited domestic business borrowing.[citation needed] The U.S. interest rates were also affected by France's decision to raise their interest rates to attract gold to their vaults. In theory, the U.S. would have two potential responses to that: allow the exchange rate to adjust, or increase their own interest rates to maintain the gold standard. At the time, the U.S. was pegged to the gold standard. Therefore, Americans converted their dollars into francs to buy more French assets, the demand for the U.S. dollar fell, and the exchange rate increased. One of the only things the U.S. could do to get back into equilibrium was increase interest rates.[citation needed]

In the late 20th century, Winner of the Swedish Central Bank Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences economist Milton Friedman and his fellow monetarist Anna Schwartz argued that the Federal Reserve could have stemmed the severity of the Depression, but failed to exercise its role of managing the monetary system and ameliorating banking panics, resulting in a Great Contraction of the economy from 1929 until the New Deal began in 1933.[8] This view was endorsed by Fed Governor Ben Bernanke who in 2002 said in a speech honoring Friedman and Schwartz:

Let me end my talk by abusing slightly my status as an official representative of the Federal Reserve. I would like to say to Milton and Anna: Regarding the Great Depression, you're right. We did it. We're very sorry. But thanks to you, we won't do it again.[9][8]
— Ben S. Bernanke

Stock market crash

The Wall Street Crash of 1929 is often cited as the beginning of the Great Depression. It began on October 24, 1929, and kept going down until March 1933. It was the longest and most devastating stock market crash in the history of the United States. Much of the stock market crash can be attributed to exuberance and false expectations. In the years leading up to 1929, the rising stock market prices had created vast sums of wealth in relation to amounts invested, in turn encouraging borrowing to buy more stock. However, on October 24 (Black Thursday), share prices began to fall and panic selling caused prices to fall sharply. On October 29 (Black Tuesday), share prices fell by $14 billion in a single day, more than $30 billion in the week.[10] The value that evaporated that week was ten times more than the entire federal budget and more than all of what the U.S. had spent on World War I. By 1930 the value of shares had fallen by 90%.[11]

Since many banks had also invested their clients' savings in the stock market, these banks were forced to close when the stock market crashed. After the stock market crash and the bank closures, people were afraid of losing more money. Because of their fears of further economic challenge, individuals from all classes stopped purchasing and consuming. Thousands of individual investors who believed they could get rich by investing on margin lost everything they had. The stock market crash severely impacted the American economy.

Banking failures

A large contribution was the closure and suspension of thousands of banks across the country. Financial institutions failed for several reasons, including unregulated lending procedures, confidence in the gold standard, consumer confidence in future economics, and agricultural defaults on outstanding loans. With these compounding issues the banking system struggled to keep up with the public's increasing demand for cash withdrawals. This overall decreased the money supply and forced the banks to resort to short or liquidate existing loans.[7] In the race to liquidate assets the banking system began to fail on a wide scale. In November 1930 the first major banking crisis began with over 800 banks closing their doors by January 1931. By October 1931 over 2100 banks were suspended with the highest suspension rate recorded in the St. Louis Federal Reserve District, with 2 out of every 5 banks suspended.[12] The economy as a whole experienced a massive reduction in banking footholds across the country amounting to more than nine thousand closed banks by 1933.

 
People outside a closed bank after 1929 stock market crash

The closures resulted in a massive withdrawal of deposits by millions of Americans estimated at near $6.8 billion ($121 billion in 2021 dollars). During this time the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) was not in place resulting in a loss of roughly $1.36 billion (or 20%) of the total $6.8 billion accounted for within the failed banks. These losses came directly from everyday individuals' savings, investments and bank accounts. As a result, GDP fell from the high seven-hundreds in 1929 to the low to mid six-hundreds in 1933 before seeing any recovery for the first time in nearly 4 years.[13] Federal leadership intervention is highly debated on its effectiveness and overall participation. The Federal Reserve Act could not effectively tackle the banking crisis as state bank and trust companies were not compelled to be a member, paper eligible discount member banks heavily restricted access to the Federal Reserve, power between the twelve Federal Reserve banks was decentralized and federal level leadership was ineffective, inexperienced, and weak.

Unregulated banking growth

Throughout the early 1900s banking regulations were extremely lax if not non-existent. The Currency Act of 1900 lowered the required capital of investors from 50,000 to 25,000 to create a national bank. As a result of this change nearly two thirds of the banks formed over the next ten years were quite small, averaging just above the 25,000 in required capital.[14] The number of banks would nearly double (number of banks divided by Real GDP) from 1890 to 1920 due to the lack of oversight and qualification when banking charters were being issued in the first two decades of the 1900s.[15]

The unregulated growth of small rural banking institutions can be partially attributed to the rising cost of agriculture especially in the Corn Belt and Cotton Belt. Throughout the corn and cotton belts real estate increases drove the demand for more local funding to continue to supply rising agricultural economics. The rural banking structures would supply the needed capital to meet the farm commodity market, however, this came with a price of reliability and low risk lending. Economic growth was promising from 1887 to 1920 with an average of 6 percent growth in GDP. In particular, the participation in World War I drove a booming agricultural market that drove optimism at the consumer and lending level which, in turn, resulted in a more lax approach in the lending process. Over banked conditions existed which pressured struggling banks to increase their services (specifically to the agricultural customers) without any additional regulatory oversight or qualifications. This dilemma introduced several high-risk and marginal business returns to the banking market.[16] Banking growth would continue through the first two decades well outside of previous trends disregarding the current economic and population standards. Banking profitability and loan standards begin to deteriorate as early as 1900 as a result.

 
Approaching dust storm near Stratford, Texas. April 18, 1935.

Crop failures beginning in 1921 began to impact this poorly regulated system, the expansion areas of corn and cotton suffered the largest due to the dust bowl era resulting in real estate value reductions. In addition, the year 1921 was the peak for banking expansion with roughly 31,000 banks in activity, however, with the failures at the agricultural level 505 banks would close between 1921 and 1930 marking the largest banking system failure on record. Regulatory questions began to hit the debating table around banking qualifications as a result; discussions would continue into the Great Depression as not only were banks failing but some would disappear altogether with no rhyme or reason.[17] The panic of financial crisis would increase in the Great Depression due to the lack of confidence in the regulatory and recovery displayed during the 1920s, this ultimately drove a nation of doubts, uneasiness, and lack of consumer confidence in the banking system.

Contagion

With a lack of consumer confidence in the economic direction given by the federal government panic started to spread across the country shortly after the Wall Street Crash of 1929. President Hoover retained the Gold Standard as the country's currency gauge throughout the following years. As a result, the American shareholders with the majority of the gold reserves began to grow wary of the value of gold in the near future. Europe's decision to move away from the Gold Standard caused individuals to start to withdraw gold shares and move the investments out of the country or began to hoard gold for future investment. The market continued to suffer due to these reactions, and as a result caused several of the everyday individuals to speculate on the economy in the coming months. Rumors of market stability and banking conditions began to spread, consumer confidence continued to drop and panic began to set in. Contagion spread like wildfire pushing Americans all over the country to withdraw their deposits en masse. This idea would continue from 1929 to 1933 causing the greatest financial crisis ever seen at the banking level pushing the economic recovery efforts further from resolution. An increase in the currency-deposit ratio and a money stock determinant forced money stock to fall and income to decline. This panic-induced banking failure took a mild recession to a major recession.[18]

Whether this caused the Great Depression is still heavily debated due to many other attributing factors. However, it is evident that the banking system suffered massive reductions across the country due to the lack of consumer confidence. As withdraw requests would exceed cash availability banks began conducting steed discount sales such as fire sales and short sales. Due to the inability to immediately determine current value worth these fire sales and short sales would result in massive losses when recuperating any possible revenue for outstanding and defaulted loans. This would allow healthy banks to take advantage of the struggling units forcing additional losses resulting in banks not being able to deliver on depositor demands and creating a failing cycle that would become widespread.[19] Investment would continue to stay low through the next half-decade as the private sector would hoard savings due to uncertainty of the future. The federal government would run additional policy changes such as the Check tax, monetary restrictions (including reduction of money supply by burning), High Wage Policy, and the New Deal through the Hoover and Roosevelt administration.

Social & political impacts

 
Huts and unemployed men in New York City, 1935

One visible effect of the depression was the advent of Hoovervilles, which were ramshackle assemblages on vacant lots of cardboard boxes, tents, and small rickety wooden sheds built by homeless people. Residents lived in the shacks and begged for food or went to soup kitchens. The term was coined by Charles Michelson, publicity chief of the Democratic National Committee, to refer sardonically to President Herbert Hoover whose policies Michelson blamed for the depression.[20]

The government did not calculate unemployment rates in the 1930s. The most widely accepted estimates of unemployment rates for the Great Depression are those by Stanley Lebergott from the 1950s. He estimated that unemployment reached 24.9 percent in the worst days of 1933. Another commonly cited estimate is by Michael Darby in 1976. He put the unemployment rate at a peak of 22.5 percent in 1932.[21] Job losses were less severe among women, workers in non durable industries (such as food and clothing), services and sales workers, and those employed by the government. Unskilled inner city men had much higher unemployment rates. Age also played a factor. Young people had a hard time getting their first job. Men over the age of 45, if they lost their job, would rarely find another one because employers had their choice of younger men. Millions were hired in the Great Depression, but men with weaker credentials were not, and they fell into a long-term unemployment trap. The migration in the 1920s that brought millions of farmers and townspeople to the bigger cities suddenly reversed itself. Unemployment made the cities unattractive, and the network of kinfolk and more ample food supplies made it wise for many to go back.[22] City governments in 1930–31 tried to meet the depression by expanding public works projects, as President Herbert Hoover strongly encouraged. However, tax revenues were plunging, and the cities as well as private relief agencies were totally overwhelmed by 1931; no one was able to provide significant additional relief. People fell back on the cheapest possible relief, including soup kitchens providing free meals to anyone who showed up.[23] After 1933, new sales taxes and infusions of federal money helped relieve the fiscal distress of the cities, but the budgets did not fully recover until 1941.

The federal programs launched by Hoover and greatly expanded by President Roosevelt's New Deal used massive construction projects to try to jump-start the economy and solve the unemployment crisis. The alphabet agencies CCC, FERA, WPA and PWA built and repaired the public infrastructure in dramatic fashion, but did little to foster the recovery of the private sector. FERA, CCC and especially WPA focused on providing unskilled jobs for long-term unemployed men.

 
Industry, a 1934 painting by Arthur Durston

The Democrats won easy landslide victories in 1932 and 1934, and an even bigger one in 1936; the hapless Republican Party seemed doomed. The Democrats capitalized on the magnetic appeal of Roosevelt to urban America. The key groups were low-skilled and Catholics, Jews, and Blacks were especially impacted. The Democrats promised and delivered in terms of political recognition, labor union membership, and relief jobs. The cities' political machines were stronger than ever, for they mobilized their precinct workers to help families who needed help the most navigate the bureaucracy and get on relief. FDR won the vote of practically every demographic in 1936, including taxpayers, small business and the middle class. However, the Protestant middle-class voters turned sharply against him after the recession of 1937–38 undermined repeated promises that recovery was at hand. Historically, local political machines were primarily interested in controlling their wards and citywide elections; the smaller the turnout on election day, the easier it was to control the system. However, for Roosevelt to win the presidency in 1936 and 1940, he needed to carry the electoral college and that meant he needed the largest possible majorities in the cities to overwhelm rural voters. The machines came through for him.[24] The 3.5 million voters on relief payrolls during the 1936 election cast 82% percent of their ballots for Roosevelt. The rapidly growing, energetic labor unions, chiefly based in the cities, turned out 80% for FDR, as did Irish, Italian and Jewish communities. In all, the nation's 106 cities over 100,000 population voted 70% for FDR in 1936, compared to his 59% elsewhere. Roosevelt worked very well with the big city machines, with the one exception of his old nemesis, Tammany Hall in Manhattan. There he supported the complicated coalition built around the nominal Republican Fiorello La Guardia, and based on Jewish and Italian voters mobilized by labor unions.[25]

In the 1938 United States elections the Republicans made an unexpected comeback, and Roosevelt's efforts to purge the Democratic Party of his political opponents backfired badly. The conservative coalition of Northern Republicans and Southern Democrats took control of Congress, outvoted the urban liberals, and halted the expansion of New Deal ideas. Roosevelt survived in 1940 thanks to his margin in the Solid South and in the cities. In the North the cities over 100,000 gave Roosevelt 60% of their votes, while the rest of the North favored Willkie 52–48%.[26]

With the start of full-scale war mobilization in the summer of 1940, the economies of the cities rebounded. Even before Pearl Harbor, Washington pumped massive investments into new factories and funded round-the-clock munitions production, guaranteeing a job to anyone who showed up at the factory gate.[27] The war brought a restoration of prosperity and hopeful expectations for the future across the nation. It had the greatest impact on the cities of the West Coast, especially Los Angeles, San Diego, San Francisco, Portland and Seattle.[28]

