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The '''Great Depression''' was the global economic slump that began in the
United States following
Black Thursday, the
Wall Street panic of October 1929. On
October 24,
1929, share prices on Wall Street collapsed catastrophically, setting off a chain of
bankruptcies and
defaults that quickly spread overseas. The events in the United States triggered a worldwide
depression, which put hundreds of millions out of work across the
capitalist world throughout the
1930s.
On the global scale, the market crash in the U.S. was a final straw in an already shaky world economic situation.
Germany was suffering from
hyperinflation, and many of the Allied victors of
World War I were having serious problems paying off huge war debts. In the late
1920s, the U.S. economy at first seemed immune to the mounting troubles, but with the start of the 1930s it crashed with startling rapidity.
==Causes of the Great Depression==
International finance never recovered from the strains of
World War I, which caused a dramatic increase in productivity capacity, particularly outside
Europe, without a corresponding increase in sustained demand. Fixed exchange rates and free convertibility gave way to a compromise—the
Gold Exchange Standard—that lacked the stability to rebuild world trade.
In
1929 the world's most prosperous nation was the
United States. But despite the confidence in the
United States and the apparent economic well-being in other countries, the world economy was in an unhealthy state. One by one, the pillars of the prewar
economic system—
multilateral trade, the
gold standard, and the
interchangeability of currencies—were crumbling.
The UK had returned to the gold standard in 1925 but had spent the five years previous managing the gold price down to the pre-war level. This forced a sharp deflation across the economy of the UK and the many other nations that used the
Pound Sterling as their national unit of account.
The U.S. economy had thus been showing some signs of distress for months before
October 1929. Commodity prices had been falling worldwide since 1926, reducing the capacity of exporters in the peripheral, undeveloped economies of
Latin America,
Asia, and
Africa to buy products from the core industrial countries, such as the
United States and the
United Kingdom. Business inventories of all types were three times as large as they had been a year before (an indication that the public was not buying products as rapidly as in the past); and other signposts of economic health—freight carloads, industrial production, wholesale prices—were slipping downward.
===A Maldistribution of Purchasing Power===
A fundamental maldistribution of purchasing power, the greatly unequal distribution of wealth throughout the
1920s, was a factor contributing to the depression. Wages increased at a rate that was a fraction of the rate at which productivity increased. As production costs fell quickly, wages rose slowly, and prices remained constant, the bulk benefit of the increased productivity went into profits. As
industrial and
agricultural production increased, the proportion of the profits going to farmers, factory workers, and other potential consumers was far too small to create a market for goods that they were producing. Even in
1929, after nearly a decade of economic growth, more than half the families in America lived on the edge or below the subsistence level—too poor to share in the great consumer boom of the
1920s, too poor to buy the cars and houses and other goods the industrial economy was producing, too poor in many cases to buy even the adequate food and shelter for themselves. As long as corporations had continued to expand their capital facilities (their factories, warehouses, heavy equipment, and other investments), the economy had flourished. And thanks to pressure from the
Coolidge administration and the business, the
Federal Reserve Board kept the rediscount rate low, encouraging excessive investment. By the end of the
1920s, however, capital investments had created more plant space than could be profitably used, and factories were pouring out more goods than consumers could purchase.
An increase in
margin buying, the act of borrowing money from money lenders in order to buy stocks, helped many people invest in the roaring stock market of the 1920s. When the stock market began to decline, the lenders panicked and demanded their money back. This increased the sales of stocks to pay off the loans, but many people remained in debt and the lenders couldn't get their money back.
===A Lack of Diversification===
Another factor was the serious lack of diversification in the American economy of the
1920s. Prosperity had been excessively dependent on a few basic industries, notably construction and
automobiles; in the late
1920s, those industries began to decline. Between
1926 and
1929, expenditures on construction fell from $11 billion to under $9 billion. Automobile sales began to decline somewhat later, but in the first nine months of
1929 they declined by more than one third. Once these two crucial industries began to weaken, there was not enough strength in other sectors of the economy to take up the slack. Even before, while the automotive industry was thriving in the
1920s some industries, agriculture in particular, were declining steadily. While the
Ford Motor Company was reporting record assets, farm prices plummeted, and the price of food fell precipitously. Also prospering during the
1920s were businesses dependent upon the radio industry.
