Distress in the economy in 1929 In response to his administration’s role in plunging the country into the Great Depression, President Franklin D. Roosevelt instituted the interventionist New Deal. In response to firm failures and steadily rising unemployment, the state implemented social and economic measures to mitigate the situation. After its implementation in 1933, this strategy lasted until 1938. The New Deal established union rights, controlled business practices, and transformed the financial sector.
What Is the New Deal?
President Franklin D. Roosevelt.
In the wake of the 1929 stock market collapse, the United States saw a wave of bankruptcies and a subsequent surge in the unemployment rate. The Great Depression affected the United States throughout the 1930s. Roosevelt took extraordinary political action to mitigate the economic damage. Indeed, it was the New Deal.
The New Deal was a vast economic recovery program implemented between 1933 and 1938 by U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt to counteract the effects of the Great Depression caused by the stock market crash of 1929. Beyond the rapid recovery of consumption and investment, this “New Deal” aimed to thoroughly reform the American economic system to prevent new crises.
The New Deal profoundly transformed American society, which until then had been opposed to any federal government intervention in the economy. It also inspired many economists, including John Maynard Keynes, who published his “General Theory” in 1936, a work that advocated government intervention, including budget deficits, to ensure full employment.
Why Did Franklin D. Roosevelt Create the New Deal?
Despite the efforts of the previous president, Herbert Hoover, the economic situation in the country was catastrophic. The unemployment rate was around 25%, the GDP had fallen sharply, the financial situation was precarious, millions of savers and farmers had been ruined. Between 1930 and 1933, American industrial production fell by half, or even by two-thirds in some sectors, agricultural prices fell by 25% to 50% depending on the product, and 14 million Americans were unemployed in 1933, that is, a quarter of the working population, who could only survive thanks to soup kitchens.
These were all indicators of an unprecedented economic crisis that saw the resurgence of demonstrations of revolt that were thought to be from another time and another world: the food riots.
Many businesses failed, and the number of people without jobs rose dramatically after the stock market crash of 1929. During Herbert Hoover’s presidency, the first signs of the Great Depression emerged. Franklin Delano Roosevelt, who assumed office after him, reformed the financial markets to stimulate the U.S. economy. It was the principles of economist and “Keynesian” movement founder John Maynard Keynes that influenced his interventionist New Deal strategy.
When and Where Did the New Deal Take Place?
First implemented in the United States in 1933, the New Deal strategy sought to improve economic conditions. The first noticeable effects of these and other policies, most notably those affecting the allocation of resources and economic power, were apparent in 1935. The five-year period of this interventionist program ended in 1938. The United States gradually shifted towards a military economy during this time.
The Great Depression of the 1930s was significant in that it ushered in the period of state intervention (theorized by John Maynard Keynes) in a market economy that had become weak due to its length, scope (beyond the United States, the crisis grew international), and societal hardship.
In light of this crisis, President Roosevelt and his advisors made the decision to increase Federal State involvement in economic regulation. This required a crackdown on certain financial activities (particularly credit and debt management), the creation of a massive public works program, and the establishment of a social welfare state. Far from it, this bold strategy did not have widespread support. Many economists panned it for the restrictions it placed on free markets, while the media and some politicians called it dictatorial and too centralized to fit with American ideals.
How Was the New Deal Put Into Action?
Initiated in 1933, the New Deal sought to rapidly implement Roosevelt’s economic and social initiatives. In these “First 100 Days,” policies like welfare, workfare, and financial reform were implemented as an emergency response. In 1935, a new New Deal was enacted, which included redistribution of wealth and protections for labor unions. The New Deal officially ended in 1938, while several of its initiatives continued for a while thereafter.
As part of his plan to end the Great Depression, President Franklin D. Roosevelt heavily intervened in the economy by creating new government agencies, subsidized programs, and public services in an effort to bring about a period of economic growth and job creation. The president relied on a committee of advisers, the brain trust, made up mostly of academics from Harvard (Boston) and Columbia (New York), each of whom represented a distinct school of thought in economics, to help him make these decisions.
There were two camps: the “planners,” who favored long-term changes to the system, and the “spenders,” who thought it was sufficient to just pump money into the economy to get things moving.
Roosevelt significantly expanded government expenditure by resorting to the practice of budget deficits ($3.5 billion in 1936). Among the main measures of the New Deal were;
reviving industry and regulating competition (National Industrial Recovery Act or NIRA, 1933);
combating unemployment through a policy of massive public works, most notably the development of the Tennessee Valley in 1933 (see the Tennessee Valley Authority or TVA);
abandoning the gold standard and devaluing the dollar to 59% of its former value in gold (Gold Reserve Act of 1934);
aid to farmers and the fight against agricultural overproduction (Agricultural Adjustment Act or AAA);
and the creation of a social security system (Social Security Act, 1935), instituting old age insurance and unemployment insurance, within the framework of the Welfare State were all central tenets of the New Deal.