Economic historians led by Price Fishback have examined the impact of New Deal spending on improving health conditions in the 114 largest cities, 1929–1937. They estimated that every additional $153,000 in relief spending (in 1935 dollars, or $1.95 million in year 2000 dollars) was associated with a reduction of one infant death, one suicide, and 2.4 deaths from infectious disease.[29][30]

Global comparison of severity

The Great Depression began in the United States of America and quickly spread worldwide.[31] It had severe effects in countries both rich and poor. Personal income, consumption, industrial output, tax revenue, profits and prices dropped, while international trade plunged by more than 50%. Unemployment in the U.S. rose to 25%, and in some countries rose as high as 33%.[32]

Cities all around the world were hit hard, especially those dependent on heavy industry. Construction was virtually halted in many countries. Farming and rural areas suffered as crop prices fell by approximately 60%.[33][34] Facing plummeting demand with few alternate sources of jobs, areas dependent on primary sector industries such as grain farming, mining and logging, as well as construction, suffered the most.[35]

Most economies started to recover by 1933–34. However, in the U.S. and some others the negative economic impact often lasted until the beginning of World War II, when war industries stimulated recovery.[36]

There is little agreement on what caused the Great Depression, and the topic has become highly politicized. At the time the great majority of economists around the world recommended the "orthodox" solution of cutting government spending and raising taxes. However, British economist John Maynard Keynes advocated large-scale government deficit spending to make up for the failure of private investment. No major nation adopted his policies in the 1930s.[37]

Europe

  • Europe as a whole was badly hit, in both rural and industrial areas. Democracy was discredited in most countries.[38]
  • As the Great Depression in the United Kingdom worsened, there were no programs in Britain comparable to the New Deal.
  • In France, the "Popular Front" government of Socialists with some Communist support, was in power 1936–1938. It briefly tried major programs favoring labor and the working class, but engendered stiff opposition.
  • Germany during the Weimar Republic (1919–1933) fully recovered and was prosperous in the late 1920s. The Great Depression hit in 1929 and was severe. The political system descended into violence and the Nazi Party led by Adolf Hitler came to power through a series of elections in the early 1930s. Economic recovery was pursued through autarky, pressure on economic partners, wage controls, price controls, and spending programs such as public works and, especially, military spending.
  • Spain was a poor rural nation that saw mounting political crises that led in 1936–1939 to the Spanish Civil War. Damage was great. 1939 saw the takeover of the country by Francisco Franco's Nationalist faction.
  • In Benito Mussolini's Italy, the economic controls of his corporate state were tightened. The economy was never prosperous.

Canada and the Caribbean

  • In Canada, Between 1929 and 1939, the gross national product dropped 40%, compared to 37% in the U.S. Unemployment reached 28% at the depth of the Depression in 1929 and 1930,[39] while wages bottomed out in 1933.[40] Many businesses closed, as corporate profits of Can$396 million in 1929 turned into losses of $98 million in 1933. Exports shrank by 50% from 1929 to 1933. The worst hit were areas dependent on primary industries such as farming, mining and logging, as prices fell and there were few alternative jobs. Some families saw most or all of their assets disappear and their debts became heavier as prices fell. Local and provincial government set up relief programs but there was no nationwide New Deal-like program.
  • The effects of the Great Depression in Canada were heavily regionalized. The Prairie Provinces's economies, which had experienced strong economic growth during the 1920s, were poor for most of the 1930s. British Columbia, Ontario, and Quebec initially experienced sharp economic contractions, which were followed by reasonably strong recoveries, with some sectors of their economies even experiencing strong growth in the latter half of the 1930s. Meanwhile, in the Maritimes the Great Depression had the effect of exacerbating economic conditions that had been poor since the mid-1920s.[41]
  • The Conservative government of Prime Minister R. B. Bennett retaliated against the American high tariff act of 1930. It raised tariffs on U.S. goods and lowered them on British Empire goods. Nevertheless, the Canadian economy suffered. In 1935, Bennett proposed a series of programs that resembled the New Deal; but was defeated in the elections of that year and no such programs were passed.[42]
  • Cuba and the Caribbean saw their greatest unemployment during the 1930s because of a decline in exports to the U.S., and a fall in export prices.[citation needed]

Asia

  • Japan's economy expanded at the rate of 5% of GDP per year after the years of modernization. Manufacturing and mining came to account for more than 30% of GDP, more than twice the value for the agricultural sector. Most industrial growth, however, was geared toward expanding the nation's military power. Beginning in 1937 much of Japan's energy was focused on a large-scale war and occupation of China.
  • China's severe depression was worsened by the Second Sino-Japanese War during most of the 1930s, in addition to internal struggles between Chiang Kai-shek's Kuomintang and Mao Zedong's Communist Party.

Australia and New Zealand

Tight monetary policy

The stock market crash in 1929 not only affected the business community and the public's economic confidence, but it also led to the banking system soon after the turmoil. The boom of the US economy in the 1920s was based on high indebtedness, and the rupture of the debt chain caused by the collapse of the bank had produced widespread and far-reaching adverse effects. It is precisely because of the shaky banking system, the United States was using monetary policy to save the economy that had been severely constrained. The American economist Charles P. Kindleberger of long-term studying of the Great Depression pointed out that in the 1929, before and after the collapse of the stock market, the Fed lowered interest rates, tried to expand the money supply and eased the financial market tensions for several times; however, they were not successful. The fundamental reason was that the relationship between various credit institutions and the community was in a drastic adjustment process, the normal supply channels for money supply were blocked.[44] Later, some economists argued that the Fed should do a large-scale opening market business at that time, but the essence of the statement was that the US government should be quick to implement measures to expand fiscal spending and fiscal deficits.

Hoover Administration and the gold standard

Between the 1920s and 1930s, The United States began to try the tight money policy to promote economic growth. In terms of the fiscal policy, the US government failed to reach a consensus on the fiscal issue. President Hoover began to expand federal spending, setting up the Reconstruction Finance Corporation to provide emergency assistance to banks and financial institutions that were on the verge of bankruptcy. Hoover's fiscal policy had accelerated the recession. In December 1929, as means of showing government confidence in the economy, Hoover reduced all income tax rates by 1% in 1929 due to the continuing budget surplus. By 1930, the surplus had turned into a fast-growing deficit of economic contraction. In 1931, the US federal fiscal revenue and expenditure changed from the financial surplus to a deficit for the first time (the deficit was less than 2.8% of GDP).

By the end of 1931, Hoover had decided to recommend a large increase in taxes to balance the budget; in addition, Congress approved the tax increase in 1932, a substantial reduction in personal immunity to increase the number of taxpayers, and the interest rates had risen sharply, the lowest marginal rate rose from 25% on taxable income in excess of $100,000 to 63% on taxable income in excess of $1 million as the rates were made much more progressive.

Hoover changed his approach to fighting the Depression. He justified his call for more federal assistance by noting that "We used such emergency powers to win the war; we can use them to fight the Depression, the misery, and suffering from which are equally great." This new approach embraced a number of initiatives. Unfortunately for the President, none proved especially effective. Just as important, with the presidential election approaching, the political heat generated by the Great Depression and the failure of Hoover's policies grew only more withering.[45]

In terms of the financial reform, since the recession, Hoover had been trying to repair the economy. He founded government agencies to encourage labor harmony and support local public works aid which promoted cooperation of government and business, stabilize prices, and strive to balance the budget. His work focused on indirect relief from state governments and the private sector, which was reflected in the letter emphasizing "more effective supporting for each national committee" and volunteer service -" appealing for funding" from outside the government.[46]

The commitment to maintain the gold standard system prevented the Federal Reserve expanded its money supply operations in 1930 and 1931, and it promoted Hoover's destructive balancing budgetary action to avoid the gold standard system overwhelming the dollar. As the Great Depression became worse, the call raised for increasing in federal intervention and spending. But Hoover refused to allow the federal government to force fixed prices, control the value of the business or manipulate the currency, in contrast, he started to control the dollar price. For official dollar prices, he expanded the credit base through free market operations in federal reserve system to ensure the domestic value of the dollar. He also tended to provide indirect aid to banks or local public works projects, refused to use federal funds to give aid to citizens directly, which he believed would lower public morale. Instead, he focused on volunteer fundraising to raise money for relief of the needy.[46]

Even though Hoover was a philanthropist before becoming president, his opponents regarded him as unconcerned about the plight of impoverished citizens. During the administration of Hoover, the US economic policies had moved to activism and interventionism. In his re-election campaign, Hoover tried to persuade Americans that direct monetary relief from the federal government would be devastating to the economy in the long run. However, this message was highly unpopular, and consequently Hoover was defeated by Franklin Roosevelt in the presidential election of 1932.[citation needed]

Roosevelt Administration and the gold standard

At the beginning of 1933, during the last few weeks of Hoover's term, the American financial system was paralyzed. The Great Depression had been extended by the interventionist policy for four years. The bank crisis caused serious deflationary pressures. In fact, the worst period of 1932 – the Great Depression had passed, but the recovery was slow and weak. Roosevelt understood that traditional political and financial policy was not an adequate response to the crisis, and his administration chose to pursue the more radical measures of the New Deal.

During the financial crisis of 1933 culminating in the banking holiday of March 1933, gold had flowed out from the Fed in large quantities, to individuals and companies in the United States worried about bank failures, and to foreign entities worried about the depreciation of the dollar.[47]

In the spring and summer of 1933, the Roosevelt administration and the Congress took several actions that effectively suspended the gold standard. Roosevelt took office on March 4, 1933, and thirty-six hours later, he declared a nationwide bank moratorium in order to prevent a run on the banks by consumers lacking confidence in the economy. He also forbade banks to pay out gold or to export it.

On March 9, Congress passed the Emergency Banking Act, giving the President the power to control international and domestic gold exports. It also gave the treasury secretary the power to surrender of gold coins and certificates.

On April 5, Roosevelt ordered all gold coins and gold certificates in denominations of more than $100 turned in for other money. It required all persons to deliver all gold coin, gold bullion and gold certificates owned by them to the Federal Reserve by May 1 for the set price of $20.67 per ounce. By May 10, the government had taken in $300 million of gold coin and $470 million of gold certificates.

On April 20, President Roosevelt issued a formal proclamation prohibiting gold exports and prohibiting the conversion of money and deposits into gold coins and ingots.

On May 12, the United States weakened the monetary connection with gold further when FDR signed the Agricultural Adjustment Act. Title III of this act, also known as the Thomas amendment, gave the President power to reduce the dollar's gold content by as much as 50%. President Roosevelt also used the silver standard instead of gold to exchange dollars, it determined by the price of the bank.[47]

On June 5, Congress enacted a joint resolution nullifying the clauses in many public and private obligations that permitted creditors to demand repayment in gold.

In 1934, the government price of gold was increased to $35 per ounce, effectively increasing the gold on the Federal Reserve's balance sheets by 69 percent. This increase in assets allowed the Federal Reserve to further inflate the money supply. The abandonment of the gold standard made the Wall Street stock prices quickly increase; Wall Street's stock trading was exceptionally active.

Political responses of the depression era

Hoover's response

 
Herbert Hoover

The Hoover Administration attempted to correct the economic situation quickly, but was unsuccessful. Throughout Hoover's presidency, businesses were encouraged to keep wage rates high.[48] President Hoover and many academics believed that high wage rates would maintain a steady level of purchasing power, keeping the economy turning. In December 1929, after the beginning phases of the depression had begun, President Hoover continued to promote high wages. It wasn't until 1931 that business owners began reducing wages in order to stay afloat. Later that year, The Hoover Administration created the Check Tax[49] to generate extra government funding. The tax added a two-cent tax to the purchase of all bank checks, directly affecting the common man. This additional cost pushed people away from using checks, so instead, the majority of the population increased their usage of cash. Banks had already closed due to cash shortage, but this reaction to the Check Tax rapidly increased the pace.

Roosevelt's New Deal

In the "First New Deal" of 1933–34, a wide variety of programs were targeted toward the depression and agriculture in rural areas, in the banking industry, and for the economy as a whole. Relief programs were set up for the long-term unemployed who are routinely passed over whenever new jobs did open up.[50][51] The most popular program was the Civilian Conservation Corps that put young men to work in construction jobs, especially in rural areas. Prohibition was repealed, fulfilling a campaign pledge and generating new tax revenues for local and state governments. A series of relief programs were designed to provide jobs, in cooperation with local governments.

The National Recovery Administration (NRA) sought to stimulate demand and provide work and relief through increased government spending. To end deflation the gold standard was suspended and a series of panels comprising business leaders in each industry set regulations that ended what was called "cut-throat competition," believed to be responsible for forcing down prices and profits nationwide.[52] Several Hoover agencies were continued, most notably the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, which provided large-scale financial aid to banks, railroads, and other agencies.[53] Reforms that had never been enacted in the 1920s now took center stage, such as the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) designed to electrify and modernize a very poor, mountainous region in Appalachia.