===Postwar Deflationary Pressures===
During
World War I many nations of Europe abandoned the
gold standard in an attempt to use inflationary policies to fund government expenditure. This had a number of economic consequences in its own right. However what is of particular relevance is that following the War most nations returned to the gold standard at the pre-war gold price. Monetary policy was in effect put into a deflationary setting that would over the next decade slowly grind away at the viability of many European enterprises. Modern advocates of the
gold standard such as proponents of
supply-side economics maintain that the correct policy response following World War I would have been to return to the gold standard at the prevailing market price of gold rather than at the pre-war price.
Deflation's impact is particularly hard on sectors of the economy that are in debt. One typical group that is adversely affected is the farm sector. Deflation erodes the price of commodities while increasing the real value of debt.
It should be noted, however, that deflationary forces alone do not fully account for the Great Depression and must be considered in the context of other political factors.
===The Credit Structure===
Farmers, already deeply in debt, saw farm prices plummet in the late 20s, their implicit real interest rates on loans skyrocket; their land was already mortgaged, and crop prices were too low to allow them to pay off what they owed. Small banks, especially those tied to the agricultural economy, were in constant crisis in the
1920s as their customers defaulted on loans due to the sudden rise in real interest rates; there was a steady stream of failures among these smaller banks throughout the decade.
Although most American bankers in this era were staunchly conservative, some of the nation's largest banks were failing to maintain adequate reserves and were investing recklessly in the stock market or making unwise loans. In other words, the banking system was not well prepared to absorb the shock of a major recession. The banking system as a whole, moreover, was only very loosely regulated by the
Federal Reserve System at this time.
===The Breakdown of International Trade===
Another factor contributing to the Great Depression was America's position in international trade. Protectionist impulses would drive nations to protect domestic production against competition from foreign imports by erecting high tariff walls. The
Hawley-Smoot Tariff Act of June 1930 raised U.S. tariffs to unprecedented levels. It practically closed U.S. borders and, with retaliatory tariffs from U.S. trading partners, caused the immediate collapse of the most important export industry, American agriculture. American foreign trade seriously declined, and the volume of world trade steadily decreased.
Prior to the Great Depression, a petition signed by over 1000 economists was presented to the U.S. government warning that the Hawley-Smoot Tariff Act would bring disastrous economic repercussions, however, this did not stop the act from being signed into law.
Beginning late in the 1920s, European demand for U.S. goods began to decline. That was partly because European industry and agriculture were becoming more productive, and partly because some European nations (most notably
Weimar Germany) were suffering serious financial crises and could not afford to buy goods overseas. However, the central issue causing the destabilization of the European economy in the late 1920s was the international debt structure that had emerged in the aftermath of
World War I.
When the war came to an end in
1918, all European nations that had been allied with the United States owed large sums of money to American banks, sums much too large to be repaid out of their shattered treasuries. This is one reason why the Allies had insisted (to the consternation of the perhaps historically vindicated
Woodrow Wilson) on demanding reparation payments from Germany and
Austria. Reparations, they believed, would provide them with a way to pay off their own debts. But Germany and Austria were themselves in deep economic trouble after the war; they were no more able to pay the reparations than the Allies were able to pay their debts.
The debtor nations put strong pressure on the United States in the 1920s to forgive the debts, or at least reduce them. The American government refused. Instead, U.S. banks began making large loans to the nations of Europe. Thus debts (and reparations) were being paid only by augmenting old debts and piling up new ones. In the late 1920s, and particularly after the American economy began to weaken after 1929, the European nations found it much more difficult to borrow money from the United States. At the same time, high U.S. tariffs were making it much more difficult for them to sell their goods in U.S. markets. Without any source of revenues from foreign exchange with which to repay their loans, they began to default.
The high tariff walls critically impeded the payment of war debts. As a result of high U.S. tariffs, only a sort of cycle kept the reparations and war-debt payments going. During the 1920s the former allies paid the war-debt installments to the United States chiefly with funds obtained from German reparations payments, and Germany was able to make those payments only because of large private loans from the United States and Britain. Similarly, U.S. investments abroad provided the dollars, which alone made it possible for foreign nations to buy U.S. exports.
By
1931 the world was reeling from the worst depression of all time, and the entire structure of reparations and war debts collapsed.
