Tuesday, April 7 Welcome back! Please submit your Prohibition work on the front table. Thank you! Bellringer: – To what extent (how much) do you think.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Causes. Background The 1920s was a prosperous time for some but not for everyone. Although the nations wealth grew by billions it was not distributed.
Advertisements

Causes of the Stock Market Crash
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Causes of the Great Depression.
Causes of the Great Depression
The Stock Market Crash Mr. Dodson.
Ch. 11 The Great Depression
The Great Depression The Party’s over. Twenties Prosperity Many Americans believed the post-war economic boom had limitless growth. National income rose.
The Causes of the Great Depression. The Postwar Economic Boom The years following WWI were known as the “Roaring Twenties” The Boom affected America in.
A MULTIMEDIA LEARNING LLC POWERPOINT PRESENTATION
1920) World economy = a delicately balanced house of cards. Key card that held up the rest was American economic prosperity. HoJun.
The Causes of the Great Depression
Causes of the Great Depression
CAUSES OF THE GREAT DEPRESSION.
What Caused the Great Depression?
The Economy in the Late 1920s CHAPTER 14 SECTION 3
Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War Begins Section 1 Causes of the Depression Objectives Discuss the weaknesses in the economy of the 1920s. Explain how.
14 sec.1 Nation’s Sick Economy. Economic Troubles Housing boom faded Railroads lost business Mining & lumbering suffered.
Guiding Question Can and will history repeat itself? If so, what can we do about it? Do people need help? Do people need government's help? When, in what.
Station 1. UNEQUAL DISTRIBUTION OF WEALTH OVER PRODUCTION HIGH TARIFFS AND WAR DEBTS CAUSES OF THE GREAT DEPRESSION AGRICULTURE 2 INDUSTRY MONETARY POLICY.
CAUSES OF THE GREAT DEPRESSION. THE GREAT DEPRESSION KWL ON YOUR PINK POST IT NOTE WRITE SOMETHING THAT YOU KNOW ABOUT THE GREAT DEPRESSION ON YOUR YELLOW.
Causes of The Great Depression. Hoover Elected President Election of 1928 takes place during prosperity –Hoover runs campaign on Republicans prosperity.
The Great Depression and New Deal (1929 – 1941) The Causes of the Depression and the Great Crash.
Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War Begins Section 1 Causes of the Depression 21.1 Objectives Discuss the weaknesses in the economy of the 1920s. Explain.
Causes of the Great Depression
1 Objective: To examine the causes of the Great Depression.
CHAPTER 14 SECTION 1 THE NATIONS SICK ECONOMY MAIN IDEA: As the prosperity of the 1920s ended, severe economic problems gripped the nation.
Americans prosperous called “Roaring 20’s” Depression started in 1929 with the crash of the Stock Market.
Warm Up ISN, pg. 65 What do you think is the most important issue facing the president today and why?
Causes of the Great Depression Terms and People Herbert Hoover – former Secretary of Commerce and Republican candidate for President in 1928 speculation.
Economic Troubles on the Horizon Things Aren’t as Good as They Appear to Be!
The Nation’s Sick Economy What caused the economy to go bad at the end of the 1920s?
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Causes of the Great Depression.
US Chp 22 The Great Depression Hoover….Dam!!! The Best Laid Plans of Stocks And Bonds Often Go Awry, Leaving US Naught But Grapes of Wrath.
Wednesday, April 8 Welcome back! Please submit your Harlem Renaissance artist poster on the front table. Thank you! Bellringer: – Using a Venn diagram,
The Nation’s Sick Economy The Great Depression (The Hoover Years):
1 2  Unequal Distribution of Wealth  High Tariffs and War Debts  Overproduction in Industry and Agriculture  1928 Presidential Election  Farm crisis.
1 2  Unequal Distribution of Wealth  High Tariffs and War Debts  Overproduction in Industry and Agriculture  1928 Presidential Election  Farm crisis.
A MULTIMEDIA LEARNING LLC POWERPOINT PRESENTATION
THE GREAT DEPRESSION AND THE NEW DEAL Unit 2: Chapters Notes.
 What events led to the stock market’s Great Crash in 1929?  Why did the Great Crash produce a ripple effect throughout the nation’s economy?  What.
Unit #3: 1920’s, GD, New Deal Causes of the Great Depression.
1. 2 AGRICULTURE INDUSTRY MONETARY POLICY STOCK MARKET CRASH AND FINANCIAL PANIC Historians disagree as to the causes of the Great Depression. Most scholars.
 Unequal Distribution of Wealth  High Tariffs and War Debts  Overproduction in Industry and Agriculture  1928 Presidential Election  Farm crisis 
Causes of the Great Depression. Possible Causes of the Great Depression Stock Market Crash Over production Unequal distribution of wealth Consumerist.
Unit #4: Great Depression & New Deal Causes of the Great Depression.
A Worldwide Depression. Postwar Europe Unstable New Democracies Germany and new countries formed from Austria-Hungary No experience with democracy Existing.
The Great Depression. ● Decrease in demand for American goods after WWI ● Installment Buying/Buying on Margin ● Decrease in Purchasing Power.
THE GREAT DEPRESSION The Nation’s Sick Economy. The future’s so Bright, I gotta wear shades? 1920’s were a prosperous decade to many, but not all. Trouble.
Causes of the Great Depression
CAUSES OF THE GREAT DEPRESSION
Pre Read List 10 ways in which you know or can hypothesize how the Great Depression and the Great Recession differ? Think National, Global, Societal, and.
Station 1.
Causes of the Great Depression
Essential Declarative:
A MULTIMEDIA LEARNING LLC POWERPOINT PRESENTATION
CAUSES OF THE GREAT DEPRESSION.
Objectives Discuss the weaknesses in the economy of the 1920s.
CAUSES OF THE GREAT DEPRESSION
Causes of the Great Depression
Aim: How did President Hoover respond to The Great Depression?
4/24 Day 6 Grab Causes of the Great Depression pg. 3
Causes of the Great Depression
President and Mrs. Hoover
Causes of the Great Depression
Objectives Discuss the weaknesses in the economy of the 1920s.
Causes of the Great Depression
Essential Declarative:
Objectives Discuss the weaknesses in the economy of the 1920s.
Objectives Discuss the weaknesses in the economy of the 1920s.
Presentation transcript:

