Depression of the 1930s
Date Submitted: 10/19/2001 02:29:31
Category: / Law & Government / Government & Politics
Length: 2 pages (511 words)
Category: / Law & Government / Government & Politics
Length: 2 pages (511 words)
Depression of the 1930s
The economic depression that beset the United States and other
countries in the 1930s was unique in its magnitude and its
consequences. At the depth of the depression, in 1933, one
American worker in every four was out of a job. In other
countries unemployment ranged between 15 percent and 25 percent
of the labor force. The great industrial slump continued
throughout the 1930s, shaking the foundations of Western
capitalism and the society based
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gross national product (GNP), which for years
had grown at an average annual rate of 3.5%, declined at a rate
of over 10% annually, on average, from 1929 to 1932.
Agricultural distress was intense: farm prices fell by 53% from
1929 to 1932.
President Hoover opposed government intervention to ease the
mounting economic distress. His one major action, creation
(1932) of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation to lend money
to ailing corporations, was seen as inadequate. Hoover lost the
1932 election to Franklin D. ROOSEVELT.
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