In the scramble for liquidity that followed the Great Crash, funds flowed back from Europe to America and Europe's fragile economies crumbled.
==Responses==
The
Wall Street crash had ushered in a world-wide financial crisis. In the United States between
1929 and
1933 unemployment soared from approximately 3 percent of the workforce to 25 percent, while manufacturing output declined by one-third. Governments worldwide sought economic recovery by adopting restrictive
autarkic policies (high tariffs, import quotas, and barter agreements) and by experimenting with new plans for their internal economies.
The economic crises due to the depression were a terrible epidemic throughout the United States and many parts of the world. Consumers reduced their purchases of luxury cars, clothes, and many businesses cut production. Big businesses such as General Motors saw its sales drop by 50% in the late 1920s and the early 1930s. This caused business to lay off thousand of workers which put the general public into confusion.
Due to World War I, businesses had hired many women because the men were off fighting for their country. However, the women were replaced by the men because of the argument that the men had to take care of their families monetarily.
When the farm prices fell; small farmers went bankrupt and lost their land. By June of 1932, the American economy had fallen by about 55% of the work force. The Government tried to restore prosperity by spending on welfare and public works.
Since the stock market collapse, the New York banks became frightened and called in their loans to Germany and Austria. However, without the American money, Germans had to stop paying reparations to France and Britain. Of course, this was a chain reaction and they could not repay their war loans to America. Therefore, the depression had spread to Europe. All governments were forced to cancel both reparations payments and war loans.
The United States government was trying to protect domestic industries from foreign competition which was imposed the highest import duty in American history. However, in retaliation, other countries raised their tariffs. As a result, global industrial production declined by 36% between 1929 and 1932, while world trade dropped by a breathtaking 62%.
In 1932, The United States had elected President Franklin D. Roosevelt. In his
New Deal concept, a platform of government programs to stimulate and revitalize the economy. The British and French governments also intervened in their economies and escaped the worst of the depression. Moreover, the Soviet Union put in the five-year plans.
Observers throughout the world saw in the massive program of economic planning and state ownership of the
Soviet Union what appeared to be a depression-proof economic system and a solution to the crisis in capitalism.
In
Germany unemployment increased drastically, fuelling widespread disillusionment and anger. The institutions of the
Weimar Republic, which had already been standing on shaky ground, started cracking in the years from 1930 to 1932, while
Chancellor and finance expert
Heinrich Brüning was trying to fix the economy by drastically cutting state spending. At the time, the
NSDAP gained much popularity, winning the two general elections in 1932, which eventually led to the appointment of
Adolf Hitler as Chancellor on
January 30,
1933. (See
Weimar Republic for details.) In Nazi Germany economic recovery was pursued through rearmament, conscription, and public works programs. In
Mussolini's
Italy the economic controls of his corporate state were tightened.
In the
United Kingdom, the
Labour government of
Ramsay MacDonald, and later the
Conservative-dominated "National Government" responded to the depression by imposing tariffs on all imports except those of the
British Empire (which arguably worsened the global situation), by cutting public spending, and by abandoning the
Gold Standard which reduced the cost of British exports. (see
Great Depression in the United Kingdom).
In the
United States, President
Herbert Hoover made only half-hearted efforts to control the situation, and hindsight shows that at first, he gravely underestimated the severity of the crisis, (even announcing to
Congress on
December 3, 1929 that the worst effects of the recent
stock market crash were behind them and that the American people had regained faith in the
economy). Having realized his mistake, Hoover went before Congress again on
December 2,
1930 to ask for a $150 million public works program to help generate jobs and stimulate the economy. However, one of the major problems was that with deflation, the currency that you kept in your pocket could buy more goods as prices went down. The other was that there had been no Federal oversight of the stock market or other investment markets, and with the collapse, many stock and investment schemes were found to be either insolvent, or outright frauds. Unfortunately, many banks had invested in these schemes, and this precipitated a collapse of the banking system in
1932. With the banking system in shambles, and people holding on to whatever currency that they had, there was minimal cash available for any activities that would cause positive change.
The response of the Hoover administration helped little; instead of increasing the money supply, the Hoover administration did the exact opposite and raised interest rates, falsely believing that
inflation was the real danger. Many in the Hoover administration believed that as wages fell, the cost of production would drop, and as a result, production would pick up again, and the depression would be self-correcting. For this reason, they saw no need for the government to intervene in the economy, a policy which proved disastrous.
