THE GREAT
DEPRESSION
    1929
     Photos by photographer Dorothea Lange
         THE NATION’S SICK
             ECONOMY
            As the 1920s advanced, serious problems
            threatened the economy while
            Important industries struggled, including:
•   Agriculture
•   Railroads
•   Textiles
•   Steel
•   Mining
•   Lumber
•   Automobiles
•   Housing
•   Consumer goods
FARMERS STRUGGLE
                          • No industry suffered as
                            much as agriculture
                          • During World War I
                            European demand for
                            American crops soared
                          • After the war demand
                            plummeted
                          • Farmers increased
                            production sending
                            prices further downward
Photo by Dorothea Lange
    CONSUMER SPENDING
          DOWN
• By the late 1920s,
  American consumers
  were buying less
• Rising prices, stagnant
  wages and overbuying on
  credit were to blame
• Most people did not have
  the money to buy the
  food of goods factories
  produced
GAP BETWEEN RICH &
      POOR
                          • The gap between rich
                            and poor widened
                          • The wealthiest 1% saw
                            their income rise 75%
                          • The rest of the
                            population saw an
                            increase of only 9%
                          • More than 70% of
                            American families
                            earned less than $2500
                            per year
Photo by Dorothea Lange
THE STOCK MARKET
       • By 1929, many Americans
         were invested in the Stock
         Market
       • The Stock Market had
         become the most visible
         symbol of a prosperous
         American economy
       • The Dow Jones Industrial
         Average was the barometer
         of the Stock Market’s worth
       • The Dow is a measure
         based on the price of 30
         large firms
       STOCK PRICES RISE
       THROUGH THE 1920s
• Through most of the
  1920s, stock prices
  rose steadily
• The Dow reached a
  high in 1929 of 381
  points (300 points
  higher than 1924)
• By 1929, 4 million
  Americans owned
  stocks
                        New York Stock Exchange
  SEEDS OF TROUBLE
                                • By the late 1920s,
                                  problems with the
                                  economy emerged
                                • Speculation: Too many
                                  Americans were engaged
                                  in speculation – buying
                                  stocks & bonds hoping for
                                  a quick profit
                                • Margin: Americans were
                                  buying “on margin” –
                                  paying a small percentage
                                  of a stock’s price as a
                                  down payment and
                                  borrowing the rest
The Stock Market’s bubble was
        about to break
                         THE 1929 CRASH
• In September the Stock Market
  had some unusual up & down
  movements
• On October 24, the market took
  a plunge . . .the worst was yet
  to come
• On October 29, now known as
  Black Tuesday, the bottom fell
  out
• 16.4 million shares were sold
  that day – prices plummeted
• People who had bought on
  margin (credit) were stuck with
  huge debts
By mid-November, investors
 had lost about $30 billion
THE GREAT DEPRESSION
          • The Stock Market crash
            signaled the beginning of
            the Great Depression
          • The Great Depression is
            generally defined as the
            period from 1929 – 1940
            in which the economy
            plummeted and
            unemployment
            skyrocketed
          • The crash alone did not
            cause the Great
            Depression, but it
            hastened its arrival
     FINANCIAL COLLAPSE
• After the crash, many
  Americans panicked and
  withdrew their money
  from banks
• Banks had invested in
  the Stock Market and lost
  money
• In 1929- 600 banks fail
• By 1933 – 11,000 of the
  25,000 banks nationwide     Bank run 1929, Los Angeles
  had collapsed
CAUSES OF THE GREAT
    DEPRESSION
           • Tariffs & war debt
             policies
           • U.S. demand low,
             despite factories
             producing more
           • Farm sector crisis
           • Easy credit
           • Unequal
             distribution of
             income
EFFECTS OF DEPRESSION
          • Suicide rate rose more
            than 30% between 1928-
            1932
          • Alcoholism rose sharply in
            urban areas
          • Three times as many
            people were admitted to
            state mental hospitals as
            in normal times
          • Many people showed great
            kindness to strangers
          • Additionally, many people
            developed habits of
            savings & thriftiness
         End to Depression
• Outbreak of World War II
  causes
  – US factories flooded with
    orders form armaments and
    munitions
  – Unemployment decreases
    and production increase
  – Depression ends completely
    by the time the US enters
    the war in 1941