The Work Project Administration (WPA)
The Work Progress Administration (WPA) was founded on May 6, 1935, as a government organization that focuses on large-scale building projects (renamed in 1939 as the Work Projects Administration). The construction and restoration of private homes and public structures were both within the WPA’s purview. The Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco, one of its most famous works, was a testament to its excellence. Through the FAP (Federal Art Project), it served a vital function in the cultural sphere. On June 30th, 1943, President Roosevelt signed an act disbanding the WPA.
The National Recovery Administration (NRA)
On June 20, 1933, Congress created a new government agency called the National Recovery Administration (NRA) to oversee matters related to the economy, workers, and the workplace. The NIRA mandated a level playing field for industries in need of revival. Businesses were now permitted to set a floor price for their products. The length of the work week and the minimum pay were both regulated by the NRA. On May 27, 1935, it was formally disbanded.
The Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA)
Pumping water by hand from the sole water supply in this section of Wilder, Tennessee (Tennessee Valley Authority, 1942).
The TVA was a government agency that managed power plants, waterways, and flood protection in the Tennessee Valley. Tennessee, Alabama, Kentucky, Georgia, and Mississippi were all included in the TVA’s service area. It has been around since 1933, when it was first established. Hydroelectric and nuclear power generation are the primary focuses of its output. Thermal power plants are another asset of the TVA’s.
The Results of the New Deal
Franklin D. Roosevelt, Henry Wallace, and Robert Fechner in the Shenandoah Valley, Virginia. Image: National Archives NextGen Catalog
Though the New Deal had a mixed record when it came to the economy as a whole (in 1939, the national income still hadn’t returned to its 1929 level), it did contribute to long-term improvements in the country’s infrastructure. During the New Deal, the federal government refined its monetary (activity on the money supply) and fiscal (new taxes, practice of budget deficits) policy tools, which it would subsequently use to mitigate the consequences of economic downturns.
On the other hand, the social front saw tensions escalate during the major strikes of 1937, which were exacerbated by the crisis and the expanded privileges of trade unions. Although the jobless, single women, and the crippled had been marginalized in the 1920s, they were able to participate in American society again because of the New Deal’s social security programs.
After a promising start, another crisis in 1937 threatened to derail this strategy (or rather these policies, since priorities shifted over Rooselvelt’s first two mandates). Even while the New Deal’s impact on society is indisputable, its economic effectiveness is open to debate. Many people believed that it was America’s rearmament and subsequent involvement in the war in 1941 that helped lift the country’s economy out of its rut.
The consequences of Roosevelt’s economic strategy during the Great Depression are disputed, and at best they are seen as negligible. But the New Deal’s positive influence on society is undeniable. The president kept in close contact with the populace by holding frequent news conferences.
Due to the revisions, new laws could now be enacted to protect workers’ rights in the workplace and regulate the financial sector. The New Deal left a significant political and social legacy since it authorized the establishment of several government agencies, most notably those tasked with protecting individuals’ civil liberties.
The Global Impact of the New Deal
With the New Deal, a new kind of “experimental” interventionism was born in an emergency setting to try to alleviate shortages. Keynesianism is most often understood as a method entirely linking social expenditure with economic recovery, and after WWII it was applied to all developed nations.
Public interventionism, however, was originally intended as a mechanism fulfilling a function similar to that of a liberal economy: to secure, as far as possible, an optimum equilibrium in all markets, whether they be for commodities and services, the labor market, or the money market.
This has led to an increase in the number of separate interventions across different economic sectors, with the state increasingly taking on the role of an entrepreneur by intervening directly in the workings of the economy through measures such as nationalizations, price controls, and banking dirigisme rather than simply seeking to correct imbalances on a macro level. The role of the state is central to the discussion, since this interventionism is often seen to be the driving force behind the “pure” liberalism that has defined the economies of the industrialized world since the mid-1980s.
FOCUS DATES OF THE NEW DEAL
The Black Thursday, October 24, 1929: The Wall Street Crash
Black Thursday, October 24, 1929, was the beginning of the “great panic” in the financial markets. First to go was the New York Stock Exchange, where 12 million shares were sold. On Tuesday, October 29, 1929, a price decline of 30 percent was recorded, triggering the worst economic catastrophe in human history. The name for this event is the 1929 stock market collapse.
A bankruptcy for the Creditanstalt was filed on May 11, 1931.
The international repercussions of the 1929 crisis may be seen even now. Creditanstalt, an Austrian financial institution, collapsed two years later. As a result, the Austrian stock market crashed, followed by Germany’s, and the European economy went into a tailspin.