Like their counterparts abroad, many Americans were disillusioned with their system of government, believing that Hoover's policies had driven the country to ruin. (Shantytowns populated by unemployed people at the time were often dubbed
Hoovervilles to highlight the President's fading popularity.) During this period, several alternative and fringe political movements saw a considerable increase in membership. In particular, a number of high-profile figures embraced the ideals of
Communism, though this would subsequently be used against them during the
Red Scare of the
1950s. Radio speakers such as Father
Charles Coughlin saw their listening audiences swell into the millions, as they sought for (and often found) easy scapegoats to blame the country's woes upon.
Upon accepting Democratic nomination for president (
July 2,
1932), Roosevelt promised "a new deal for the American people," a phrase that has endured as a label for his administration and its many domestic achievements.
==Life during the Depression==
In the so-called
Dust Bowl, a massive area of the
great plains consisting mainly of Kansas, Oklahoma, and parts of Texas, people found themselves unable to make a living. On top of the economic crisis, the earth withered and blew away in a series of massive dust storms. For a farming people this was diastrous, and these migrants were led westward by advertisements for work put out by
agribusiness in western states such as California. The migrants came to be called
Okies,
Arkies, and other derogatory names as they flooded the labor supply of the agricultural fields, driving down wages and increasing competition for jobs in a place that couldn't afford it. This story was dramatized in the famous novel
The Grapes of Wrath by
John Steinbeck.
On
Wall Street in New York City, people committed suicide by jumping out of windows to their deaths.
==End of the Great Depression==
''For details, see the main
New Deal article.''
Despite this rhetoric, it was not until the U.S. entered World War II that
Roosevelt's ideas for massive public expenditures and deficit spending truly began to bear fruit.
Roosevelt's administration, of course, had little choice but to increase expenditures, given the war effort. Even given the special circumstances of war mobilization, New Deal policies seemed to work exactly as predicted, winning over many Republicans, who had been the New Deal's greatest opponents. When the Great Depression was brought to an end by the Second World War, it was obvious that the turnaround had been caused primarily by the reinforcement of business through government expenditure.
New Deal programs sought to stimulate demand and provide work and relief for the impoverished through increased government spending: The theories behind the New Deal were backed up later by the writings of British economist
John Maynard Keynes. In
1929 federal expenditures constituted only 3 percent of the
GDP. Between
1933 and
1939, federal expenditure tripled, and
Roosevelt's critics accused him of turning America into a socialist state.
However, spending on the New Deal was far smaller than on the war effort. In the first peacetime year of
1946, federal spending still amounted to $62 billion, or 30 percent of GDP. In short, federal expenditures went from 3 percent of the GDP in
1929 to about a third in
1945. The big surprise was just how productive America became: spending financially cured the depression. Between
1939 and
1944 (the peak of wartime production), the nation's output more than doubled. Consequently, unemployment plummeted—from 19.0 percent in
1938 to 1.2 percent in
1944 as the labor force grew by ten million. The
war economy was not so much a triumph of free enterprise as the result of government/business sectionalism, of the Federal government bankrolling business. While unemployment remained high throughout the New Deal years, consumption, investment, and exports—the pillars of economic growth—remained low. It was
World War II, not the New Deal, which finally ended the crisis. Nor did the New Deal substantially alter the distribution of power within American
capitalism; it had only a small impact on the distribution of wealth among the population (the effect of the war on this, however, was massive: The years immediately following the war played host to the narrowest wealth gap between rich and poor in American history, according to most estimates).
The Great Depression was not the longest depression on record, that title being held by the
Long Depression of the late nineteenth century, nor was it the sharpest contraction, the one after the Second World War being a deeper drop. It has commonly been described as the "deepest" depression in history as no other contraction was so deep for so long.
==See also==
*
Aftermath of World War I
*
The Great Depression in Canada
*
The Great Depression in the United Kingdom
==External links==
*
America's Great Depression -- an "Austrian" interpretation by Murray Rothbard
*
The Causes of the 1929-33 Great Collapse: A Marxian Interpretation, by James Devine
*
Keynes and Friedman on the Great Depression
*
Theories on the Great Depression
*
The Economics of the Great Depression
*About.com:
1929 Stock Market Crash
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