Tuesday, April 7 Welcome back! Please submit your Prohibition work on the front table. Thank you! Bellringer: – To what extent (how much) do you think the government should regulate people’s moral behavior? Explain your position, and give examples to support it. Note: Moral behavior is what people should do or how they should behave.

The Roaring Twenties Prohibition Political corruption Social changes Entertainment and the arts Labor vs. industry

Think … What was the economy of the United States like in the 1920s? What was going well? What changes were occurring (new inventions, discoveries, developments, etc.), and how did those things change American life? Were there any signs of potential economic or financial trouble on the horizon?

Key questions How did the “Roaring 20s” come to an end? What caused the Great Depression? What caused the stock market crash?

The economy of the 1920s Using the textbook, complete the note guide on the economy of the 1920s. Be on the lookout for answers to the questions we just discussed!

The Great Depression Paying the price of the 1920s

What caused the Depression? There were many reasons to believe the U.S. economy was soft in the 1920s – Example: Farmers were in a depression throughout the decade Historians still argue over the exact causes of the Depression But there is widespread agreement about some things that contributed to it

Causes of the Great Depression Unequal distribution of wealth High tariffs and war debts Monetary policy Agricultural overproduction Industrial overproduction Consumer behavior Stock market crash; financial panic

Causes of the Great Depression The 1920s was known as a prosperous time, but not for everyone Consumer behavior was also a contributing factor People were buying things they couldn’t afford

The nation's wealth grew by billions throughout the 1920s But it was not distributed evenly UNEQUAL DISTRIBUTION OF WEALTH

The top 1 percent received a 75 percent increase in their disposable income The other 99 percent saw an average 9 percent increase in their disposable income (money leftover when the necessities are paid for). 80 percent of Americans had no savings at all Put these numbers in chart form! UNEQUAL DISTRIBUTION OF WEALTH

99 percent of the population: Income grew 9 percent The top 1 percent of the population: Income rose 75 percent.

The economy grew by billions throughout the 1920s. Total realized income rose from $74.3 billion in 1923 to $89 billion in 1929

But that prosperity was NOT reflected in the wages of unskilled workers.

