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Published byKevin Shaw Modified over 8 years ago
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How bad was the Great Depression?
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No Money, No Jobs Unemployment reached 27% at the height of the Depression in 1933. Corporate profits went from $396 million in 1929 to corporate losses of $98 million in 1933. For all major classes of labour jobs in Canada, every trade saw their rates of wages dropped between 1930 and 1936
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No More Exporting Other countries put up huge tariffs. Canadian exports shrank by 50% from 1929 to 1933. Farmers biggest exporters, hit hardest
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Not to mention the drought Creates Dust Bowl of the 1930s
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Food Is Hard to Find and/or Buy
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Extreme Political Groups Gain Power Remember worldwide depression and its results? Happens in Canada to some degree. Social Credit Party, Communist Party, etc all gain popularity.
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Work Camps For the Unemployed Bunkhouse residence, 3 meals a day, work clothes, medical care and 20 cents a day. the "Royal Twenty Centers" Worked 44-hr weeks clearing bush, building roads, planting trees and constructing public buildings. Many upset at tough conditions, temporary fix
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On To Ottawa Trek
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Families Fall Apart Canada's birthrate dropped from 13.1 live births per 1000 in 1930 to only 9.7 by 1937, the lowest ratio until the 1960s. Divorce rates went up.
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Homelessness
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PM RB Bennett Takes a lot of the blame. Bennett blankets=newspapers Bennet buggies=abandoned cars
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Desperation and Hopelessness
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