The financial collapse of the Danat Bank on July 13, 1931
Both the Danat Bank and the Creditanstalt filed for bankruptcy in 1931. The American companies’ approach of buying up failing foreign companies in an effort to mitigate the economic fallout from the Great Depression of 1929 had a devastating effect on a German bank. They were able to recoup their losses by selling the stocks they had purchased overseas.
September 21, 1931 – The pound sterling is devalued
The depreciation of the British pound sterling occurred after the stock market crisis of 1929. In a little over a year, the value of the pound dropped by about 40%. As part of this process, the government also gave up the gold standard for its currency.
During a speech on July 2, 1932, President Roosevelt brought up the “New Deal”
As early as 1932, Roosevelt laid out the foundations of the New Deal. Several of his close associates, such as the economist John Maynard Keynes, were mentioned, along with their suggested economic and social policies. The goal of this interventionist strategy was to reduce the damage caused by the Great Depression of 1929. It put an emphasis on reworking financial markets, building real estate, and expanding welfare services.
Formed by Roosevelt on March 4, 1933, “A New Deal for the People”
Soon after his election as president, Roosevelt began making plans to enact the New Deal in order to mitigate the economic downturn. This included building large-scale projects around the country and establishing agencies and initiatives to boost the economy.
The United States banks were shut down by President Roosevelt on March 5, 1933
All American banks were closed for four days after Roosevelt’s inauguration. This step was an attempt to calm the market after a string of bankruptcies. Creditors were to be repaid on March 9, 1933, and banks were to be permitted to reopen.
On March 6th, 1933, President Roosevelt instituted a ban on the trading of gold
As part of his plan to end the Great Depression, Roosevelt imposed a ban on the export of gold. After abandoning the gold standard in April 1933, the president reaffirmed this policy approach.
The Civilian Conservation Corps was established on March 31st, 1933
A job-creation initiative launched by the Roosevelt administration, the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) provided training and paid employment to young people who were otherwise without opportunities. Planting trees and fixing up old buildings were meant to be the means by which poverty and crime were kept at bay. The Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) was an organization established during the New Deal that is famous for its role in constructing bridges, towers, and trails throughout the United States.
Agricultural New Deal programs launched on May 12, 1933
The New Deal policies had an impact on the agriculture industry in the United States. The AAA’s restrictions on agricultural output were enforced by the government. The government provided monetary compensation in exchange. Overproduction, which led to a drop in raw material prices, was the target.
The Tennessee Valley Authority was established on May 18th, 1933
The TVA was a government agency whose mission was to lower the rate of unemployment in the Tennessee Valley. After years of research and development, it was optimized for the generation of energy. In use even now, it has established itself as a pioneer in the fields of hydroelectric and nuclear power.
The National Industrial Recovery Act was signed into law on June 16, 1933
The New Deal included the National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA) vote, which was focused on the manufacturing sector. It stipulated a code of fair competition and the implementation of minimum pricing on the worth of goods and services. These orders were carried out by the NRA (National Recovery Administration). It’s important to notice that there was a floor under which both hours worked and money earned had to fall.
The Social Security Act was signed into law on August 14, 1935
The United States now has a system of social assistance thanks to the passage of the Social Security Act. The elderly, the jobless, single mothers, and their children without father figures were the primary targets. In the midst of extreme poverty, it was referred to as a “welfare state” and a kind of social insurance.
The crisis of 1929, which began with a stock market fall on Wall Street on Thursday, October 24, 1929, had far-reaching and dramatic effects, eventually giving rise to the Great Depression. The United States had an unprecedented economic expansion in the years after World War I. Nobody could have foreseen that one day on Wall Street would lead to one of the worst economic disasters in American history. The global economic collapse began on 1929’s “Black Thursday” and continued until World War II. During a ten-year economic downturn, nations like Germany and the United States saw significant social and political turmoil, including the emergence of a certain dictator, Adolf Hitler.
There was a dramatic increase in joblessness since so many banks and enterprises failed. There were 7 million unemployed in two years in the United States. When the Great Depression was at its worst in 1933 nearly half of the banks had collapsed and unemployment had risen to over 15 million. Under Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal economic and social policy, the U.S. economy began to show signs of improvement in 1933 and continued to improve over the next several years. The international economic crisis of 1929 was the worst of its kind in the 20th century. Its devastating effects lasted for a full decade and played a significant role in setting the stage for World War II.
Where Did 1929’s Economic Collapse Come From?
The Great Depression of the 1930s was the worst economic downturn the capitalist system had ever seen. It started off in the middle of the optimism caused by the speedy recovery from World War I. In the decade after World War I, both global output and international commerce hit record highs. With the exception of the Soviet Union, every country’s postwar economy was building on the economic liberalism (universal return to the gold standard) that had made Europe prosperous in the 19th century. The magnitude of technological advancement and the fruition of rationalization strategies also had a role in bolstering people’s faith.
