the great depression hoover vs. roosevelt
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The Great Depression Hoover vs. Roosevelt. By: Alex Cisneros Mrs. McEmoyl P.6. Causes . Hawley Smoot Tariff Installment Plan Stock Market Speculation Over Production Unequal D istribution o f Wealth Dust Bowl. Hawley Smoot Tariff. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
The Great Depression Hoover vs. Roosevelt
By: Alex CisnerosMrs. McEmoyl
P.6
Hawley Smoot Tariff Installment Plan Stock Market Speculation Over Production Unequal Distribution of Wealth Dust Bowl
Causes
Damaged American sales abroad because
imports now cost much more. Increased taxes. Other foreigners started doing the same,
increased taxes on U.S. products.
Hawley Smoot Tariff
The Installment Plan was a source in which
Americans would use credit plans to purchase such consumer goods like vacuum cleaners, washing machines, radios, and other home appliances.
Many people who bought high-cost items reached a point where they were not able to pay off their debts because many banks failed to have people’s money due to stock values collapsing therefore the consumers had no money to back up the items.
Installment Plan
For a while things were good in the U.S. for the
moment because the increase of companies was causing growth to the economy with technological inventions being discovered.
Oct. 24, ‘’Black Thursday,’’ was when The New York Stock Exchange plummeted, leading to The Great Depression of the 1930s
Oct. 29, of 1929 ‘’Black Tuesday,’’ 50,000,000,000 were vanished leaving many people broke.
Stock Market Speculation
businesses were not cutting back on making
products. Mass production, too many products being
made buy companies and having to sell them cheaper.
There was increased manufacturing and agricultural output, but wages for industrial workers and other laborer, and income for farmers, did not keep pace for the consumers to purchase all that was produced or grown
Over Production
The imbalance of wealth created an
unstable economy during the great 1920's depression.
The currency of wealth was not flowing fairly enough to stimulate the economy.
People ran on banks and banks collapsed, which in turn meant people losing their savings.
Unequal Distribution of Wealth
Dust was everywhere in Kansas, Oklahoma,
Texas, New Mexico and Colorado. Too much of the soil became to dust so crops
didn’t grow. Thousands of farmers lost their farms. was a very deserted place. Many migrants moved to the west for a better
life.
Dust Bowl
Boulder Dam, was designed to jump-start the
economy and add jobs. Federal Home Loan Bank Act, which lowered
mortgage rates for homeowners and allowed farmers to refinance their farm loans and avoid foreclosure.
The New Deal, Helping 6 million people become employed
Reconstruction Finance Corporation, authorizing to provide emergency financing to banks, life insurance companies, railroads and other large businesses.
Hoover’s Ideas
Roosevelt had the goal of getting people back
to work. Getting them fed and sheltered and fixing the
economy. He came up with an idea to have the men and
some women, work on construction projects like building dams, roads and other things.
Roosevelt’s Ideas
Both Hoover and Roosevelt had ideas on
putting an end to The Great Depression. They both wanted people to have jobs and
end the homeless living economy.
Comparing The Ideas
Social Security Act of 1935 The Wagner Act Fair Labor Standards Act Securities Act of 1933 TVA Securities and Exchange Act
Programs America Still Has Today
Sources
http://useconomy.about.com/od/grossdomesticproduct/p/1929_Depression.htm 1/31/13
http://www.thegreatdepressioncauses.com/facts.html 2/2/13
http://www.lewrockwell.com/rothbard/rothbard184.html 2/5/13
http://www.ehow.com/about_4597060_homeless-population-during-great-depression.html 2/4/13