 
Top left: the Tennessee Valley Authority, part of the New Deal, being signed into law in 1933.
Top right: Franklin Delano Roosevelt, who was responsible for initiatives and programs are collectively known as the New Deal.
Bottom: a public mural from one of the artists employed by the New Deal.

In 1934–36 came the much more controversial "Second New Deal." It featured Social Security; the Works Progress Administration (WPA), a very large relief agency for the unemployed run by the federal government; and the National Labor Relations Board, which operated as a strong stimulus to the growth of labor unions. Unemployment fell by ⅔ in Roosevelt's first term (from 25% to 9%, 1933–1937). The second set of reforms launched by the Roosevelt Administration during the same period included the Social Security Act of 1935. Insurance and poor relief ("public assistance" or "welfare") are constituent parts of the legislation, which provided pensions to the aged, benefit payments to dependent mothers, crippled children and blind people, and unemployment insurance.[54] The Social Security Act still plays a significant role of the American health and human service system so far. Much of the economy had recovered by 1936, but persistent, long-term unemployment lasted until rearmament began for World War II in 1940.[55]

The New Deal was, and still is, sharply debated.[56] The business community, with considerable support from such conservative Democrats as Al Smith, launched a crusade against the New Deal, warning that a dangerous man had seized control of the economy and threatened America's conservative traditions.[57] Scholars remain divided as well. When asked whether "as a whole, government policies of the New Deal served to lengthen and deepen the Great Depression," 74% of American university professors specializing in economic history disagreed, 21% agreed with provisos, and 6% fully agreed. Among respondents who taught or studied economic theory, 51% disagreed, 22% agreed with provisos, and 22% fully agreed.[58]

Recession of 1937–1938

 
A homeless family of seven walks along U.S. 99, bound for San Diego, where the father hoped to enroll in welfare because he once lived there. They walked from Phoenix, Arizona, where they picked cotton, 1939.

By 1936, all the main economic indicators had regained the levels of the late 1920s, except for unemployment, which remained high. In 1937, the American economy unexpectedly fell, lasting through most of 1938. Production declined sharply, as did profits and employment. Unemployment jumped from 14.3% in 1937 to 19.0% in 1938.[59] A contributing factor to the Recession of 1937 was a tightening of monetary policy by the Federal Reserve. The Federal Reserve doubled reserve requirements between August 1936 and May 1937[60] leading to a contraction in the money supply.

The Roosevelt Administration reacted by launching a rhetorical campaign against monopoly power, which was cast as the cause of the depression, and appointing Thurman Arnold to break up large trusts; Arnold was not effective, and the campaign ended once World War II began and corporate energies had to be directed to winning the war.[61] By 1939, the effects of the 1937 recession had disappeared. Employment in the private sector recovered to the level of the 1936 and continued to increase until the war came and manufacturing employment leaped from 11 million in 1940 to 18 million in 1943.[62]

Another response to the 1937 deepening of the Great Depression had more tangible results. Ignoring the pleas of the Treasury Department, Roosevelt embarked on an antidote to the depression, reluctantly abandoning his efforts to balance the budget and launching a $5 billion spending program in the spring of 1938 in an effort to increase mass purchasing power.

 
Total employment numbers in the United States from 1920 to 1940, excluding farms and WPA

Business-oriented observers explained the recession and recovery in very different terms from the Keynesian economists. They argued the New Deal had been very hostile to business expansion in 1935–37. They said it had encouraged massive strikes which had a negative impact on major industries and had threatened anti-trust attacks on big corporations. But all those threats diminished sharply after 1938. For example, the antitrust efforts fizzled out without major cases. The CIO and AFL unions started battling each other more than corporations, and tax policy became more favorable to long-term growth.[63]

On the other hand, according to economist Robert Higgs, when looking only at the supply of consumer goods, significant GDP growth only resumed in 1946. (Higgs does not estimate the value to consumers of collective goods like victory in war.[64]) To Keynesians, the war economy showed just how large the fiscal stimulus required to end the downturn of the Depression was, and it led, at the time, to fears that as soon as America demobilized, it would return to Depression conditions and industrial output would fall to its pre-war levels. The incorrect prediction by Alvin Hansen and other Keynesians that a new depression would start after the war failed to take account of pent-up consumer demand as a result of the Depression and World War.[65]

Afterward

 
A woman working in a military aircraft factory in Fort Worth, Texas in 1942. Millions of American women found work in the defense industry during the Second World War.

The government began heavy military spending in 1940, and started drafting millions of young men that year.[66] By 1945, 17 million had entered service to their country, but that was not enough to absorb all the unemployed. During the war, the government subsidized wages through cost-plus contracts. Government contractors were paid in full for their costs, plus a certain percentage profit margin. That meant the more wages a person was paid the higher the company profits since the government would cover them plus a percentage.[67]

Using these cost-plus contracts in 1941–1943, factories hired hundreds of thousands of unskilled workers and trained them, at government expense. The military's own training programs concentrated on teaching technical skills involving machinery, engines, electronics and radio, preparing soldiers and sailors for the post-war economy.[68]

Structural walls were lowered dramatically during the war, especially informal policies against hiring women, minorities, and workers over 45 or under 18. In 1941, Executive Order 8802 banned racial discrimination in war-related employment, and set up the Fair Employment Practices Commission to enforce this. Strikes (except in coal mining) were sharply reduced as unions pushed their members to work harder. Tens of thousands of new factories and shipyards were built, with new bus services and nursery care for children making them more accessible. Wages soared for workers, making it quite expensive to sit at home. Employers retooled so that unskilled new workers could handle jobs that previously required skills that were now in short supply. The combination of all these factors drove unemployment below 2% in 1943.[69]

Roosevelt's declining popularity in 1938 was evident throughout the US in the business community, the press, and the Senate and House. Many were labeling the recession the "Roosevelt Recession". In late December 1938, Roosevelt looked to gain popularity with the American people, and try to regain the nation's confidence in the economy. His decision that December to name Harry Hopkins as Secretary of Commerce was an attempt to achieve the confidence he so badly needed. The appointment came as a surprise to most because of Hopkins' lack of business experience, but proved to be vastly important in shaping the years following the recession.[70]

Hopkins made it his mission to strengthen ties between the Roosevelt administration and the business community. While Roosevelt believed in complete reform through the New Deal, Hopkins took a more administrative position;[clarification needed] he felt that recovery was imperative and that The New Deal would continue to hinder recovery. With support from Secretary of Agriculture Henry Wallace and Treasury Secretary Henry Morgenthau Jr, popular support for recovery, rather than reform, swept the nation. By the end of 1938 reform had been struck down, as no new reform laws were passed.[70]

The economy in America was now beginning to show signs of recovery and the unemployment rate was lowering following the abysmal year of 1938. The biggest shift towards recovery, however, came with the decision of Germany to invade France in May 1940. After France had been defeated in June, the U.S. economy would skyrocket in the months following. France's defeat meant that Britain and other allies would look to the U.S. for large supplies of materials for the war.[71]

The need for these war materials created a huge spurt in production, thus leading to a promising level of employment in America. Moreover, Britain chose to pay for their materials in gold. This stimulated the gold inflow and raised the monetary base, which in turn, stimulated the American economy to its highest point since the summer of 1929 when the depression began.[71]

By the end of 1941, before American entry into the war, defense spending and military mobilization had started one of the greatest booms in American history thus ending the last traces of unemployment.[71]

Facts and figures

 

Effects of depression in the U.S.:[72]

  • 13 million people became unemployed. In 1932, 34 million people belonged to families with no regular full-time wage earner.[73]
  • Industrial production fell by nearly 45% between 1929 and 1932.
  • Homebuilding dropped by 80% between the years 1929 and 1932.
  • In the 1920s, the banking system in the U.S. was about $50 billion, which was about 50% of GDP.[74]
  • From 1929 to 1932, about 5,000 banks went out of business.
  • By 1933, 11,000 of US 25,000 banks had failed.[75]
  • Between 1929 and 1933, U.S. GDP fell around 30%; the stock market lost almost 90% of its value.[76]
  • In 1929, the unemployment rate averaged 3%.[77]
  • In Cleveland, the unemployment rate was[when?] 50%; in Toledo, Ohio, 80%.[73]
  • One Soviet trading corporation in New York averaged 350 applications a day from Americans seeking jobs in the Soviet Union.[78]
  • Over one million families lost their farms between 1930 and 1934.[73]
  • Corporate profits dropped from $10 billion in 1929 to $1 billion in 1932.[73]
  • Between 1929 and 1932, the income of the average American family was reduced by 40%.[79]
  • Nine million savings accounts were wiped out between 1930 and 1933.[73]
  • 273,000 families were evicted from their homes in 1932.[73]
  • There were two million homeless people migrating around the country.[73]
  • Over 60% of Americans were categorized as poor by the federal government in 1933.[73]
  • In the last prosperous year (1929), there were 279,678 immigrants recorded, but in 1933 only 23,068 came to the U.S.[80][81]
  • In the early 1930s, more people emigrated from the United States than immigrated to it.[82]
  • With little economic activity there was scant demand for new coinage. No nickels or dimes were minted in 1932–33, no quarter dollars in 1931 or 1933, no half dollars from 1930 to 1932, and no silver dollars in the years 1929–33.
  • In 1932 deflation was 10.7 percent and real interest rate was 11.49 percent.[83]
  • The U.S. government sponsored a Mexican Repatriation program which was intended to encourage people to voluntarily move to Mexico, but thousands, including many U.S. citizens, were deported against their will. Altogether about 400,000 Mexicans were repatriated.[84]
  • New York social workers reported that 25% of all schoolchildren were malnourished. In the mining counties of West Virginia, Illinois, Kentucky, and Pennsylvania, the proportion of malnourished children was perhaps as high as 90%.[73]
  • Many people became ill with diseases such as tuberculosis (TB).[73]
  • The 1930 U.S. Census determined the U.S. population to be 122,775,046. About 40% of the population was under 20 years old.[85]
  • Suicide rates increased; however, life expectancy increased from about 57 years in 1929 to 63 in 1933.[86]

See also

General:

References

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Further reading

  • Bernanke, Ben. Essays on the Great Depression (Princeton University Press, 2000) (Chapter One – "The Macroeconomics of the Great Depression" 2010-07-04 at the Wayback Machine online)
  • Best, Gary Dean. Pride, Prejudice, and Politics: Roosevelt Versus Recovery, 1933–1938 (1991) ISBN 0-275-93524-8, a conservative viewpoint [https://archive.org/details/prideprejudicepo0000best online[
  • Best, Gary Dean. The Nickel and Dime Decade: American Popular Culture during the 1930s. (1993) online
  • Bindas, Kenneth J. Modernity and the Great Depression: The Transformation of American Society, 1930–1941 (UP of Kansas, 2017). 277 pp.
  • Blumberg, Barbara. The New Deal and the Unemployed: The View from New York City (1977). online
  • Bordo, Michael D., Claudia Goldin, and Eugene N. White, eds., The Defining Moment: The Great Depression and the American Economy in the Twentieth Century (1998). Advanced economic history.
  • Bremer, William W. "Along the American Way: The New Deal's Work Relief Programs for the Unemployed." Journal of American History 62 (December 1975): 636–652 online
  • Cannadine, David (2007). Mellon: An American Life. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. pp. 395–469. ISBN 978-0679450320.
  • Chandler, Lester. America's Greatest Depression (1970). overview by economic historian. online
  • Cravens, Hamilton. Great Depression: People and Perspectives (2009), social history excerpt and text search
  • Dickstein, Morris. Dancing in the Dark: A Cultural History of the Great Depression (2009) excerpt and text search
  • Field, Alexander J. A Great Leap Forward: 1930s Depression and U.S. Economic Growth (Yale University Press; 2011) 387 pages; argues that technological innovations in the 1930s laid the foundation for economic success in World War II and postwar
  • Friedman, Milton and Anna J. Schwartz, A Monetary History of the United States, 1867–1960 (1963) ISBN 0-691-04147-4 classic monetarist explanation; highly statistical online
    • Friedman, Milton and Anna J. Schwartz, The Great Contraction 1929–1933 (New Edition, 2008), chapter from A Monetary History covering Great Contraction
  • Fuller, Robert Lynn, "Phantom of Fear" The Banking Panic of 1933 (2012)
  • Graham, John R.; Hazarika, Sonali & Narasimhan, Krishnamoorthy. "Financial Distress in the Great Depression" (2011) SSRN link to paper
  • Grant, Michael Johnston. Down and Out on the Family Farm: Rural Rehabilitation in the Great Plains, 1929–1945 (2002) online
  • Greenberg, Cheryl Lynn. To Ask for an Equal Chance: African Americans in the Great Depression (2009) excerpt and text search
  • Greenspan, Alan; Wooldridge, Adrian (2018). Capitalism in America: A History. New York: Penguin Press. pp. 220–272. ISBN 978-0735222441.
  • Hapke, Laura. Daughters of the Great Depression: Women, Work, and Fiction in the American 1930s (1997)
  • Hicks, John D. Republican ascendancy, 1921-1933 (1960). online
  • Himmelberg, Robert F. ed The Great Depression and the New Deal (2001), short overview
  • Howard, Donald S. The WPA and Federal Relief Policy (1943) online
  • Jensen, Richard J., "The Causes and Cures of Unemployment in the Great Depression", Journal of Interdisciplinary History (1989) 19(553–83) online
  • Kennedy, David. Freedom from Fear: The American People in Depression and War, 1929–1945 (1999), wide-ranging survey by leading scholar; online
  • Klein, Maury. Rainbow's End: The Crash of 1929 (2001) by economic historian
  • Kubik, Paul J. "Federal Reserve Policy during the Great Depression: The Impact of Interwar Attitudes regarding Consumption and Consumer Credit" Journal of Economic Issues, Vol. 30, 1996 online
  • McElvaine Robert S. The Great Depression (2nd ed, 1993) social history online
  • Mitchell, Broadus. Depression Decade: From New Era through New Deal, 1929–1941 (1947), non-technical overview of economic history online
  • Morris, Charles R. A Rabble of Dead Money: The Great Crash and the Global Depression: 1929–1939 (PublicAffairs, 2017), 389 pp. popular economic history; [1] also see online review
  • Ossian Lisa L. The Depression Dilemmas of Rural Iowa, 1929–1933 (University of Missouri Press, 2012)
  • Rauchway, Eric. The Great Depression and the New Deal: A Very Short Introduction (2008) excerpt and text search
  • Roose, Kenneth D. "The Recession of 1937–38" Journal of Political Economy, 56#3 (1948), pp. 239–248 in JSTOR
  • Rose, Nancy. Put to Work: The WPA and Public Employment in the Great Depression (2009) online
  • Rose, Nancy. Workfare or fair work: Women, Welfare, and Government Work Programs (1995) online
  • Rosen, Elliot A. Roosevelt, the Great Depression, and the Economics of * Recovery (2005) ISBN 0-8139-2368-9
  • * Rosen, Elliot A. Hoover, Roosevelt, and the Brains Trust : from depression to New Deal (1977) online
  • Rothbard, Murray N. America's Great Depression (1963)
  • Saloutos, Theodore. The American Farmer and the New Deal (1982) online
  • Singleton, Jeff. The American Dole: Unemployment Relief and the Welfare State in the Great Depression (2000)
  • Sitkoff, Harvard. A New Deal for Blacks: The Emergence of Civil Rights as a National Issue: The Depression Decade (2008) online
  • Sitkoff, Harvard, ed. Fifty Years Later: The New Deal Evaluated (1985), liberal perspective
  • Smiley, Gene. Rethinking the Great Depression (2002) ISBN 1-56663-472-5 economist blames Federal Reserve and gold standard
  • Smith, Jason Scott. Building New Deal Liberalism: The Political Economy of Public Works, 1933–1956 (2005). online
  • Sternsher, Bernard, ed., Hitting Home: The Great Depression in Town and Country (1970), readings by experts on local history online
  • Szostak, Rick. Technological Innovation and the Great Depression (1995)
  • Temin, Peter. Did Monetary Forces Cause the Great Depression? (1976)
  • Tindall, George B. The Emergence of the New South, 1915–1945 (1967). History of entire region by leading scholar
  • Trout, Charles H. Boston, the Great Depression, and the New Deal (1977) online
  • Uys, Errol Lincoln. Riding the Rails: Teenagers on the Move During the Great Depression (Routledge, 2003) ISBN 0-415-94575-5
  • Warren, Harris Gaylord. Herbert Hoover and the Great Depression (1959). scholarly history online
  • Watkins, T. H. The Great Depression: America in the 1930s. (2009) online; popular history.
  • Wecter, Dixon. The Age of the Great Depression, 1929–1941 (1948), scholarly social history online
  • Wicker, Elmus. The Banking Panics of the Great Depression (1996) [2]
  • White, Eugene N. "The Stock Market Boom and Crash of 1929 Revisited". The Journal of Economic Perspectives Vol. 4, No. 2 (Spring, 1990), pp. 67–83, evaluates different theories in JSTOR
  • Young, William H., and Nancy K. Young. The Great Depression in America: A Cultural Encyclopedia (2 vol. 2007) vol 1 online also vol 2w online

Historiography

  • Cargill, Thomas F., and Thomas Mayer. “The Great Depression and History Textbooks.” History Teacher 31#4 (1998), pp. 441–458. online, discusses causation
  • Parker, Randall E., ed. Reflections on the Great Depression (2002) interviews with 11 leading economists
  • Romasco, Albert U. "Hoover-Roosevelt and the Great Depression: A Historiographic Inquiry into a Perennial Comparison." In John Braeman, Robert H. Bremner and David Brody, eds. The New Deal: The National Level (1973) v 1 pp. 3–26.
  • Szostak, Rick. "Evaluating the historiography of the Great Depression: explanation or single‐theory driven?." Journal of Economic Methodology 12.1 (2005): 35–61.

Primary sources

  • Cantril, Hadley and Mildred Strunk, eds.; Public Opinion, 1935–1946 (1951), massive compilation of many public opinion polls online
  • Lowitt, Richard and Beardsley Maurice, eds. One Third of a Nation: Lorena Hickock Reports on the Great Depression (1981)
  • Lynd, Robert S. and Helen M. Lynd. Middletown in Transition. 1937. sociological study of Muncie, Indiana [3]
  • Mott, Frank Luther, ed. Headlining America (1937) reprints best newspaper stories of 1935–136. online
  • Terkel, Studs. Hard Times: An Oral History of the Great Depression (1970)

External links

  • Rare Color Photos from the Great Depression – slideshow by The Huffington Post
  • , "An Overview of the Great Depression", by Randall Parker.
  • . Extensive library of projects on America in the Great Depression from American Studies at the University of Virginia
  • , year by year timeline of events in science and technology, politics and society, culture and international events with embedded audio and video. AS@UVA
  • by Lawrence Reed
  • Franklin D. Roosevelt Library & Museum for copyright-free photos of the period
  • . American Studies at the University of Virginia
  • Great Depression in the Deep South May 4, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  • on Smithsonian Networks
  • The Great Depression at the History Channel
  • .Recorded live on March 20, 2012, 10:35am MST at a class at George Washington University
  • "Banking Panics (1930–1933)." Encyclopedia of the Great Depression (2017) Encyclopedia.com | Free Online Encyclopedia>.
  • Richardson, Gary. "Banking Panics of 1930–31." Federal Reserve History. 2017.