After years of economic depression, the United States underwent a period of rapid rebuilding in the 1920s. However, there were several holes in the American system. It was founded not just on industrial overproduction, but also on stock market speculation and easy access to financing. In order to finance their stock market investments, the general public took out excessive loans. This means that when prices dropped, investors acted quickly to liquidate their holdings before they lost too much money.
The United States had robust expansion in the 1920s, resulting in a roughly 50 percent rise in industrial output. Contrarily, speculators who ignored economic realities drove up New York Stock Exchange values by more than 300 percent over the same time period. Not only that, but neither production nor earnings have increased to match the elevated mood.
The ingredients for the impending catastrophe were quickly brought together: investors stop looking to collect dividends on profits, the fruits of real growth, and instead bought securities in large quantities on credit with the sole objective of selling them as quickly as possible for as much profit as possible. The stock market collapse was imminent since the foundations were being trampled.
“Black Thursday,” the panicked selling of approximately 13 million stocks on Wall Street on October 24, 1929, was a catastrophic event. As a result of the stock market crash, the American economy as a whole plummeted at a dizzying velocity. Investors abandoned industries, and consumer spending was continually on the decline.
The value of agricultural commodities also fell, prolonging a crisis that persisted for years. In response to the insolvency of their shareholders, the banks filed for bankruptcy protection one after another. With this, the Great Depression officially began.
Early Warnings on the Impending Crash
Charles Merrill
Charles Merrill, the founder of the business that would become Merrill Lynch, warned investors in 1928 to stop purchasing stock on credit. In the end, nothing came of this first warning. Unfortunately, the economy started to slow down significantly in early 1929, with the car industry being particularly hard hit. Overall, industrial output dropped by around seven percent in the first three months of the year. Simply said, all the money had been sucked up by stock market speculation, and the “real economy” was no longer receiving any funding as a result.
That stock prices nonetheless increased by more than 100% over the same time was a testament to the unrelenting blindness of financial operators. There were cash flow problems and a lack of readjustment to reality. After being steadily fed for months, the stock market finally declined in September and keep steadily declining since the beginning of October.
Since they weren’t seeing any further growth, the large players were cashing out in more alarming numbers between October 18 and 23. The only catch was that no one was willing to repurchase grossly overvalued stock unless they were certain of a massive profit in the very near future. The worst possible outcome was inevitable.
Black Thursday, the Day the Market Crashed (October 24)
The New York Stock Exchange street during the crash in 1929 Great Depression.
The next day, Thursday, October 24, 1929, was the first day of absolute panic: no one wanted to acquire any more shares, and all the main operators were in a selling position; the whole collapse of the prices, -22% at midday, a tragic record had just been made. The reports of widespread suicides among traders were first refuted. But the news cameras were there. An investor woman jumped off the 40th floor of the Equitable Building. Two men with a joint bank account held hands and jumped out of the 10th-floor window of a hotel. Meanwhile, as the telegraphers tapped the news of the collapse, many people had heart attacks.
Nonetheless, the widespread fear caused banks to repurchase a large number of shares (13 million sales against a usual average of 2.5 million), driving up the price of the stock. Even though the trade volume was over the roof, they were able to keep the loss to less than 2% at the end of the day. Prices didn’t change for the following two days. But this was just a temporary respite; “investors,” or should we say “Russian roulette players,” had used all of their credit to speculate, and now they had to sell to cut their losses before the market plunges any worse in the near future. On Monday, October 28th, prices dropped again, and this time, banks did not act to stabilize the market. The Dow Jones dropped by a record 13% in a single day and another 12% the next day.
“Who Else Had Any Money Left?”
12,894,650 shares were sold as a result of the falling prices in October 24. The daily average of the previous month was 4 million. Prices fell non-stop on Friday and Saturday. On Sunday, newspapers reported that the worst moments of the crash were over and things would improve the following week. However, shares began to fall again on Monday, and it became clear on Tuesday that the worst had not yet happened. On October 29, 1929 (“Black Tuesday”), about 16.5 million shares were sold. There were no shares left to sell, and in a single day, $14 million was gone from earnings on paper.
A young man who used to run an errand here ordered and bought one block of shares for 1 dollar, which was valued at $100,000 six days ago. Despite the dominant despair, those who were reassured were still absent. John D. Rockefeller, an oil multi-millionaire, proudly stated that he and his family bought trustworthy bills. On the other hand, the comedian Eddie Cantor, who had lost everything in the crash, could not stand what Rockefeller told, and said: “Sure, who else had any money left?“
Over the course of the next several weeks, ten times the size of the United States federal budget disappeared into thin air. The US industrial production index dropped to 48.7 in July 1932 from 100 in 1929; the drama of agriculture was spectacularly manifested by the collapse of the price of cotton (1929: 17.65 cents; 1933: 6 cents) and wheat (1920: 98 cents; 1933: 40 cents); the banking crisis peaked at the beginning of 1933, when all banks closed down after a general moratorium was declared.
