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After winning the Election of 1932, Franklin D. Roosevelt (FDR) began sending bill after bill to Congress, 15 major acts passes to meet the economic crisis,

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Presentation on theme: "After winning the Election of 1932, Franklin D. Roosevelt (FDR) began sending bill after bill to Congress, 15 major acts passes to meet the economic crisis,"— Presentation transcript:

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2 After winning the Election of 1932, Franklin D. Roosevelt (FDR) began sending bill after bill to Congress, 15 major acts passes to meet the economic crisis, setting a pace for new legislation that has never been equaled. Together these programs made up what would later be called the First New Deal.

3 On his very first night in office FDR declared a nat’l bank holiday, temporarily closing all banks & Congress unanimously passed the Emergency Bank Relief Act, and Roosevelt signed it into law shortly afterwards. The law required federal examiners to survey the nation’s banks and issue Treasury Department licenses to those that were financially sound.

4 Securities Act - required companies that sold stocks and bonds to provide complete and truthful information to investors. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), to regulate the stock market and prevent fraud. Glass-Steagall Act - separated commercial banking from investment banking and also created the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) to provide government insurance for bank deposits up to a certain amount greatly increased public confidence in the banking system.

5 The most highly praised New Deal work relief program was the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) offered unemployed young men ages 18 -25 the opportunity to work under the direction of the national forestry service planting trees, fighting forest fires, and building reservoirs. Federal Emergency Relief Administration (FERA) - did not initially crate projects for the unemployed, it channeled money- a half billion dollars in all- to state and local agencies to fund their relief projects. Public Works Administration (PWA) - began a series of construction projects to build and improve highways, dams, sewer systems, water works, schools, and other government facilities.

6 The Civil Works Administration (CWA) - hired workers directly and put them on the federal government’s payroll. The winter the CWA employed 4 million people, 300,000 of them were women. The agency built or improved 1,000 airports, 500,000 miles of roads, 40,000 school buildings, and 3,500 playgrounds, parks and playing fields. The cost of the CWA was huge-the program spent nearly $1 billion in just 5 months.

7 The New Deal had been in effect for two years, yet the economy had shown only a slight improvement. 2 million new jobs had been created, but 10 million workers remained unemployed nation’s total income remained about half of what it had been in 1929.

8 1935, FDR asked Congress for nearly $5 billion “for work relief and to increase employment by providing useful projects.” Much of the money would be given to the Works Progress Administration (WPA), the WPA spent $11 billion and employed 8.5 million workers. Built 650,000 mile of highways, roads, and streets 125,000 public buildings, more than 8,000 parks. It built or improved more than 124,000 bridges 853 airports.

9 Wagner Act - guaranteed workers the right to organize unions without interference from employers and to bargain collectively. The law set up the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) - organized factory elections by secret ballot to determine whether workers wanted a union. The new law also set up a process whereby dissatisfied union members could take their complaints to binding arbitration, in which a neutral party would listen to both sides and decide the issues.

10 major goal was to provide some security for the elderly and for unemployed workers. Workers earned the right to receive benefits because they paid premiums. The legislation also provided modest welfare payments to other needy people, including those with disabilities and poor families with young dependent children. The core of Social Security was the monthly retirement benefit, which people could collect when they stopped working at age 65. Another important benefit, unemployment insurance, supplied a temporary income to unemployed workers looking for new jobs.

11 late 1937, Roosevelt decided it was time to balance the budget. Concerned about the dangers of too much debt, FDR ordered the WPA and the PWA to be cut significantly. FDR cut spending just as the 1st Social Security payroll taxes removed $2 billion from the economy. Almost immediately the economy plummeted. By the end of 1937, about 2 million people had been thrown out of work.

12 Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 - provided more protection for workers, abolished child labor, and established a 40-hour workweek for many workers to come into effect within three years. In terms of its main goal of ending the Depression, the New Deal was only a limited success. Unemployment remained high, and economic recovery was not complete until after World War II.

13 TAKE OUT half SHEET OF PAPER NUMBER 1-5

14 1. What law required federal examiners to survey the nation’s banks and issue Treasury Department licenses to those that were financially sound? 2. This required companies that sold stocks and bonds to provide complete and truthful information to investors? 3. This guaranteed workers the right to organize unions without interference from employers and to bargain collectively? 4. A major goal of this was to provide some security for the elderly and for unemployed workers? 5. This provided more protection for workers, abolished child labor, and established a 40-hour workweek for many workers to come into effect within three years?


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