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Great Depression What is it? Causes and Contributing Factors

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Great Depression. What is it? Causes and Contributing Factors. What is a Depression? Depression – a sharp & sustained decline in economic activity Great Depression – longest/worst in economic history Depression did not occur in 1 day - progressive Oct. 29, 1929 – stock market crashed - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Great Depression

Great DepressionWhat is it?

Causes and Contributing Factors

Page 2: Great Depression

What is a Depression?– Depression – a sharp & sustained decline in economic

activityGreat Depression – longest/worst in economic history

• Depression did not occur in 1 day - progressive• Oct. 29, 1929 – stock market crashed– Had been steadily growing weaker– Oct. 24 began “panic selling” of stocks– Stock prices dropped 2/3

• Economy reached bottom in 1932

Page 3: Great Depression

5 causes of the Great Depression

1. Weak economy

2. American business system was unbalanced

3. Poor distribution of purchasing power

4. Debt threatened economy

5. International debts owed, but not being paid

IN your spiral – illustrate these 5 causes!

You need to add notes as we go from what I say – you will have an assignment over these notes!

Page 4: Great Depression

#1

#2 #3

#4 #5

5 Causes of the

Great Depression

Page 5: Great Depression

3 Contributing Factors that prolonged the Depression

Page 6: Great Depression

1. Banking CrisisBetween 1930-33 over 9,000 banks closedBank deposits not insured & depositors lost $Decline in bank system: reduced amount of $ available

for loans/investmentsFederal Reserve System (controls flow of $ to American

banks) responded slowly1931 raised interest rates (shrinking $ supply further)

Economy bottomed out in 1932GNP declined 25% over last 3 yearsInvestments only 3% of what it was before crashFarm income cut by 2/3’s

Page 7: Great Depression

2. Unemployment

Reached 25% (1 of every 4 Americans out of work)

Most immediately visible in Midwestex. 50% unemployed in Cleveland, Ohioex. 80% unemployed in Toledo, Ohio

Page 8: Great Depression
Page 9: Great Depression

3. The Dust Bowl

Natural disaster that struck middle Americamid 1930’s lower than avg. rainfall from Dakotas to TX

worst areas: panhandle of TX & OK, and parts of Kansas, Colorado & New Mexico

lakes dried, plants withered, animals diedtopsoil so dry that it was blown east in heavy windspeople lost land or ceased to be able to make a living off

of it many moved West b/c they heard of jobs and good crops “Oakies” most worked as low-paid migrant farmers

farmers, despite dust, still produced more than people could buy, prices continued to fall.

Page 10: Great Depression

Great Depression Images

Page 11: Great Depression

Dust storms were frequent during the depression; this one occurred in Texas in 1935.

Page 12: Great Depression
Page 13: Great Depression

Dorothea Lange's Migrant Mother

depicts destitute pea pickers during the

depression in California, centering on Florence Owens

Thompson, a mother of seven children, age

32, March 1936.

Page 14: Great Depression

In the early 1930s shantytowns sprang up in cities across the United States, built by people made homeless by the Great Depression. These areas were nicknamed Hoovervilles because their inhabitants blamed United States president Herbert Hoover. This one is in Seattle.

Page 15: Great Depression

Dwellers in a local Hooverville, Circleville, Ohio

Two small children during the Great Depression- part of a squatter community (known bitterly as "Hoovervilles“)

Page 16: Great Depression

•What did the man do wrong if he really did save money to help him through the bad times?

•What’s different today from what happened during the Great Depression?

•Do you think it can happen again?