What Repercussions Did the Great Depression Have on a Global Scale?
In the 1930s, the Great Depression or Great Recession hit the United States after the stock market crash of 1929. Because other economies were more reliant on American dominance, it eventually extended worldwide. The USSR was the only nation to avoid being swept up in the 1929 crisis because of its uncompromising communist doctrine.
The 1929 crisis quickly spread from the United States to Latin America (1929–1930), Austria (with the collapse of the Credit Anstalt on May 11, 1931), Germany (where American capital had been abruptly repatriated), Great Britain and the Commonwealth, and, finally, more slowly but more permanently, to France (1932).
All throughout the world, unemployment rates reached all-time highs. Because of his promises to restore Germany’s economy, Hitler was able to rise to power. Currency devaluations and a more protectionist policy than ever before were among the other measures used by leaders in an effort to reverse their nations’ downward trends. The Great Depression finally ended after a tumultuous decade when World War II broke out.
The Financial Crisis Turned Into Economic Crisis
Companies who wanted to invest in their own growth but couldn’t because of the economic downturn that followed the financial crisis were affected hard. Personal spending was falling drastically. Banks were cornered into cutting off firms’ access to credit, further weakening the companies and leading to more bankruptcies. It was a never-ending cycle: when people stopped getting their money back, the weakest banks went down, and then tiny savers attempted to protect their money by pulling it out of the remaining institutions. This caused a crisis in the financial industry.
Unemployment skyrocketed as a direct result of the 1929 crisis, which included the combined effects of the financial, economic, and banking sectors collapsing; this was the social crisis, which rounded out the dismal picture. However, these were not the only costs of this organized self-destruction; the crisis of 1929 was also responsible for the unanticipated strengthening of authoritarian regimes and the inward retreat of nations (protectionist policies).
As a result, international commerce plummeted by a shocking 66.7% between 1929 and 1933. Britain’s devaluation of the pound sterling in 1931 set off a domino effect throughout Europe. Joblessness skyrocketed. In order to combat unemployment and foster corporate recovery, President Roosevelt’s administration instituted the New Deal in March of 1933. This enshrined governmental involvement in the United States, which had previously been a bastion of liberalism.
France and Germany’s Repercussions After the Great Depression of 1929
France didn’t seem to be affected by the global crisis that began in October 1929 with the collapse of the New York stock market until the autumn of 1931. But when Britain finally gave up on the gold standard in September 1931 and allowed the pound sterling to float on the foreign currency markets, disaster ensued. French exporters were hurt severely by this action, which amounted to re-exporting the crisis to continental Europe, since the British pound lost 30 percent of its value in a matter of weeks. British and American devaluations exacerbated the gap between French and international prices as the government stubbornly refused to discount the franc, despite the advise of experts like Paul Reynaud.
Thus, although other nations were beginning to see signs of recovery by the end of 1933, the French crisis deepened in 1934 and 1935, and the French cabinet’s attempt at deflation ultimately failed. The Popular Front’s election success in May 1936 was meant to symbolize the French people’s unification behind the dirigiste movement that was gaining momentum across the world. Franc devaluation occurred in October 1936, but France did not emerge from its economic crisis until the outbreak of World War II in 1939.
Even worse were the repercussions in Germany, where millions of unemployed and impoverished middle-class people helped propel Hitler to power in January 1933 when the Weimar Republic collapsed. The National Socialist regime quickly alleviated the crisis by instituting a strict dirigiste and autarkic policy, as well as a massive public works (freeway) and armaments program, which drastically reduced unemployment. Fascist Italy also resorted to these tactics.
Confidence had been lost across the free world, economic barriers had been put up amid more mistrust than ever, and in order to forget their sorrow, people had once again turned to the tranquilizers of bellicose nationalism. However, the issue was never completely resolved, and as a result, its effects brought to the Second World War.
Franklin Delano Roosevelt, the man elected president of the United States in 1932, instituted the New Deal. Reorganizing the banking system, abandoning the gold standard, devaluing the dollar, regulating agricultural production, providing social and economic aid, and launching massive projects to combat unemployment were all part of the “new deal” policy that was implemented in response to the economic crisis.
The previously pursued capitalist agenda veered off in a new direction as governmental involvement trumped liberalism. A seemingly robust economic structure, but one with shaky underpinnings, ultimately led to the 1929 crash. The globe was rocked for a decade by one day that revealed the flaws of American liberal capitalism. Nazism was gaining strength as several other countries were seeking to develop at the same time. The world was soon be plunged into World War II.
Investment by Borrowing
When Wall Street’s crash of 1929 led to Black Thursday and the Great Depression, it was the worst economic downturn in the history of the industrialized world. The daily routine had begun as usual at this stock exchange building, which was the world’s largest money market on Wall Street in New York. But stockbrokers were frustrated. Over the past few weeks, both prices and the general mood fluctuated between optimism and fear.