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In the United States the Great Depression began with the Wall Street Crash of October 1929 and then spread worldwide The nadir came in 1931 1933 and recovery came in 1940 The stock market crash marked the beginning of a decade of high unemployment poverty low profits deflation plunging farm incomes and lost opportunities for economic growth as well as for personal advancement Altogether there was a general loss of confidence in the economic future 1 Great Depression era1929 1941Dorothea Lange s 1936 photo Migrant Mother is an iconic photograph associated with the Great Depression LocationUnited StatesIncludingEarly New Deal EraFirst Great MigrationProhibitionPresident s Herbert HooverFranklin D RooseveltKey eventsWall Street Crash of 1929 Smoot Hawley Tariff Act Widespread bank failures Hitler s rise to power Dust BowlNew DealRecession of 1937 1938 Preceded byRoaring Twenties Followed by World War IINew Deal EraUnemployed men outside a soup kitchen in Chicago 1931 The usual explanations include numerous factors especially high consumer debt ill regulated markets that permitted overoptimistic loans by banks and investors and the lack of high growth new industries These all interacted to create a downward economic spiral of reduced spending falling confidence and lowered production 2 Industries that suffered the most included construction shipping mining logging and agriculture Also hard hit was the manufacturing of durable goods like automobiles and appliances whose purchase consumers could postpone The economy hit bottom in the winter of 1932 1933 then came four years of growth until the recession of 1937 1938 brought back high levels of unemployment 3 US annual real GDP from 1910 to 1960 with the years of the Great Depression 1929 1939 highlighted Unemployment rate in the US 1910 60 with the years of the Great Depression 1929 39 highlighted accurate data begins in 1939 represented by a blue line The Depression caused major political changes in America Three years into the depression President Herbert Hoover widely blamed for not doing enough to combat the crisis lost the election of 1932 to Franklin Delano Roosevelt by a landslide Roosevelt s economic recovery plan the New Deal instituted unprecedented programs for relief recovery and reform and brought about a major realignment of politics with liberalism dominant and conservatism in retreat until 1938 There were mass migrations of people from badly hit areas in the Great Plains the Okies and the South to places such as California and the cities of the North the Great Migration 4 5 Racial tensions also increased during this time The memory of the Depression also shaped modern theories of government and economics and resulted in many changes in how the government dealt with economic downturns such as the use of stimulus packages Keynesian economics and Social Security It also shaped modern American literature resulting in famous novels such as John Steinbeck s The Grapes of Wrath and Of Mice and Men Contents 1 Causes 1 1 Monetary interpretations 1 2 Stock market crash 1 3 Banking failures 1 3 1 Unregulated banking growth 1 4 Contagion 2 Social amp political impacts 3 Global comparison of severity 3 1 Europe 3 2 Canada and the Caribbean 3 3 Asia 3 4 Australia and New Zealand 4 Tight monetary policy 4 1 Hoover Administration and the gold standard 4 2 Roosevelt Administration and the gold standard 5 Political responses of the depression era 5 1 Hoover s response 5 2 Roosevelt s New Deal 6 Recession of 1937 1938 7 Afterward 8 Facts and figures 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 11 1 Historiography 11 2 Primary sources 12 External linksCauses EditMonetary interpretations Edit Examining the causes of the Great Depression raises multiple issues what factors set off the first downturn in 1929 what structural weaknesses and specific events turned it into a major depression how the downturn spread from country to country and why the economic recovery was so prolonged 6 Many rural banks began to fail in October 1930 when farmers defaulted on loans There was no federal deposit insurance during that time as bank failures were considered a normal part of economic life Worried depositors started to withdraw savings so the money multiplier worked in reverse Banks were forced to liquidate assets such as calling in loans rather than creating new loans 7 This caused the money supply to shrink and the economy to contract the Great Contraction resulting in a significant decline in aggregate investment The decreased money supply further aggravated price deflation putting more pressure on already struggling businesses A 10 US gold certificate The U S used the gold standard until 1934 and controlled nearly half of the global gold supply during the inter war period The U S Government s commitment to the gold standard prevented it from engaging in expansionary monetary policy clarification needed High interest rates needed to be maintained in order to attract international investors who bought foreign assets with gold However the high interest also inhibited domestic business borrowing citation needed The U S interest rates were also affected by France s decision to raise their interest rates to attract gold to their vaults In theory the U S would have two potential responses to that allow the exchange rate to adjust or increase their own interest rates to maintain the gold standard At the time the U S was pegged to the gold standard Therefore Americans converted their dollars into francs to buy more French assets the demand for the U S dollar fell and the exchange rate increased One of the only things the U S could do to get back into equilibrium was increase interest rates citation needed In the late 20th century Winner of the Swedish Central Bank Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences economist Milton Friedman and his fellow monetarist Anna Schwartz argued that the Federal Reserve could have stemmed the severity of the Depression but failed to exercise its role of managing the monetary system and ameliorating banking panics resulting in a Great Contraction of the economy from 1929 until the New Deal began in 1933 8 This view was endorsed by Fed Governor Ben Bernanke who in 2002 said in a speech honoring Friedman and Schwartz Let me end my talk by abusing slightly my status as an official representative of the Federal Reserve I would like to say to Milton and Anna Regarding the Great Depression you re right We did it We re very sorry But thanks to you we won t do it again 9 8 Ben S Bernanke Stock market crash Edit The Wall Street Crash of 1929 is often cited as the beginning of the Great Depression It began on October 24 1929 and kept going down until March 1933 It was the longest and most devastating stock market crash in the history of the United States Much of the stock market crash can be attributed to exuberance and false expectations In the years leading up to 1929 the rising stock market prices had created vast sums of wealth in relation to amounts invested in turn encouraging borrowing to buy more stock However on October 24 Black Thursday share prices began to fall and panic selling caused prices to fall sharply On October 29 Black Tuesday share prices fell by 14 billion in a single day more than 30 billion in the week 10 The value that evaporated that week was ten times more than the entire federal budget and more than all of what the U S had spent on World War I By 1930 the value of shares had fallen by 90 11 Since many banks had also invested their clients savings in the stock market these banks were forced to close when the stock market crashed After the stock market crash and the bank closures people were afraid of losing more money Because of their fears of further economic challenge individuals from all classes stopped purchasing and consuming Thousands of individual investors who believed they could get rich by investing on margin lost everything they had The stock market crash severely impacted the American economy Banking failures Edit A large contribution was the closure and suspension of thousands of banks across the country Financial institutions failed for several reasons including unregulated lending procedures confidence in the gold standard consumer confidence in future economics and agricultural defaults on outstanding loans With these compounding issues the banking system struggled to keep up with the public s increasing demand for cash withdrawals This overall decreased the money supply and forced the banks to resort to short or liquidate existing loans 7 In the race to liquidate assets the banking system began to fail on a wide scale In November 1930 the first major banking crisis began with over 800 banks closing their doors by January 1931 By October 1931 over 2100 banks were suspended with the highest suspension rate recorded in the St Louis Federal Reserve District with 2 out of every 5 banks suspended 12 The economy as a whole experienced a massive reduction in banking footholds across the country amounting to more than nine thousand closed banks by 1933 People outside a closed bank after 1929 stock market crash The closures resulted in a massive withdrawal of deposits by millions of Americans estimated at near 6 8 billion 121 billion in 2021 dollars During this time the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation FDIC was not in place resulting in a loss of roughly 1 36 billion or 20 of the total 6 8 billion accounted for within the failed banks These losses came directly from everyday individuals savings investments and bank accounts As a result GDP fell from the high seven hundreds in 1929 to the low to mid six hundreds in 1933 before seeing any recovery for the first time in nearly 4 years 13 Federal leadership intervention is highly debated on its effectiveness and overall participation The Federal Reserve Act could not effectively tackle the banking crisis as state bank and trust companies were not compelled to be a member paper eligible discount member banks heavily restricted access to the Federal Reserve power between the twelve Federal Reserve banks was decentralized and federal level leadership was ineffective inexperienced and weak Unregulated banking growth Edit Throughout the early 1900s banking regulations were extremely lax if not non existent The Currency Act of 1900 lowered the required capital of investors from 50 000 to 25 000 to create a national bank As a result of this change nearly two thirds of the banks formed over the next ten years were quite small averaging just above the 25 000 in required capital 14 The number of banks would nearly double number of banks divided by Real GDP from 1890 to 1920 due to the lack of oversight and qualification when banking charters were being issued in the first two decades of the 1900s 15 The unregulated growth of small rural banking institutions can be partially attributed to the rising cost of agriculture especially in the Corn Belt and Cotton Belt Throughout the corn and cotton belts real estate increases drove the demand for more local funding to continue to supply rising agricultural economics The rural banking structures would supply the needed capital to meet the farm commodity market however this came with a price of reliability and low risk lending Economic growth was promising from 1887 to 1920 with an average of 6 percent growth in GDP In particular the participation in World War I drove a booming agricultural market that drove optimism at the consumer and lending level which in turn resulted in a more lax approach in the lending process Over banked conditions existed which pressured struggling banks to increase their services specifically to the agricultural customers without any additional regulatory oversight or qualifications This dilemma introduced several high risk and marginal business returns to the banking market 16 Banking growth would continue through the first two decades well outside of previous trends disregarding the current economic and population standards Banking profitability and loan standards begin to deteriorate as early as 1900 as a result Approaching dust storm near Stratford Texas April 18 1935 Crop failures beginning in 1921 began to impact this poorly regulated system the expansion areas of corn and cotton suffered the largest due to the dust bowl era resulting in real estate value reductions In addition the year 1921 was the peak for banking expansion with roughly 31 000 banks in activity however with the failures at the agricultural level 505 banks would close between 1921 and 1930 marking the largest banking system failure on record Regulatory questions began to hit the debating table around banking qualifications as a result discussions would continue into the Great Depression as not only were banks failing but some would disappear altogether with no rhyme or reason 17 The panic of financial crisis would increase in the Great Depression due to the lack of confidence in the regulatory and recovery displayed during the 1920s this ultimately drove a nation of doubts uneasiness and lack of consumer confidence in the banking system Contagion Edit With a lack of consumer confidence in the economic direction given by the federal government panic started to spread across the country shortly after the Wall Street Crash of 1929 President Hoover retained the Gold Standard as the country s currency gauge throughout the following years As a result the American shareholders with the majority of the gold reserves began to grow wary of the value of gold in the near future Europe s decision to move away from the Gold Standard caused individuals to start to withdraw gold shares and move the investments out of the country or began to hoard gold for future investment The market continued to suffer due to these reactions and as a result caused several of the everyday individuals to speculate on the economy in the coming months Rumors of market stability and banking conditions began to spread consumer confidence continued to drop and panic began to set in Contagion spread like wildfire pushing Americans all over the country to withdraw their deposits en masse This idea would continue from 1929 to 1933 causing the greatest financial crisis ever seen at the banking level pushing the economic recovery efforts further from resolution An increase in the currency deposit ratio and a money stock determinant forced money stock to fall and income to decline This panic induced banking failure took a mild recession to a major recession 18 Whether this caused the Great Depression is still heavily debated due to many other attributing factors However it is evident that the banking system suffered massive reductions across the country due to the lack of consumer confidence As withdraw requests would exceed cash availability banks began conducting steed discount sales such as fire sales and short sales Due to the inability to immediately determine current value worth these fire sales and short sales would result in massive losses when recuperating any possible revenue for outstanding and defaulted loans This would allow healthy banks to take advantage of the struggling units forcing additional losses resulting in banks not being able to deliver on depositor demands and creating a failing cycle that would become widespread 19 Investment would continue to stay low through the next half decade as the private sector would hoard savings due to uncertainty of the future The federal government would run additional policy changes such as the Check tax monetary restrictions including reduction of money supply by burning High Wage Policy and the New Deal through the Hoover and Roosevelt administration Social amp political impacts Edit Huts and unemployed men in New York City 1935 One visible effect of the depression was the advent of Hoovervilles which were ramshackle assemblages on vacant lots of cardboard boxes tents and small rickety wooden sheds built by homeless people Residents lived in the shacks and begged for food or went to soup kitchens The term was coined by Charles Michelson publicity chief of the Democratic National Committee to refer sardonically to President Herbert Hoover whose policies Michelson blamed for the depression 20 The government did not calculate unemployment rates in the 1930s The most widely accepted estimates of unemployment rates for the Great Depression are those by Stanley Lebergott from the 1950s He estimated that unemployment reached 24 9 percent in the worst days of 1933 Another commonly cited estimate is by Michael Darby in 1976 He put the unemployment rate at a peak of 22 5 percent in 1932 21 Job losses were less severe among women workers in non durable industries such as food and clothing services and sales workers and those employed by the government Unskilled inner city men had much higher unemployment rates Age also played a factor Young people had a hard time getting their first job Men over the age of 45 if they lost their job would rarely find another one because employers had their choice of younger men Millions were hired in the Great Depression but men with weaker credentials were not and they fell into a long term unemployment trap The migration in the 1920s that brought millions of farmers and townspeople to the bigger cities suddenly reversed itself Unemployment made the cities unattractive and the network of kinfolk and more ample food supplies made it wise for many to go back 22 City governments in 1930 31 tried to meet the depression by expanding public works projects as President Herbert Hoover strongly encouraged However tax revenues were