POSTWAR PROSPERITY CRUMBLES. END OF PROSPERITY Postwar prosperity turned to depression by end of 20’s. European farmland destroyed during the war. Farmers.

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Presentation transcript:

POSTWAR PROSPERITY CRUMBLES

END OF PROSPERITY Postwar prosperity turned to depression by end of 20’s. European farmland destroyed during the war. Farmers in Africa, Australia, India, New Zealand, NA, and SA increased food production to sell to Europe. Took out loans for machinery and additional land. Worldwide demand for crops and prices dropped: Debt crisis

PROTECTIONISM Nations protected foreign industries from competition by limiting trade Est. tariffs on imported good-Failed policy Ex: Hawley-Smoot Tariff: highest import tax in history (Made it difficult for Europeans to sell their goods in the United States) Could not purchase goods or pay off their debts American bankers: loaned money to Europeans to buy US goods

SPECULATION AND PANIC Market Speculation-Stock market investments 1920’s buying on margin: borrow money to purchase goods Value of Stock rises-stocks sells-loans repaid-Value falls-loans aren’t repaid Black Thursday: Stock market closed on Wednesday, October 3 rd and Down Jones dropped 21 points in an HOUR. Thursday: worried investors begin to sell and stock prices fall dramatically. Ex: General Electric: bought at 400, sold 283 Banks pulled money to buy stock to stabilize prices

Black Tuesday: October 29 th, record of 16.4 million shares sold compared to average 4-8 million (Great Crash). By November 13 th - Dow Jones fell from 381 to Overall losses: $30 billion dollars.

RIPPLE EFFECT 1.Risky loans hurt banks: banks loan huge sums of money to many high- risk businesses. When stock prices fell, these businesses were unable to repay loans. 2.Bank Runs: Fear that banks would run out of money. People would run to banks to withdraw as much money from their accounts. To pay deposits, banks demanded loans. Loans were not paid, therefore, money could not be given. 3.Bank Failures: unpaid loans + bank runs= bankrupt 4.Savings wiped out: bank failures wiped out savings 5.Cuts in Production: Businesses could not borrow money to produce more goods. Lacked incentive to spend money. 6.Rise in Unemployment: cut back on production, laid off workers. 7.Further cuts in Production: unemployment grew and incomes shrank, consumers spent less and less money produced still fewer goods.

WORLDWIDE DEPRESSION By 1932, more than 30 million workers in countries in industrialized world could not find jobs. Economic Nationalism made the Depression harder to recover from

Great Britain (Great Slump) 1.Suffering turmoil of war and never recovered by GD. 2.Relied highly on exports to other countries (No Buyers) 3.Create jobs by granting low-interest loans to industries. 4.Raised tariffs against foreign goods 5.Relied heavily on reparations from Germany France 1.Underdeveloped Economy 2.Farming and Tourism (No Money for tourists to visit). 3.Relied heavily on Reparations from Germany

Germany: 1.Had to pay reparations to other countries like France and Great Britain 2.Currency had to be printed constantly (Currency becomes worthless) 3.Savings were wiped out 4.Adolph Hitler (Begins to fade): German production: munitions/arms manufacturing rather than consumer goods. Japan: 1.Deficit Spending: govt will spend more than the income it makes. 2.Yen was intentionally lowered 3.Exports such as textiles were substantially lower than UK or France. 4.Worried more about Economy overgrowth Soviet Union: 1.Lack of participation in capitalism (Barely affected by Depression)

NEW DEAL 1932: FDR elected president of the United States “Relief, Reform, and Recovery” “Only thing to fear is fear itself” Granted money to states to provide clothing, food, and shelter Government began a program of public works (Buildings, roads, and other projects) Social Security Act: unemployment and old age benefits 40 hour workweek and minimum wages Right to from unions WW2 ends Depression for all countries