Throughout the 1920s, Americans spent recklessly on securities and stocks. Credit was unlimited for a wide range of purchases. The frenzy of playing with stocks was largely supported by the debts given by intermediaries because everyone believed heartily that the constant rise in values would secure their investments.
However, as it was nearing the end of the decade, it became clear that a heavy price would be paid. By mid-October 1929, prices had suddenly dropped, so that thousands of stockholders, whose wealth was only on paper, had to sell all their investments.
The selling craze launched by panicked investors that would go down in history as “Black Thursday” shocked the foundations of the US stock market. On Thursday, October 24, at 11 o’clock, that was, exactly one hour after the opening time, the stock market was alarmed. Investors, who bought shares from various companies that are said to have risen, gave sales orders to their brokers; no matter how much, sometimes even at the expense of nothing…
The New York Times reported excitedly: “Fear struck… People threw their stocks away regardless of what they yielded.” On the morning of the bubble burst, investors who had a fortune on paper were wiped out. Everyone was fighting wildly on the stock market to sell what they owned. The stockbrokers were completely pale from horror. As fear and uncertainty increased, some of them were running around like crazy. Officers closed the visitor hall because of the chaos. This was unusual for the New York Stock Exchange, which usually looks calm.
Rescue Operation for the Collapsing Stock Market
At noon, the worst moments of panic seemed to be over, and a rescue operation was about to begin. A community of leading bankers and investors were willing to collect $20–30 million in a pool to purchase stocks and valuable papers. In a statement to the press, they mentioned how “there was some tension in sales,” and so they decided to fix the imbalance to support the market now.
An hour later, the Vice President of the New York Stock Exchange, Richard Whitney, appeared. By finding his way through the crowd confidently, he reached the center where US steel shares were sold. He ordered 10,000 shares at a price higher than he asked. Then he stopped by 20 different points and bought a large number of shares. In a few minutes, he spent about 20 million dollars of bankers’ money.
But the effect was short-lived. The stock tickers were still unable to reach the speed of trading. Even though the market had recovered somewhat in response to this hard attempt, the bad news continued to come: The stocks were continuing to be sold wildly. Immersed in sales orders and ticker tapes to their knees, stockbrokers were watching hopelessly how much money their customers were losing per minute. The stock market closed at three in the afternoon as usual, but even hours later, the lights were still on in the office windows as the dealers were trying to cope with the transactions. The restaurants around Wall Street remained open all night, and the hotels were full.
The clerk in New York hotels asks the guests: “Do you want a room to sleep or to jump? You had to stand in line to get a window to jump out of.”
Will Rogers, American humorist
Why Did the New York Stock Exchange Crash?
In the months preceding the collapse of Wall Street on Black Thursday, the US had already been in a frenzy of buying stocks. The offices of stock brokerage firms were filled with men and women who thirsted for profit every day all over the country. The system of purchasing shares by depositing an allowance allowed ordinary people to buy shares on credit. The purchaser was investing only a small amount, for example, 10 percent of the original value, and that was the allowance. The rest of the value was borrowed from the broker by holding the stocks as assurance. When the value of the shares rose, the owner sold them, paid the broker his money, and pocketed the profit.
The possibility of making such a quick profit had already mobilized those who were rich, and also those who wanted to take the lion’s share. For the ones who wanted to get the latest financial news, the hotels installed machines in their lobbies that recorded the stock market news; In fact, the French ocean liner Ile de France was on its way to Europe with fully equipped stock tickers from New York and a brokerage firm’s office. But on September 5, an economist named Roger W. Babson warned everyone. “Sooner or later, a crash is coming.“
Starting on this date, the trust started to decrease. As the stock values fell, the buyers who purchased shares by paying allowances saw the money in their hands vaporize but also began to be pressured by brokers who wanted more allowances to protect the money they lent their customers.
The number of bond sellers exceeded the number of buyers by too far, and thousands of people whose money ran out had to sell their investments. On Monday, October 21, a huge wave of sales swept Wall Street which paved the way for the next crash three days later.
Calvin Coolidge (left), who withdrew from being a candidate for the presidency, and Herbert Hoover (right), who took his place.
The two US presidents, Calvin Coolidge and Herbert Hoover, played a key role in the economic downturn of 1929 and the Great Depression that lasted until the 1930s. A third president, Franklin D. Roosevelt, brought a new order to America. In March 1929, Coolidge was president for six years. Seven months after he left his post, what brought about the collapse of Wall Street and Black Thursday was his inability to prevent stock market speculation and easy borrowing.