plunging and the cities as well as private relief agencies were totally overwhelmed by 1931 no one was able to provide significant additional relief People fell back on the cheapest possible relief including soup kitchens providing free meals to anyone who showed up 23 After 1933 new sales taxes and infusions of federal money helped relieve the fiscal distress of the cities but the budgets did not fully recover until 1941 The federal programs launched by Hoover and greatly expanded by President Roosevelt s New Deal used massive construction projects to try to jump start the economy and solve the unemployment crisis The alphabet agencies CCC FERA WPA and PWA built and repaired the public infrastructure in dramatic fashion but did little to foster the recovery of the private sector FERA CCC and especially WPA focused on providing unskilled jobs for long term unemployed men Industry a 1934 painting by Arthur Durston The Democrats won easy landslide victories in 1932 and 1934 and an even bigger one in 1936 the hapless Republican Party seemed doomed The Democrats capitalized on the magnetic appeal of Roosevelt to urban America The key groups were low skilled and Catholics Jews and Blacks were especially impacted The Democrats promised and delivered in terms of political recognition labor union membership and relief jobs The cities political machines were stronger than ever for they mobilized their precinct workers to help families who needed help the most navigate the bureaucracy and get on relief FDR won the vote of practically every demographic in 1936 including taxpayers small business and the middle class However the Protestant middle class voters turned sharply against him after the recession of 1937 38 undermined repeated promises that recovery was at hand Historically local political machines were primarily interested in controlling their wards and citywide elections the smaller the turnout on election day the easier it was to control the system However for Roosevelt to win the presidency in 1936 and 1940 he needed to carry the electoral college and that meant he needed the largest possible majorities in the cities to overwhelm rural voters The machines came through for him 24 The 3 5 million voters on relief payrolls during the 1936 election cast 82 percent of their ballots for Roosevelt The rapidly growing energetic labor unions chiefly based in the cities turned out 80 for FDR as did Irish Italian and Jewish communities In all the nation s 106 cities over 100 000 population voted 70 for FDR in 1936 compared to his 59 elsewhere Roosevelt worked very well with the big city machines with the one exception of his old nemesis Tammany Hall in Manhattan There he supported the complicated coalition built around the nominal Republican Fiorello La Guardia and based on Jewish and Italian voters mobilized by labor unions 25 In the 1938 United States elections the Republicans made an unexpected comeback and Roosevelt s efforts to purge the Democratic Party of his political opponents backfired badly The conservative coalition of Northern Republicans and Southern Democrats took control of Congress outvoted the urban liberals and halted the expansion of New Deal ideas Roosevelt survived in 1940 thanks to his margin in the Solid South and in the cities In the North the cities over 100 000 gave Roosevelt 60 of their votes while the rest of the North favored Willkie 52 48 26 With the start of full scale war mobilization in the summer of 1940 the economies of the cities rebounded Even before Pearl Harbor Washington pumped massive investments into new factories and funded round the clock munitions production guaranteeing a job to anyone who showed up at the factory gate 27 The war brought a restoration of prosperity and hopeful expectations for the future across the nation It had the greatest impact on the cities of the West Coast especially Los Angeles San Diego San Francisco Portland and Seattle 28 Economic historians led by Price Fishback have examined the impact of New Deal spending on improving health conditions in the 114 largest cities 1929 1937 They estimated that every additional 153 000 in relief spending in 1935 dollars or 1 95 million in year 2000 dollars was associated with a reduction of one infant death one suicide and 2 4 deaths from infectious disease 29 30 Global comparison of severity EditMain articles Great Depression and Great Depression in Canada The Great Depression began in the United States of America and quickly spread worldwide 31 It had severe effects in countries both rich and poor Personal income consumption industrial output tax revenue profits and prices dropped while international trade plunged by more than 50 Unemployment in the U S rose to 25 and in some countries rose as high as 33 32 Cities all around the world were hit hard especially those dependent on heavy industry Construction was virtually halted in many countries Farming and rural areas suffered as crop prices fell by approximately 60 33 34 Facing plummeting demand with few alternate sources of jobs areas dependent on primary sector industries such as grain farming mining and logging as well as construction suffered the most 35 Most economies started to recover by 1933 34 However in the U S and some others the negative economic impact often lasted until the beginning of World War II when war industries stimulated recovery 36 There is little agreement on what caused the Great Depression and the topic has become highly politicized At the time the great majority of economists around the world recommended the orthodox solution of cutting government spending and raising taxes However British economist John Maynard Keynes advocated large scale government deficit spending to make up for the failure of private investment No major nation adopted his policies in the 1930s 37 Europe Edit Europe as a whole was badly hit in both rural and industrial areas Democracy was discredited in most countries 38 As the Great Depression in the United Kingdom worsened there were no programs in Britain comparable to the New Deal In France the Popular Front government of Socialists with some Communist support was in power 1936 1938 It briefly tried major programs favoring labor and the working class but engendered stiff opposition Germany during the Weimar Republic 1919 1933 fully recovered and was prosperous in the late 1920s The Great Depression hit in 1929 and was severe The political system descended into violence and the Nazi Party led by Adolf Hitler came to power through a series of elections in the early 1930s Economic recovery was pursued through autarky pressure on economic partners wage controls price controls and spending programs such as public works and especially military spending Spain was a poor rural nation that saw mounting political crises that led in 1936 1939 to the Spanish Civil War Damage was great 1939 saw the takeover of the country by Francisco Franco s Nationalist faction In Benito Mussolini s Italy the economic controls of his corporate state were tightened The economy was never prosperous Canada and the Caribbean Edit In Canada Between 1929 and 1939 the gross national product dropped 40 compared to 37 in the U S Unemployment reached 28 at the depth of the Depression in 1929 and 1930 39 while wages bottomed out in 1933 40 Many businesses closed as corporate profits of Can 396 million in 1929 turned into losses of 98 million in 1933 Exports shrank by 50 from 1929 to 1933 The worst hit were areas dependent on primary industries such as farming mining and logging as prices fell and there were few alternative jobs Some families saw most or all of their assets disappear and their debts became heavier as prices fell Local and provincial government set up relief programs but there was no nationwide New Deal like program The effects of the Great Depression in Canada were heavily regionalized The Prairie Provinces s economies which had experienced strong economic growth during the 1920s were poor for most of the 1930s British Columbia Ontario and Quebec initially experienced sharp economic contractions which were followed by reasonably strong recoveries with some sectors of their economies even experiencing strong growth in the latter half of the 1930s Meanwhile in the Maritimes the Great Depression had the effect of exacerbating economic conditions that had been poor since the mid 1920s 41 The Conservative government of Prime Minister R B Bennett retaliated against the American high tariff act of 1930 It raised tariffs on U S goods and lowered them on British Empire goods Nevertheless the Canadian economy suffered In 1935 Bennett proposed a series of programs that resembled the New Deal but was defeated in the elections of that year and no such programs were passed 42 Cuba and the Caribbean saw their greatest unemployment during the 1930s because of a decline in exports to the U S and a fall in export prices citation needed Asia Edit Japan s economy expanded at the rate of 5 of GDP per year after the years of modernization Manufacturing and mining came to account for more than 30 of GDP more than twice the value for the agricultural sector Most industrial growth however was geared toward expanding the nation s military power Beginning in 1937 much of Japan s energy was focused on a large scale war and occupation of China China s severe depression was worsened by the Second Sino Japanese War during most of the 1930s in addition to internal struggles between Chiang Kai shek s Kuomintang and Mao Zedong s Communist Party Australia and New Zealand Edit In Australia 1930s conservative and Labor led governments concentrated on cutting spending and reducing the national debt citation needed In New Zealand a series of economic and social policies similar to the New Deal were adopted after the election of its First Labor Government in the 1935 general election 43 Tight monetary policy EditThe stock market crash in 1929 not only affected the business community and the public s economic confidence but it also led to the banking system soon after the turmoil The boom of the US economy in the 1920s was based on high indebtedness and the rupture of the debt chain caused by the collapse of the bank had produced widespread and far reaching adverse effects It is precisely because of the shaky banking system the United States was using monetary policy to save the economy that had been severely constrained The American economist Charles P Kindleberger of long term studying of the Great Depression pointed out that in the 1929 before and after the collapse of the stock market the Fed lowered interest rates tried to expand the money supply and eased the financial market tensions for several times however they were not successful The fundamental reason was that the relationship between various credit institutions and the community was in a drastic adjustment process the normal supply channels for money supply were blocked 44 Later some economists argued that the Fed should do a large scale opening market business at that time but the essence of the statement was that the US government should be quick to implement measures to expand fiscal spending and fiscal deficits Hoover Administration and the gold standard Edit Between the 1920s and 1930s The United States began to try the tight money policy to promote economic growth In terms of the fiscal policy the US government failed to reach a consensus on the fiscal issue President Hoover began to expand federal spending setting up the Reconstruction Finance Corporation to provide emergency assistance to banks and financial institutions that were on the verge of bankruptcy Hoover s fiscal policy had accelerated the recession In December 1929 as means of showing government confidence in the economy Hoover reduced all income tax rates by 1 in 1929 due to the continuing budget surplus By 1930 the surplus had turned into a fast growing deficit of economic contraction In 1931 the US federal fiscal revenue and expenditure changed from the financial surplus to a deficit for the first time the deficit was less than 2 8 of GDP By the end of 1931 Hoover had decided to recommend a large increase in taxes to balance the budget in addition Congress approved the tax increase in 1932 a substantial reduction in personal immunity to increase the number of taxpayers and the interest rates had risen sharply the lowest marginal rate rose from 25 on taxable income in excess of 100 000 to 63 on taxable income in excess of 1 million as the rates were made much more progressive Hoover changed his approach to fighting the Depression He justified his call for more federal assistance by noting that We used such emergency powers to win the war we can use them to fight the Depression the misery and suffering from which are equally great This new approach embraced a number of initiatives Unfortunately for the President none proved especially effective Just as important with the presidential election approaching the political heat generated by the Great Depression and the failure of Hoover s policies grew only more withering 45 In terms of the financial reform since the recession Hoover had been trying to repair the economy He founded government agencies to encourage labor harmony and support local public works aid which promoted cooperation of government and business stabilize prices and strive to balance the budget His work focused on indirect relief from state governments and the private sector which was reflected in the letter emphasizing more effective supporting for each national committee and volunteer service appealing for funding from outside the government 46 The commitment to maintain the gold standard system prevented the Federal Reserve expanded its money supply operations in 1930 and 1931 and it promoted Hoover s destructive balancing budgetary action to avoid the gold standard system overwhelming the dollar As the Great Depression became worse the call raised for increasing in federal intervention and spending But Hoover refused to allow the federal government to force fixed prices control the value of the business or manipulate the currency in contrast he started to control the dollar price For official dollar prices he expanded the credit base through free market operations in federal reserve system to ensure the domestic value of the dollar He also tended to provide indirect aid to banks or local public works projects refused to use federal funds to give aid to citizens directly which he believed would lower public morale Instead he focused on volunteer fundraising to raise money for relief of the needy 46 Even though Hoover was a philanthropist before becoming president his opponents regarded him as unconcerned about the plight of impoverished citizens During the administration of Hoover the US economic policies had moved to activism and interventionism In his re election campaign Hoover tried to persuade Americans that direct monetary relief from the federal government would be devastating to the economy in the long run However this message was highly unpopular and consequently Hoover was defeated by Franklin Roosevelt in the presidential election of 1932 citation needed Roosevelt Administration and the gold standard Edit At the beginning of 1933 during the last few weeks of Hoover s term the American financial system was paralyzed The Great Depression had been extended by the interventionist policy for four years The bank crisis caused serious deflationary pressures In fact the worst period of 1932 the Great Depression had passed but the recovery was slow and weak Roosevelt understood that traditional political and financial policy was not an adequate response to the crisis and his administration chose to pursue the more radical measures of the New Deal During the financial crisis of 1933 culminating in the banking holiday of March 1933 gold had flowed out from the Fed in large quantities to individuals and companies in the United States worried about bank failures and to foreign entities worried about the depreciation of the dollar 47 In the spring and summer of 1933 the Roosevelt administration and the Congress took several actions that effectively suspended the gold standard Roosevelt took office on March 4 1933 and thirty six hours later he declared a nationwide bank moratorium in order to prevent a run on the banks by consumers lacking confidence in the economy He also forbade banks to pay out gold or to export it On March 9 Congress passed the Emergency Banking Act giving the President the power to control international and domestic gold exports It also gave the treasury secretary the power to surrender of gold coins and certificates On April 5 Roosevelt ordered all gold coins and gold certificates in denominations of more than 100 turned in for other money It required all persons to deliver all gold coin gold bullion and gold certificates owned by them to the Federal Reserve by May 1 for the set price of 20 67 per ounce By May 10 the government had taken in 300 million of gold coin and 470 million of gold certificates On April 20 President Roosevelt issued a formal proclamation prohibiting gold exports and prohibiting the conversion of money and deposits into gold coins and ingots On May 12 the United States weakened the monetary connection with gold further when FDR signed the Agricultural Adjustment Act Title III of this act also known as the Thomas amendment gave the President power to reduce the dollar s gold content by as much as 50 President Roosevelt also used the silver standard instead of gold to exchange dollars it determined by the price of the bank 47 On June 5 Congress enacted a joint resolution nullifying the