RURAL POVERTY IN THE 1920’S

HIGH TARIFFS AND WAR DEBTS At the end of World War I, European nations owed over $10 billion ($115 billion in 2002 dollars) to the U.S. But they had no way of paying the money back, because their economies had been devastated by the war When the U.S. insisted on payment, the Allies turned to Germany to demand that they pay their reparations, as outlined in the Treaty of Versailles But Germany couldn’t pay, either … so the U.S. loaned money to Germany to pay the Allies, who then used that money to pay … the United States

HIGH TARIFFS AND WAR DEBTS Europe could not purchase goods from the U.S., leading to a financial crisis This debt contributed to the Great Depression. The Fordney-Mc Cumber Act (1922) instituted high tariffs on industrial products Tariff: tax on imports Other nations soon retaliated with their own tariffs World trade declined, helping to bring on the Great Depression

Factories were producing products, but … Wages for workers were not rising enough for them to buy them Few workers could afford to buy the factory output The surplus (extra) products could not be sold overseas due to high tariffs and lack of money in Europe OVERPRODUCTION IN INDUSTRY

Agricultural overproduction During WWI, more crops were needed, so production increased After WWI, prices declined, to farmers had to grow more crops to hold steady What happens to prices when supply rises? Farmers went into debt and could not pay their bank loans off When they weren’t repaid, banks foreclosed on farms, leaving farmers and their families homeless

FARM OVERPRODUCTION Due to surpluses and overproduction, farm incomes dropped throughout the 1920s Surplus ears of corn

FARM OVERPRODUCTION Agriculture was in a depression from 1920 until World War II began in 1939 Surplus ears of corn $273 $750

FARM OVERPRODUCTION Why did this matter? Problems in the agricultural sector had a large impact … 30 percent of Americans still lived on farms Surplus corn

YEARWHEATCORNOATSPOTATOESPEANUTS unstable prices U.S. Department of Agriculture’s yearbook from 1934 shows the unstable prices of foodstuff

Average gross receipts Average expenditures Balance Farmers’ profits dropped … … leading to foreclosures

Foreclosure: When an owner cannot pay his mortgage, the bank repossesses the property to sell it

Agricultural product Corn (per bushel) Wheat (per bushel) Oats (per bushel) Butter (per lb) Butterfat (per lb) Wool (per lb) Hogs (per cwt) Milk (per cwt) American farm products price declines

Federal Reserve Monetary Policy The Federal Reserve System was created in 1913 established a central banking system for the U.S. to help stabilize the economy A major goal is to deal with bank panics Monetary policy manipulates the money supply to help strengthen the economy At the beginning of the Great Depression, the Fed did not address failing banks, and many scholars argue their idleness worsened the situation

Millions of average Americans began speculating in the stock market in the 1920s Speculating: Buying risky stocks out of a desire to get rich quick, rather than investing because of a sound investment.

Wanting it now! Heavily influenced by the start of modern advertising, millions of Americans began buying goods on credit. They adapted the idea of credit to the stock market, where they bought stocks “on margin.” As a result of the higher demand, stocks went up!

Installment buying Used credit and paying back in small amounts Introduced in the 1920s Pro: It allowed people to buy cars, radios and other new products of the decade Con: People accrued (piled up) more debt

Hoover based his winning platform on continued prosperity … “We in America today are nearer to the final triumph over poverty than ever before in the history of any land. The poorhouse is vanishing from among us.” ~1928 Hoover accepting the Republican nomination for president

1928 presidential election: New York Gov. Al Smith (D) vs. Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover (R) Al Smith Many were suspicious of Smith, who was Catholic But Hoover was popular for feeding starving Europeans after WWI

Hoover and the farm crisis Candidate Hoover: "The most urgent economic problem... is agriculture. It must be solved.”

"I do not believe that the power and duty of the General Government ought to be extended to the relief of individual suffering.... The lesson should be constantly enforced that though the people support the Government the Government should not support the people." (1930) President Hoover’s belief in self-reliance would later affect his ideas about how to best solve the upcoming depression President and Mrs. Hoover

‘The party is over’ The stock market crash – Stocks soared 300 points in five years – DJIA peak: Sept. 3, 1929 at This is known as a “bull market” – There were warnings … “Stock prices have reached a permanent high plateau.” “A crash coming, and it may be a terrific one.” – But few people heeded them