This economic collapse happened during Hoover’s presidency, which promised the American people “One chicken in every pot and a car in every garage.” Instead of realizing this promise, the president found himself facing the Great Depression; steel and automobile production had been hit hard, freight costs had declined dangerously, and the construction industry had almost stopped. Hoover’s inability to cope with the great difficulties led Franklin D. Roosevelt to win the 1933 presidential race. Roosevelt introduced the New Deal plan, which implemented an economic policy and a social security program that included industry and agricultural reforms.
The Effects of the New York Stock Exchange’s Collapse
One of the first countries outside the United States that the Wall Street Exchange crash and the Great Depression shook was the United Kingdom. There was no such economic boom in the United Kingdom as seen in the US in the 1920s, and there was already an unemployment problem going on. However, London was still one of the leading business centers and was the major overseas market for US stocks. By the end of 1929, the “unbalanced” economic situation had also turned into a mess there. In 1931, the number of unemployed reached 2.5 million and was still increasing. In August, growing hopelessness caused a split in the Labour Government. To save the political situation, Prime Minister Ramsay McDonald put together a national coalition government.
In the fight for their savings deposits. Crowds of people in front of the municipal savings bank in Berlin.
Abandoning the “gold standard,” which is the monetary system in which the basic currency unit is equal to a certain amount of gold, the United Kingdom went to the “sterling devaluation” the following month. This resulted in an international echo. The situation shook up the largest gold producer in the world, South Africa, which then had a solid economy.
Australia’s economy was built on overseas borrowing, and as a result of the economic crisis, this borrowing habit suddenly ceased. The economic crisis worsened with the fall of the world’s wool and wheat prices. However, the versatile farming economy stayed solid in New Zealand as usual. On the other hand, the economies of Indonesia and Brazil fell into a very inadequate situation as the tire and coffee markets almost reset.
In Europe, bank failures followed each other after the Great Depression. The crisis started in Austria, where the country’s largest bank, Creditanstalt, reported massive losses in the spring of 1931 and was almost unable to repay its creditors. American and British creditors rushed to the banks to get whatever they could take.
A few weeks later, Germany’s powerful Darmstadter Bank and the National Bank went bankrupt. Germany was among the countries worst affected by the stock market crash. It was time for Germany to pay the large debts borrowed from the US to restructure the country after World War I. Unemployment was growing. Some other banks went bankrupt too, and aircraft maker Willy Messerschmitt was dangerously on the verge of bankruptcy as well.
Large stock exchanges in Belgium and the Netherlands were desperate during the Great Depression. Stocks fell, and the balance of payments was badly affected. Economic insufficiency deeply shook the daily lives of the people in Spain, and laid the groundwork for a bloody civil war that would begin a few years later. In contrast, the economies of Switzerland, France, and Scandinavia were not much affected by Black Thursday compared to other countries.
The Brooklyn Daily Eagle newspaper with the headline “Wall St. In Panic As Stocks Crash”. This headline can be considered the beginning sign of the Great Depression that lasted from 1929 to 1941.
The Biggest Fraud at an American Bank
One consequence of the Great Depression and Black Thursday was the discovery of the largest bank fraud known in the world to date. For over a year, 15 employees of the Union Industrial Bank in Flint, Michigan, played on the New York Stock Exchange, from vice-presidents to veterans. But the money they used was the bank’s money, not theirs.
By the fall of 1929, Wall Street fraudsters had “borrowed” more than two million dollars from customers’ bank accounts. The tellers were content with pocketing the cash deposited in the bank and buying stock with it. When the bill rose, part of the profit was used to replace the stolen money and the interest, if there was any. Then the rest was invested in Wall Street again. When a customer wanted to withdraw their money, it was paid from someone else’s account. They were mixing the accounts, and playing with the books, and the bank inspectors were deceived.
After the stock market crash of 1929, it turned out that 1.5 million dollars were lost from the bank’s money solely in September. Criminals were caught, accused of fraud, and convicted. They received sentences of a few months to ten years.
TIMELINE OF THE 1929 GREAT DEPRESSION
Thursday, October 24, 1929: Black Thursday on Wall Street
In a breakdown at the New York Stock Exchange, 13 million shares were sold in only a few hours. The price decline prompted many speculators to rush to unload their holdings. There was a 30% discount in prices. On the 29th, a confirmation of the “crash,” was made. What started on “Black Thursday” would become the worst economic disaster in human history. This led to the complete collapse of the United States. And the political and economic consequences felt throughout the globe.
On May 11, 1931, the Creditanstalt filed for bankruptcy
In the wake of the Wall Street collapse, which precipitated a severe economic downturn in the United States, Austria’s biggest bank was forced to file for bankruptcy. The Creditanstalt, which had been operating since 1855, declared bankruptcy, leading to a complete collapse of the Austrian stock market. Germany eventually felt the effects of the global economic downturn and entered a state of catastrophe.
