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796341
Depression and the New Deal - USA 1929-41
Description
An overview of that section, with key statistics.
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history
aqa gcse
usa
depression
new deal
Mind Map by
andysan64
, updated more than 1 year ago
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Created by
andysan64
over 10 years ago
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Resource summary
Depression and the New Deal - USA 1929-41
How serious was the Depression for the American people?
Background
Import and export
Tariff war
Other countries raised tariffs to protect own economies
Gold Standard
Links exchange rate of a country's currency to the amount of gold in that country.
Countries abandoned Gold Standard because exchange rates were ridiculously high
Helped foreign economies by making American goods more expensive
Damaged USA's economy
Pound fell from $4.86 to $3.50
Collapse of business and industry
US exports fell - $10bn in 1929 to $3bn in 1932
Industrial production fell 40%, 1/3 of farmers lost their farms
Sales fell 50%, wages 60%
Unemployment rose from 1.6m in 1929 to 12.1m in 1932 (2.3% fo the workforce to 23.6%)
Timing
Key weaknesses in economy
Overproduction
Unequal distribution of wealth
Tariff policy
Financial speculation
Indebtedness of the economy
Shares had been bought 'on the margin'
Businesses which had lost money sacked people
They defaulted on loan payments
Banks went bankrupt
Banks called in loans, especially overseas
American depression became global depression
Global imports fell from $125bn in 1929 to $35bn in 1933
Other countries were dependent on American loans
1924-1928 $6bn lent abroad
Human effects of the Depression
Unemployment
Reached 25% in 1933
Black people hit worst
In Charleston on 1931, 70% of black people of working age were unemployed. It was 75% in Memphis.
Many people became hobos.
Homelessness
No dole payments
In 1932, 1/4m people became homeless
Set up shanty towns called 'Hoovervilles'
The Bonus Army
The army had been promised a 'bonus' in 1945 after WW1.
In 1932, 20,000 war veterans set up a Hooverville outside the White House to protest against the governmen's refusal to pay up front.
Troops used tanks and tear gas to clear them, and killed 2
About 1000 injured
Help from charities
Al Capone provided food in Chicago
Soup kitchens, bread kitchens, or cheap food centres
Farmers
Because no-one was buying, prices dropped so low it wasn't profitable to harvest
1930 dust bowl due to overfarming
Many moved to California
Limits to the Depression
Empire State Building - 1931
Hoover Dam -1936
Golden Gate Bridge - 1937
'New Industries' prospered
Hoover and the Depression
The 1932 presidential election
Rugged Individualism
Hoover did, however, try to help
1930 - taxes cut
1932 - Emergency Relief Act to help unemployed
How did Roosevelt deal with the Great Depression?
The New Deal
The 'Hundred Days'
Ending the banking crisis
Agriculture
Industry
Unemployment
The young
Other measures of the New Deal
The Tennessee Valley Authority
How far was the New Deal successful in ending the Depression in the USA?
Opposition to the New Deal
The Supreme Court
More opponents
The Second New Deal
Was the New Deal a success?
The Second World War
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