1 / 31

Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal

26. Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal. The Great Depression. 1920s Optimism about good economy 1929 – “Black Thursday” Stock market collapsed, factories closed, unemployment went up, optimism shattered Result in 25% unemployment Wealth of 1920s not distributed boardly enough

francisc
Download Presentation

Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 26 Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal

  2. The Great Depression • 1920s Optimism about good economy • 1929 – “Black Thursday” Stock market collapsed, factories closed, unemployment went up, optimism shattered • Result in 25% unemployment • Wealth of 1920s not distributed boardly enough • Profits used for dividends, and stock speculation

  3. The Great Crash • Souring stock prices attract investment • Corporate investor’s obsess with speculation on stock market • Money not used for wage increases • Productivity increased 43%, wages only by 11% • Demand for consumer goods declines • Businesses laid off workers • 1929: Stock market crashed

  4. Unemployment, 1929–1942

  5. Effects of the Depression • Hardship affected all classes – unemployment and poverty undermined self-worth and caused despair • The middle class lost belief in ever-increasing prosperity – hit them hard • Thousands of young homeless, jobless • 25% unemployed

  6. Fighting the Depression • Republican party struggles to overcome depression • Depression gives Democrats opportunity to regain power

  7. Hoover and Voluntarism • Hoover initially sought solution through voluntary action, private charity • Aided farmers with Farm Board to buy surpluses and bankers with loans through Reconstruction Finance Corporation • Hoover Dam • White House business conference • Hoover too cautious and too late with programs

  8. Hoover and Voluntarism • Bonus Army and General MacArthur • Resisted Democratic efforts to give direct aid to the unemployed • Perceived as indifferent to human suffering • Hoover blamed for the Depression

  9. Bank Failures, 1929–1933

  10. The Emergence of Roosevelt • Franklin Roosevelt • Born to wealth and privilege • 1921: Crippled by polio – prepared him to be sensitive to downtrodden • 1928: Elected governor of New York • Talented and persuasive politician • 1932: Defeated Hoover with farmer- worker-immigrant-Catholic coalition • Roosevelt healed division in Democratic party • People remembered Bonus Army

  11. The Hundred Days • FDR inaugural inspired with the term “nothing to fear but fear itself” • Called special session of Congress • Banking system saved from collapse – closed all banks - strong banks saved, weak eliminated – gave money to strong banks and FDIC • Fifteen major laws provided relief • Tennessee Valley Authority was the most ambitious one – jobs, electricity and modernization to rural South • New Deal aimed to reform and restore, not nationalize, the economy

  12. The Tennessee Valley Authority

  13. Roosevelt and Recovery • National Recovery Administration • National economic planning • Industries formulated guidelines and codes to eliminate cutthroat competition, ensure labor peace • Codes favored big business, • NRA ruled unconstitutional because it favored large corporations – not small ones

  14. Roosevelt and Recovery • Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1933 • Farmers paid to take land out of cultivation – farmers must cut production • Prices increased, mainly because of government payments, but Dust Bowl helped by cutting supply • Sharecroppers, tenant farmers dispossessed • Found unconstitutional in 1936 – mainly helped large farms not small ones

  15. Roosevelt and Relief • 1933: Harry Hopkins placed in charge of Relief programs to give aid to unemployed – seen as “color blind” • 1933: Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) provided employment to young people • 1935: Works Progress Administration (WPA) placed unemployed on federal payroll • Programs never sufficiently funded

  16. Roosevelt and Reform • 1933–1934: Focus on immediate problems • 1935: Shift to permanent economic reform,

  17. Challenges to FDR • Critics of FDR demanded radical reforms for small guy • Father Charles Coughlin advocated nationalizing banks, anti-Semitism • Francis Townsend called for $200 per month pensions to all those over 60 if they spent it within the month • Huey Long and the Share the Wealth Clubs called for redistribution of wealth by seizing private fortunes – popular with those not benefiting from New Deal

  18. Social Security • 1935: Social Security Act passed – most significant reform of New Deal • Criticisms: • Too few people would collect pensions • Unemployment package inadequate • Too conservative • Passed because of duty to help unemployed, aged, and handicapped

  19. Labor Legislation • 1935: Wagner Act • Allowed unions to organize and collectively bargain – New Deal good for Unions • Outlawed unfair labor practices • 1938: Fair Labor Standard Act • Maximum hour – Minimum wage • Rural Electrification Administration brought electricity to 90% of farmers who did not have it in 1930

  20. Impact of the New Deal • Had a broad influence on the quality of life in the U.S. in the 1930s • Helped labor unions most • Helped women, minorities least • Harry Hopkins helped minorities

  21. Rise of Organized Labor • 1932: National Recovery Act spurred union organizers • Congress of Industrial Organization (CIO) formed by John L. Lewis • CIO unionized steel, auto industries • 1940: CIO membership hit 5 million, 28% of labor force unionized • Promoted all workers – not just skilled

  22. The New Deal Record on Help to Minorities • Crop reduction program allowed whites to fire or evict blacks, Hispanics • Public works programs helped by providing employment • New Deal figures convinced minorities that the government was on their side • 1934: Indian Reorganization Act gave American Indians greater control

  23. Women at Work • Position of women deteriorated in the ‘30s • Jobs lost at a faster rate than men • Hardly any New Deal programs help • Progress in government • Frances Perkins, Secretary of Labor, the first woman cabinet member • Women appointed to several other posts • Eleanor Roosevelt a model for activism

  24. End of the New Deal • 1936: New Deal peaked with Roosevelt’s reelection and brought about powerful political coalition • Blacks shifted from Republican to Democrat (FDR) because FDR hired Blacks in cabinet and Harry Hopkins • Congress resisted programs after 1936 • New Deal lasted 5 years

  25. The Election of 1936 • FDR’s campaign • Attacked the rich • Promised further reforms • High point of New Deal – downhill after that • Democrats won majorities in both houses of Congress • FDR coalition: South, cities, labor, ethnic groups, African Americans, poor

  26. The Supreme Court Fight • Supreme Court blocked several of FDR’s first-term programs • 1937: FDR sought right to “pack” Court and remove threat to New Deal • Congressional protest forced retreat – even Democrats against “packing” the Court • FDR’s opponents emboldened

  27. The New Deal in Decline • 1936: Cutbacks for relief agencies • 1937: Severe slump hit economy • Roosevelt blamed • Programs require massive spending that could not be sustained • Some feel FDR was too conservative and should have spent more • 1938: Republican party revived

  28. The New Deal and American Life • Overall New Deal – Slow and halting • New Deal’s limitations: • Depression not ended • Economic system not fundamentally altered • Little done for those without political clout • Achievements: • Wagner Act helped labor • Political realignment of the 1930s • Most important was Social Security Act

More Related