The Danat Bank failed on July 13, 1931
Just like its Austrian counterpart, the Danat Bank or Darmstädter Bank was forced to shut down. The devastating effects of the Wall Street collapse and the ensuing economic crisis were too much for the German bank to bear. Attempts by American banks to extricate themselves from the crisis by reclaiming all of their overseas money ultimately led to the failure of several financial organizations.
In 1931, September 21st, the British pound was devalued
After the stock market collapsed in October 1929, the United Kingdom’s economy was in disarray, and the government was compelled to devalue the pound sterling by over 40%. In addition, it did away with the gold standard, which had been in place since the 19th century and had the monetary unit be equal to a predetermined weight of gold. After that, dozens of other currencies in the system, including the French franc, followed the same road. France had been given a reprieve up to that point, but its refusal to discount the franc had kept the crisis going strong in the country.
In a speech on July 2, 1932, Roosevelt announced the “New Deal”
The term “New Deal” was first used in public by then-New York Governor and future U.S. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. This idea, developed from the work of British economist John Keynes, aimed to implement social and economic reforms in response to the Great Depression.
Ottawa, Canada, July 20, 1932: The Opening of the Imperial Economic Conference
In an effort to save its economy, the United Kingdom decided to enter into treaties with several Commonwealth territories. The conference’s stated goal was to institute protectionist measures. More than a month after discussions began, mutually beneficial reciprocal tariffs were established.
The New Deal was officially launched by President Roosevelt on March 4, 1933
The American people chose Franklin Delano Roosevelt as their leader in November of 1932. As soon as he took office in March 1933, he began implementing the New Deal.
On March 5, 1933, Roosevelt ordered the closing of U.S. banks
U.S. banks were closed for four days after the new president issued the order the day after his inauguration. He believed this would calm people down after a string of bankruptcies. As of March 9th, business would resume if debts were settled.
Roosevelt imposed a gold ban on March 6, 1933
In an effort to end the economic downturn that had dogged the nation since 1929, the United States instituted a ban on the export of gold. It was the following month before the gold standard was finally scrapped.
Official beginning of the Civilian Conservation Corps on March 31, 1933
The Civilian Conservation Corps was one of the main government initiatives begun by the United States as part of the New Deal, allowing the government to employ two million unemployment people in a nationwide reforestation program.
Agricultural New Deal Programs, May 12, 1933
Roosevelt’s Agriculture Adjustment Act (AAA) was a cornerstone of his economic revival plan. The stock market fall of 1929 exacerbated the agricultural situation. The Act’s goal was to halt the catastrophic overproduction of agricultural goods by increasing their prices.
Farmers get monetary compensation from the state in return for shrinking their farmland. The AAA was also making efforts to make debt repayment easier. While most Americans were going hungry, surpluses were destroyed along with many crops.
The Tennessee Valley Authority was established on May 18th, 1933
As part of FDR’s New Deal, the government agency known as the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) was established. They hoped to accomplish their goal of lowering the unemployment rate by way of intensive labor. At that time, almost 12 million people in the United States were without work.
thout work.
Thus, the government’s efforts to develop the Tennessee River basin secured economic growth in the area and helped to reduce the region’s historically high unemployment rates. The dams prevented the widespread flooding and provided enough power to supply several million homes.
A National Industrial Recovery Act was approved on June 16, 1933
The NIRA was passed as part of President Roosevelt’s New Deal initiative to alleviate the country’s economic crisis. Its goal was to facilitate government engagement in industry competition to enhance competitive behavior.
The goal here was to have everyone on the same page with things like pricing, hours, and salaries. This was why Congress established the National Recovery Administration. Businesses were not required to sign on, but those who did proudly displayed their adherence to NRA standards by using a logo with a blue eagle and the organization’s letters.
As of January 30, 1934, the dollar was devalued
When the Great Depression hit, it caused a 41% devaluation of the dollar.
The Social Security Act was signed into law on August 14, 1935
The New Deal program paved the way for the passage of the Social Security Act, which helped the neediest among people.
France’s franc currency was devalued on October 1, 1936
Shortly after the Popular Front’s electoral victory, France devalued the franc to help the country weather the Great Depression. In response to the economic catastrophe that followed the 1929 stock market collapse, the nation moved much too slowly. It was difficult for the government to keep the Poincaré franc’s value stable when the pound and the dollar were devalued many years ago.
As a result, there was a major disparity between the value of the French currency and that of other countries’ markets. France, which had been immune to the crisis thus far because of its financial independence, was hit hard. In a time when other countries’ economies were starting to stabilize, this delayed response did the country no favors.
The Jarrow March, October 5, 1936
During the Great Depression, citizens of one of the worst-affected communities began a large hunger march. Many individuals looking for work headed south toward London, where a large group of them had already congregated. There had been a number of marches since the crisis of the Great Depression began, but the one in Jarrow will always be the most significant.
References
Brendon, Piers. The Dark Valley: A Panorama of the 1930s (2000).