clauses in many public and private obligations that permitted creditors to demand repayment in gold In 1934 the government price of gold was increased to 35 per ounce effectively increasing the gold on the Federal Reserve s balance sheets by 69 percent This increase in assets allowed the Federal Reserve to further inflate the money supply The abandonment of the gold standard made the Wall Street stock prices quickly increase Wall Street s stock trading was exceptionally active Political responses of the depression era EditHoover s response Edit Herbert Hoover The Hoover Administration attempted to correct the economic situation quickly but was unsuccessful Throughout Hoover s presidency businesses were encouraged to keep wage rates high 48 President Hoover and many academics believed that high wage rates would maintain a steady level of purchasing power keeping the economy turning In December 1929 after the beginning phases of the depression had begun President Hoover continued to promote high wages It wasn t until 1931 that business owners began reducing wages in order to stay afloat Later that year The Hoover Administration created the Check Tax 49 to generate extra government funding The tax added a two cent tax to the purchase of all bank checks directly affecting the common man This additional cost pushed people away from using checks so instead the majority of the population increased their usage of cash Banks had already closed due to cash shortage but this reaction to the Check Tax rapidly increased the pace Roosevelt s New Deal Edit In the First New Deal of 1933 34 a wide variety of programs were targeted toward the depression and agriculture in rural areas in the banking industry and for the economy as a whole Relief programs were set up for the long term unemployed who are routinely passed over whenever new jobs did open up 50 51 The most popular program was the Civilian Conservation Corps that put young men to work in construction jobs especially in rural areas Prohibition was repealed fulfilling a campaign pledge and generating new tax revenues for local and state governments A series of relief programs were designed to provide jobs in cooperation with local governments The National Recovery Administration NRA sought to stimulate demand and provide work and relief through increased government spending To end deflation the gold standard was suspended and a series of panels comprising business leaders in each industry set regulations that ended what was called cut throat competition believed to be responsible for forcing down prices and profits nationwide 52 Several Hoover agencies were continued most notably the Reconstruction Finance Corporation which provided large scale financial aid to banks railroads and other agencies 53 Reforms that had never been enacted in the 1920s now took center stage such as the Tennessee Valley Authority TVA designed to electrify and modernize a very poor mountainous region in Appalachia Top left the Tennessee Valley Authority part of the New Deal being signed into law in 1933 Top right Franklin Delano Roosevelt who was responsible for initiatives and programs are collectively known as the New Deal Bottom a public mural from one of the artists employed by the New Deal In 1934 36 came the much more controversial Second New Deal It featured Social Security the Works Progress Administration WPA a very large relief agency for the unemployed run by the federal government and the National Labor Relations Board which operated as a strong stimulus to the growth of labor unions Unemployment fell by in Roosevelt s first term from 25 to 9 1933 1937 The second set of reforms launched by the Roosevelt Administration during the same period included the Social Security Act of 1935 Insurance and poor relief public assistance or welfare are constituent parts of the legislation which provided pensions to the aged benefit payments to dependent mothers crippled children and blind people and unemployment insurance 54 The Social Security Act still plays a significant role of the American health and human service system so far Much of the economy had recovered by 1936 but persistent long term unemployment lasted until rearmament began for World War II in 1940 55 The New Deal was and still is sharply debated 56 The business community with considerable support from such conservative Democrats as Al Smith launched a crusade against the New Deal warning that a dangerous man had seized control of the economy and threatened America s conservative traditions 57 Scholars remain divided as well When asked whether as a whole government policies of the New Deal served to lengthen and deepen the Great Depression 74 of American university professors specializing in economic history disagreed 21 agreed with provisos and 6 fully agreed Among respondents who taught or studied economic theory 51 disagreed 22 agreed with provisos and 22 fully agreed 58 Recession of 1937 1938 EditMain article Recession of 1937 1938 A homeless family of seven walks along U S 99 bound for San Diego where the father hoped to enroll in welfare because he once lived there They walked from Phoenix Arizona where they picked cotton 1939 By 1936 all the main economic indicators had regained the levels of the late 1920s except for unemployment which remained high In 1937 the American economy unexpectedly fell lasting through most of 1938 Production declined sharply as did profits and employment Unemployment jumped from 14 3 in 1937 to 19 0 in 1938 59 A contributing factor to the Recession of 1937 was a tightening of monetary policy by the Federal Reserve The Federal Reserve doubled reserve requirements between August 1936 and May 1937 60 leading to a contraction in the money supply The Roosevelt Administration reacted by launching a rhetorical campaign against monopoly power which was cast as the cause of the depression and appointing Thurman Arnold to break up large trusts Arnold was not effective and the campaign ended once World War II began and corporate energies had to be directed to winning the war 61 By 1939 the effects of the 1937 recession had disappeared Employment in the private sector recovered to the level of the 1936 and continued to increase until the war came and manufacturing employment leaped from 11 million in 1940 to 18 million in 1943 62 Another response to the 1937 deepening of the Great Depression had more tangible results Ignoring the pleas of the Treasury Department Roosevelt embarked on an antidote to the depression reluctantly abandoning his efforts to balance the budget and launching a 5 billion spending program in the spring of 1938 in an effort to increase mass purchasing power Total employment numbers in the United States from 1920 to 1940 excluding farms and WPA Business oriented observers explained the recession and recovery in very different terms from the Keynesian economists They argued the New Deal had been very hostile to business expansion in 1935 37 They said it had encouraged massive strikes which had a negative impact on major industries and had threatened anti trust attacks on big corporations But all those threats diminished sharply after 1938 For example the antitrust efforts fizzled out without major cases The CIO and AFL unions started battling each other more than corporations and tax policy became more favorable to long term growth 63 On the other hand according to economist Robert Higgs when looking only at the supply of consumer goods significant GDP growth only resumed in 1946 Higgs does not estimate the value to consumers of collective goods like victory in war 64 To Keynesians the war economy showed just how large the fiscal stimulus required to end the downturn of the Depression was and it led at the time to fears that as soon as America demobilized it would return to Depression conditions and industrial output would fall to its pre war levels The incorrect prediction by Alvin Hansen and other Keynesians that a new depression would start after the war failed to take account of pent up consumer demand as a result of the Depression and World War 65 Afterward Edit A woman working in a military aircraft factory in Fort Worth Texas in 1942 Millions of American women found work in the defense industry during the Second World War The government began heavy military spending in 1940 and started drafting millions of young men that year 66 By 1945 17 million had entered service to their country but that was not enough to absorb all the unemployed During the war the government subsidized wages through cost plus contracts Government contractors were paid in full for their costs plus a certain percentage profit margin That meant the more wages a person was paid the higher the company profits since the government would cover them plus a percentage 67 Using these cost plus contracts in 1941 1943 factories hired hundreds of thousands of unskilled workers and trained them at government expense The military s own training programs concentrated on teaching technical skills involving machinery engines electronics and radio preparing soldiers and sailors for the post war economy 68 Structural walls were lowered dramatically during the war especially informal policies against hiring women minorities and workers over 45 or under 18 In 1941 Executive Order 8802 banned racial discrimination in war related employment and set up the Fair Employment Practices Commission to enforce this Strikes except in coal mining were sharply reduced as unions pushed their members to work harder Tens of thousands of new factories and shipyards were built with new bus services and nursery care for children making them more accessible Wages soared for workers making it quite expensive to sit at home Employers retooled so that unskilled new workers could handle jobs that previously required skills that were now in short supply The combination of all these factors drove unemployment below 2 in 1943 69 Roosevelt s declining popularity in 1938 was evident throughout the US in the business community the press and the Senate and House Many were labeling the recession the Roosevelt Recession In late December 1938 Roosevelt looked to gain popularity with the American people and try to regain the nation s confidence in the economy His decision that December to name Harry Hopkins as Secretary of Commerce was an attempt to achieve the confidence he so badly needed The appointment came as a surprise to most because of Hopkins lack of business experience but proved to be vastly important in shaping the years following the recession 70 Hopkins made it his mission to strengthen ties between the Roosevelt administration and the business community While Roosevelt believed in complete reform through the New Deal Hopkins took a more administrative position clarification needed he felt that recovery was imperative and that The New Deal would continue to hinder recovery With support from Secretary of Agriculture Henry Wallace and Treasury Secretary Henry Morgenthau Jr popular support for recovery rather than reform swept the nation By the end of 1938 reform had been struck down as no new reform laws were passed 70 The economy in America was now beginning to show signs of recovery and the unemployment rate was lowering following the abysmal year of 1938 The biggest shift towards recovery however came with the decision of Germany to invade France in May 1940 After France had been defeated in June the U S economy would skyrocket in the months following France s defeat meant that Britain and other allies would look to the U S for large supplies of materials for the war 71 The need for these war materials created a huge spurt in production thus leading to a promising level of employment in America Moreover Britain chose to pay for their materials in gold This stimulated the gold inflow and raised the monetary base which in turn stimulated the American economy to its highest point since the summer of 1929 when the depression began 71 By the end of 1941 before American entry into the war defense spending and military mobilization had started one of the greatest booms in American history thus ending the last traces of unemployment 71 Facts and figures Edit Fireside Chat 1 On the Banking Crisis source source Roosevelt s first Fireside Chat on the Banking Crisis March 12 1933 Effects of depression in the U S 72 13 million people became unemployed In 1932 34 million people belonged to families with no regular full time wage earner 73 Industrial production fell by nearly 45 between 1929 and 1932 Homebuilding dropped by 80 between the years 1929 and 1932 In the 1920s the banking system in the U S was about 50 billion which was about 50 of GDP 74 From 1929 to 1932 about 5 000 banks went out of business By 1933 11 000 of US 25 000 banks had failed 75 Between 1929 and 1933 U S GDP fell around 30 the stock market lost almost 90 of its value 76 In 1929 the unemployment rate averaged 3 77 In Cleveland the unemployment rate was when 50 in Toledo Ohio 80 73 One Soviet trading corporation in New York averaged 350 applications a day from Americans seeking jobs in the Soviet Union 78 Over one million families lost their farms between 1930 and 1934 73 Corporate profits dropped from 10 billion in 1929 to 1 billion in 1932 73 Between 1929 and 1932 the income of the average American family was reduced by 40 79 Nine million savings accounts were wiped out between 1930 and 1933 73 273 000 families were evicted from their homes in 1932 73 There were two million homeless people migrating around the country 73 Over 60 of Americans were categorized as poor by the federal government in 1933 73 In the last prosperous year 1929 there were 279 678 immigrants recorded but in 1933 only 23 068 came to the U S 80 81 In the early 1930s more people emigrated from the United States than immigrated to it 82 With little economic activity there was scant demand for new coinage No nickels or dimes were minted in 1932 33 no quarter dollars in 1931 or 1933 no half dollars from 1930 to 1932 and no silver dollars in the years 1929 33 In 1932 deflation was 10 7 percent and real interest rate was 11 49 percent 83 The U S government sponsored a Mexican Repatriation program which was intended to encourage people to voluntarily move to Mexico but thousands including many U S citizens were deported against their will Altogether about 400 000 Mexicans were repatriated 84 New York social workers reported that 25 of all schoolchildren were malnourished In the mining counties of West Virginia Illinois Kentucky and Pennsylvania the proportion of malnourished children was perhaps as high as 90 73 Many people became ill with diseases such as tuberculosis TB 73 The 1930 U S Census determined the U S population to be 122 775 046 About 40 of the population was under 20 years old 85 Suicide rates increased however life expectancy increased from about 57 years in 1929 to 63 in 1933 86 See also EditCauses of the Great Depression New Deal coalition Entertainment during the Great Depression Great Contraction Penny auction foreclosure Timeline of the Great Depression Ham and Eggs Movement California pension plan 1938 40 Great Depression in Washington State Project General List of recessions in the United StatesReferences Edit Gordon John Steele 10 Moments That Made American Business American Heritage No February March 2007 Archived from the original on April 20 2008 Retrieved March 18 2017 Chandler Lester V 1970 America s Greatest Depression 1929 1941 New York Harper amp Row Chandler 1970 Jensen 1989 Mitchell 1964 The Migrant Experience Archived October 10 2014 at the Wayback Machine Memory loc gov April 6 1998 Retrieved on 2013 07 14 American Exodus The Dust Bowl Mi Archived February 28 2019 at the Wayback Machine Faculty washington edu Retrieved on July 14 2013 Bordo Michael D Goldin Claudia White Eugene N eds 1998 The Defining Moment The Great Depression and the American Economy in the Twentieth Century ISBN 978 0 226 06589 2 a b Robert Fuller 2012 Phantom of Fear The Banking Panic of 1933 pp 241 42 fn 45 a b Milton Friedman Anna Schwartz 2008 The Great Contraction 1929 1933 New ed Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691137940 Archived from the original on March 30 2019 Retrieved October 15 2018 Ben S Bernanke Nov 8 2002 FederalReserve gov Remarks by Governor Ben S Bernanke Archived 2020 03 24 at the Wayback Machine Conference to Honor Milton Friedman University of Chicago The Economic Causes and Impacts of the Stock Market Crash of 1929 Fall 2012 Historpedia sites google com Archived from the original on September 19 2016 Retrieved June 13 2017 What caused the Wall Street Crash of 1929 Economics Help Archived from the original on June 8 2017 Retrieved June 13 2017 Banking Panics 1930 1933 Encyclopedia of the Great Depression Encyclopedia com June 13 2017 lt http www encyclopedia com Archived January 28 2018 at the Wayback Machine gt USA annual GDP from 1910 60 in billions of constant 2005 dollars with the years of the Great Depression 1929 1939 highlighted Based on data from Louis D Johnston and Samuel H Williamson What Was the U S GDP Then MeasuringWorth 2008 Walter John R Failures The Great Contagion or the Great Shakeout Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Economic Quarterly Volume 91 1 Winter 2005 91 1 2005 39 41 Web 2005 Federal Reserve Board 1933 63 65 Federal Reserve Board 1933 67 Walter John R Failures The Great Contagion or the Great Shakeout Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Economic Quarterly Volume 91 1 Winter 2005 91 1 2005 39 53 Web May 21 2017 Richardson Gary Banking Panics of 1930 31 Federal Reserve History N p November 22 2013 Web June 13 2017 Walter John