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Published byCorey Newman Modified over 8 years ago
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14.1 The Nation’s Sick Economy
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Causes of the Great Depression Farming crisis Easy credit Unequal distribution of income
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Farmers need a lift During WWI, international demand for crops such as wheat and corn had soared After the war, demand for farm products fell and crop prices declined by 50% Farmers increased production in hopes of selling more crops, which led to lower prices
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Living on Credit Credit- buy now, pay later “Buying Power”
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Uneven Distribution of Income In the 1920s, nearly half of the nation’s families earned less than $1,500/year 1920-1929: income of the wealthiest 1% rose by 75% 1929: wealthiest 5% of families controlled 1/3 of the nation’s income
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Riches in the Stock Market Speculation-buying stocks and bonds on the chance that they might sell for huge profits Buying on margin- putting a small down payment on the stock and borrowing the rest
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1928-A New President Herbert Hoover Herbert Hoover was a mining engineer from Iowa who had never run for public office Won a landslide victory mostly because Americans were happy with the way Republicans were running the country
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Black Tuesday-October 29, 1929 Market prices dropped, causing a frenzy of selling 16 million shares were sold in one day $30 billion gone by mid- November
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14.2 The Dust Bowl
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What is the Dust Bowl? Huge wind storms that relocated millions of tons of dust from the central plains
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Why did the Dust Bowl happen? Destruction of grasslands for farming Exhausted land through overproduction 1930s draught High winds
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Where did the Dust Bowl happen? Colorado, Oklahoma, Texas, Kansas, New Mexico
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Who did the Dust Bowl affect? “Okies”-a negative term used to refer to those who were displaced by the dust storms
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