R Failures The Great Contagion or the Great Shakeout Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Economic Quarterly Volume 91 1 Winter 2005 91 1 2005 45 46 Web 2005 Hans Kaltenborn It Seems Like Yesterday 1956 p 88 Smiley Gene Recent Unemployment Rate Estimates for the 1920s and 1930s PDF wisc edu Archived from the original PDF on March 5 2021 Retrieved April 9 2020 Richard J Jensen The causes and cures of unemployment in the Great Depression Journal of Interdisciplinary History 1989 553 583 in JSTOR Archived March 21 2017 at the Wayback Machine online copy Archived April 16 2015 at the Wayback Machine Janet Poppendieck Breadlines knee deep in wheat Food assistance in the Great Depression 2014 Roger Biles Big City Boss in Depression and War Mayor Edward J Kelly of Chicago 1984 Mason B Williams City of Ambition FDR LaGuardia and the Making of Modern New York 2013 Richard Jensen The cities reelect Roosevelt Ethnicity religion and class in 1940 Ethnicity An Interdisciplinary Journal of the Study of Ethnic Relations 1981 8 2 189 195 Jon C Teaford The twentieth century American city 1986 pp 90 96 Roger W Lotchin The Bad City in the Good War San Francisco Los Angeles Oakland and San Diego 2003 Robert Whaples and Randall E Parker ed 2013 Routledge Handbook of Modern Economic History Routledge p 8 ISBN 978 0415677042 Archived from the original on March 30 2019 Retrieved August 7 2017 Price V Fishback Michael R Haines and Shawn Kantor Births deaths and New Deal relief during the Great Depression The Review of Economics and Statistics 89 1 2007 1 14 citing page online Archived March 5 2019 at the Wayback Machine John A Garraty The Great Depression 1986 Frank Robert H Bernanke Ben S 2007 Principles of Macroeconomics 3rd ed McGraw Hill Irwin p 98 Willard W Cochrane Farm prices myth and reality U of Minnesota Press 1958 League of Nations World Economic Survey 1932 33 1934 p 43 Broadus Mitchell Depression Decade From New Era through New Deal 1929 1941 1947 Garraty Great Depression 1986 ch 1 Robert Skidelsky The Great Depression Keynes s Perspective in Elisabeth Muller Luckner Harold James The Interwar Depression in an International Context 2002 p 99 Robert O Paxton and Julie Hessler Europe in the Twentieth Century 2011 ch 10 11 Index numbers of employment as reported by employers in leading cities as of the first of each month January 1935 to December 1936 with yearly averages since 1922 Statistics Canada 31 March 2008 Archived from the original on August 6 2014 Retrieved October 5 2014 Index numbers of rates of wages for various classes of labour in Canada 1913 to 1936 Statistics Canada 31 March 2008 Archived from the original on August 6 2014 Retrieved October 5 2014 Wardhaugh Robert Alexander Ferguson Barry 2021 The Rowell Sirois Commission and the Remaking of Canadian Federalism Vancouver British Columbia UBC Press p 26 Ralph Allen Ordeal by Fire Canada 1910 1945 1961 ch 3 pp 37 39 History Economic Labour Policy 1966 Encyclopaedia of New Zealand Teara govt nz Archived from the original on July 24 2008 Retrieved October 11 2008 Kindleberger Charles P 1978 The world in depression 1929 1939 Herbert Hoover Domestic Affairs Miller Center millercenter org 4 October 2016 Archived from the original on 30 June 2017 Retrieved June 14 2017 a b Herbert Hoover on the Great Depression and New Deal 1931 1933 The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History gilderlehrman org July 24 2013 Archived from the original on August 15 2017 Retrieved June 14 2017 a b Richardson Gary Roosevelt s Gold Program Federal Reserve History federalreservehistory org Archived from the original on May 15 2017 Retrieved June 14 2017 Friedman Milton Schwartz Anna Jacobson 1971 A Monetary History of the United States 1867 1960 Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691003542 Archived from the original on May 30 2017 Retrieved June 13 2017 The Great Depression and the Role of Government Intervention Archived from the original on May 3 2019 Retrieved June 13 2017 Eric Rauchway The Great Depression and the New Deal A Very Short Introduction 2008 Aaron D Purcell ed Interpreting American History The New Deal and the Great Depression 2014 Olivier Blanchard und Gerhard Illing Makrookonomie Pearson Studium 2009 ISBN 978 3 8273 7363 2 pp 696 97 James Stuart Olson Saving Capitalism The Reconstruction Finance Corporation and the New Deal 1933 1940 2nd ed 2017 The New Deal Archived from the original on June 11 2017 Retrieved June 14 2017 Broadus Mitchell Decade From New Era through New Deal 1929 1941 1964 Parker ed Reflections on the Great Depression 2002 Kim Phillips Fein Invisible Hands The Businessmen s Crusade Against the New Deal 2010 Robert Whaples Where Is There Consensus Among American Economic Historians The Results of a Survey on Forty Propositions Journal of Economic History Vol 55 No 1 Mar 1995 pp 139 154 in JSTOR see also the summary at EH R FORUM The Great Depression Eh net Archived from the original on June 16 2008 Retrieved October 11 2008 Kenneth D Roose The Economics of Recession and Revival An Interpretation of 1937 38 1969 Stauffer Robert F 2002 Another Perspective on the Reserve Requirement Increments of 1936 and 1937 Journal of Post Keynesian Economics 25 1 161 179 doi 10 1080 01603477 2002 11051343 JSTOR 4538817 S2CID 154092343 Gressley Gene M 1964 Thurman Arnold Antitrust and the New Deal The Business History Review 38 2 214 231 doi 10 2307 3112073 JSTOR 3112073 S2CID 154882053 Roose Kenneth D 1948 The Recession of 1937 38 Journal of Political Economy 56 3 239 248 doi 10 1086 256675 JSTOR 1825772 S2CID 154469310 Gary Dean Best Pride Prejudice and Politics Roosevelt Versus Recovery 1933 1938 1990 pp 175 216 Higgs Robert March 1992 Wartime Prosperity A Reassessment of the U S Economy in the 1940s Journal of Economic History 52 1 41 60 doi 10 1017 S0022050700010251 S2CID 154484756 Theodore Rosenof Economics in the Long Run New Deal Theorists and Their Legacies 1932 1993 1997 Great Depression and World War Michael Lewis Archived June 29 2011 at the Wayback Machine The Library of Congress Paul A C Koistinen Arsenal of World War II The Political Economy of American Warfare 1940 1945 2004 Jensen 1989 Edwin E Witte What The War Is Doing to Us Review of Politics Jan 1943 5 1 3 25 JSTOR 1404621 Harold G Vester The U S Economy in World War III 1988 a b Smiley Gene Rethinking the Great Depression Chicago Ivan R Dee publisher 2002 a b c Hall Thomas E and Ferguson David J The Great Depression An International Disaster of Perverse Economic Policies Ann Arbor University of Michigan Press 1998 p 155 I remember the Wall Street Crash BBC News October 6 2008 Archived from the original on February 17 2009 Retrieved May 4 2010 a b c d e f g h i j Overproduction of Goods Unequal Distribution of Wealth High Unemployment and Massive Poverty Archived February 5 2009 at the Wayback Machine From President s Economic Council Q amp A Lessons from the Great Depression Archived January 18 2009 at the Wayback Machine By Barbara Kiviat TIME January 6 2009 About the Great Depression Archived from the original on December 20 2008 Retrieved March 9 2009 The Great Depression The sequel Archived March 22 2009 at the Wayback Machine By Cameron Stacy salon com April 2 2008 Economic Recovery in the Great Depression Archived September 28 2013 at the Wayback Machine Frank G Steindl Oklahoma State University A reign of rural terror a world away Archived December 3 2013 at the Wayback Machine U S News June 22 2003 American History 1930 1939 Archived from the original on May 27 2010 Persons Obtaining Legal Permanent Resident Status in the United States of America Archived February 17 2009 at the Wayback Machine Source US Department of Homeland Security The Facts Behind the Current Controversy Over Immigration permanent dead link by Allan L Damon American Heritage Magazine December 1981 A Great Depression Archived September 27 2011 at the Wayback Machine by Steve H Hanke Cato Institute Vijayakumar VK May 4 2020 Deeper depression unlikely expect U shaped recovery post COVID 19 Moneycontrol Archived from the original on May 4 2020 Retrieved May 4 2020 The Great Depression and New Deal Archived March 10 2011 at the Wayback Machine by Joyce Bryant Yale New Haven Teachers Institute 1931 U S Census Report Archived March 3 2009 at the Wayback Machine Contains 1930 Census results Tapia Granados J A Diez Roux A V September 28 2009 Life and death during the Great Depression Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 106 41 17290 17295 Bibcode 2009PNAS 10617290T doi 10 1073 pnas 0904491106 PMC 2765209 PMID 19805076 Population health did not decline and indeed generally improved during the 4 years of the Great Depression 1930 1933 with mortality decreasing for almost all ages and life expectancy increasing by several yearsFurther reading EditBernanke Ben Essays on the Great Depression Princeton University Press 2000 Chapter One The Macroeconomics of the Great Depression Archived 2010 07 04 at the Wayback Machine online Best Gary Dean Pride Prejudice and Politics Roosevelt Versus Recovery 1933 1938 1991 ISBN 0 275 93524 8 a conservative viewpoint https archive org details prideprejudicepo0000best online Best Gary Dean The Nickel and Dime Decade American Popular Culture during the 1930s 1993 online Bindas Kenneth J Modernity and the Great Depression The Transformation of American Society 1930 1941 UP of Kansas 2017 277 pp Blumberg Barbara The New Deal and the Unemployed The View from New York City 1977 online Bordo Michael D Claudia Goldin and Eugene N White eds The Defining Moment The Great Depression and the American Economy in the Twentieth Century 1998 Advanced economic history Bremer William W Along the American Way The New Deal s Work Relief Programs for the Unemployed Journal of American History 62 December 1975 636 652 online Cannadine David 2007 Mellon An American Life New York Alfred A Knopf pp 395 469 ISBN 978 0679450320 Chandler Lester America s Greatest Depression 1970 overview by economic historian online Cravens Hamilton Great Depression People and Perspectives 2009 social history excerpt and text search Dickstein Morris Dancing in the Dark A Cultural History of the Great Depression 2009 excerpt and text search Field Alexander J A Great Leap Forward 1930s Depression and U S Economic Growth Yale University Press 2011 387 pages argues that technological innovations in the 1930s laid the foundation for economic success in World War II and postwar Friedman Milton and Anna J Schwartz A Monetary History of the United States 1867 1960 1963 ISBN 0 691 04147 4 classic monetarist explanation highly statistical online Friedman Milton and Anna J Schwartz The Great Contraction 1929 1933 New Edition 2008 chapter from A Monetary History covering Great Contraction Fuller Robert Lynn Phantom of Fear The Banking Panic of 1933 2012 Graham John R Hazarika Sonali amp Narasimhan Krishnamoorthy Financial Distress in the Great Depression 2011 SSRN link to paper Grant Michael Johnston Down and Out on the Family Farm Rural Rehabilitation in the Great Plains 1929 1945 2002 online Greenberg Cheryl Lynn To Ask for an Equal Chance African Americans in the Great Depression 2009 excerpt and text search Greenspan Alan Wooldridge Adrian 2018 Capitalism in America A History New York Penguin Press pp 220 272 ISBN 978 0735222441 Hapke Laura Daughters of the Great Depression Women Work and Fiction in the American 1930s 1997 Hicks John D Republican ascendancy 1921 1933 1960 online Himmelberg Robert F ed The Great Depression and the New Deal 2001 short overview Howard Donald S The WPA and Federal Relief Policy 1943 online Jensen Richard J The Causes and Cures of Unemployment in the Great Depression Journal of Interdisciplinary History 1989 19 553 83 online Kennedy David Freedom from Fear The American People in Depression and War 1929 1945 1999 wide ranging survey by leading scholar online Klein Maury Rainbow s End The Crash of 1929 2001 by economic historian Kubik Paul J Federal Reserve Policy during the Great Depression The Impact of Interwar Attitudes regarding Consumption and Consumer Credit Journal of Economic Issues Vol 30 1996 online McElvaine Robert S The Great Depression 2nd ed 1993 social history online Mitchell Broadus Depression Decade From New Era through New Deal 1929 1941 1947 non technical overview of economic history online Morris Charles R A Rabble of Dead Money The Great Crash and the Global Depression 1929 1939 PublicAffairs 2017 389 pp popular economic history 1 also see online review Ossian Lisa L The Depression Dilemmas of Rural Iowa 1929 1933 University of Missouri Press 2012 Rauchway Eric The Great Depression and the New Deal A Very Short Introduction 2008 excerpt and text search Roose Kenneth D The Recession of 1937 38 Journal of Political Economy 56 3 1948 pp 239 248 in JSTOR Rose Nancy Put to Work The WPA and Public Employment in the Great Depression 2009 online Rose Nancy Workfare or fair work Women Welfare and Government Work Programs 1995 online Rosen Elliot A Roosevelt the Great Depression and the Economics of Recovery 2005 ISBN 0 8139 2368 9 Rosen Elliot A Hoover Roosevelt and the Brains Trust from depression to New Deal 1977 online Rothbard Murray N America s Great Depression 1963 Saloutos Theodore The American Farmer and the New Deal 1982 online Singleton Jeff The American Dole Unemployment Relief and the Welfare State in the Great Depression 2000 Sitkoff Harvard A New Deal for Blacks The Emergence of Civil Rights as a National Issue The Depression Decade 2008 online Sitkoff Harvard ed Fifty Years Later The New Deal Evaluated 1985 liberal perspective Smiley Gene Rethinking the Great Depression 2002 ISBN 1 56663 472 5 economist blames Federal Reserve and gold standard Smith Jason Scott Building New Deal Liberalism The Political Economy of Public Works 1933 1956 2005 online Sternsher Bernard ed Hitting Home The Great Depression in Town and Country 1970 readings by experts on local history online Szostak Rick Technological Innovation and the Great Depression 1995 Temin Peter Did Monetary Forces Cause the Great Depression 1976 Tindall George B The Emergence of the New South 1915 1945 1967 History of entire region by leading scholar Trout Charles H Boston the Great Depression and the New Deal 1977 online Uys Errol Lincoln Riding the Rails Teenagers on the Move During the Great Depression Routledge 2003 ISBN 0 415 94575 5 author s site Warren Harris Gaylord Herbert Hoover and the Great Depression 1959 scholarly history online Watkins T H The Great Depression America in the 1930s 2009 online popular history Wecter Dixon The Age of the Great Depression 1929 1941 1948 scholarly social history online Wicker Elmus The Banking Panics of the Great Depression 1996 2 White Eugene N The Stock Market Boom and Crash of 1929 Revisited The Journal of Economic Perspectives Vol 4 No 2 Spring 1990 pp 67 83 evaluates different theories in JSTOR Young William H and Nancy K Young The Great Depression in America A Cultural Encyclopedia 2 vol 2007 vol 1 online also vol 2w onlineHistoriography Edit Cargill Thomas F and Thomas Mayer The Great Depression and History Textbooks History Teacher 31 4 1998 pp 441 458 online discusses causation Parker Randall E ed Reflections on the Great Depression 2002 interviews with 11 leading economists Romasco Albert U Hoover Roosevelt and the Great Depression A Historiographic Inquiry into a Perennial Comparison In John Braeman Robert H Bremner and David Brody eds The New Deal The National Level 1973 v 1 pp 3 26 Szostak Rick Evaluating the historiography of the Great Depression explanation or single theory driven Journal of Economic Methodology 12 1 2005 35 61 Primary sources Edit Cantril Hadley and Mildred Strunk eds Public Opinion 1935 1946 1951 massive compilation of many public opinion polls online Lowitt Richard and Beardsley Maurice eds One Third of a Nation Lorena Hickock Reports on the Great Depression 1981 Lynd Robert S and Helen M Lynd Middletown in Transition 1937 sociological study of Muncie Indiana 3 Mott Frank Luther ed Headlining America 1937 reprints best newspaper stories of 1935 136 online Terkel Studs Hard Times An Oral History of the Great Depression 1970 Wikimedia Commons has media related to Great Depression in the United States External links EditRare Color Photos from the Great Depression slideshow by The Huffington Post EH net An Overview of the Great Depression by Randall Parker America in the 1930s Extensive library of projects on America in the Great Depression from American Studies at the University of Virginia The 1930s Timeline year by year timeline of events in science and technology politics and society culture and international events with embedded audio and video AS UVA Great Myths of the Great Depression by Lawrence Reed Franklin D Roosevelt Library amp Museum for copyright free photos of the period An Age of Lost Innocence Childhood Realities and Adult Fears in the Depression American Studies at the University of Virginia Great Depression in the Deep South Archived May 4 2008 at the Wayback Machine Soul of a People documentary on Smithsonian Networks The Great Depression at the History Channel Chairman Ben Bernanke Lecture Series Part 1 Recorded live on March 20 2012 10 35am MST at a class at George Washington University Banking Panics 1930 1933 Encyclopedia of the Great Depression 2017 Encyclopedia com Free Online Encyclopedia gt Richardson Gary Banking Panics of 1930 31 Federal Reserve History 2017 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Great Depression in the United States amp oldid 1141357382, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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