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Postwar Economics and Politics

Postwar Economics and Politics. Chapter 24 Section 1. America After World War I. Key ? – What did Warren G. Harding offer Americans as president? Postwar economy struggled – many people out of work. Americans blamed Europe, immigrants, and Wilson.

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Postwar Economics and Politics

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  1. Postwar Economics and Politics Chapter 24 Section 1

  2. America After World War I • Key ? – What did Warren G. Harding offer Americans as president? • Postwar economy struggled – many people out of work. • Americans blamed Europe, immigrants, and Wilson. • Fordney-McCumber Tariff – 1922 – bill passed which set the highest tariff on foreign goods in U.S. history. • Imported goods very expensive – enabled U.S. to keep their prices high.

  3. Postwar Politics • 1920 – campaign – Harding –”return to normalcy”. (Republican) • Supported lower taxes and less government regulation over business. • Rejected the League of Nations. • The 1st election that women could vote. • Chose a pro-business cabinet to help him lower taxes and balance the budget.

  4. Mixed Industrial Success • Key ? – What economic developments affected life in the 1920s? • Economy grew rapidly. • 1913 – U.S. established income tax. • 1917 tax rate raised to 67%; 1924 reduced to 46%; reduced to 25% in 1925.

  5. The Transportation Industry • Cheap fuel powered the new prosperity; electric vacuums, washers,toasters, fans. • Created new jobs. • Henry Ford – Model T – wanted to make a car that everyone could afford. • Assembly line – helped lower costs and increase productivity. • Birth of the airline industry; uses for old warplanes; crop dusting, flight instructors etc.

  6. Economic Problems • New manufacturing processes turned out products faster and cheaper. • As product demand rose, consumers relied on credit. • Installment buying allowed consumers to pay for cars and purchases in small monthly payments. • Companies protected by tariffs faced little competition; big companies regained monopoly control over many markets – prices rose.

  7. Con’t • Machinery allowed farmers to produce more food than needed; drove food prices down. • Government policies favored corporate interests over social interests. • Income gap between rich and poor – highest ever – 50%. • Allowing investors to buy stocks on credit caused stock prices to rise rapidly.

  8. Coolidge Takes Over • Key ? What challenges did Calvin Coolidge face as president? • Harding’s cabinet unqualified and corrupt. • Teapot Dome – Sec. of Interior Albert Fall. • Oil executives bribed Fall for access to oil-rich government land. • Fall first cabinet member to be imprisoned. • Harding died Aug. 2, 1923 – Coolidge became president.

  9. Laissez-Faire Economics • Coolidge cleaned up scandals and promised further strengthen pro-business policies. • Laissez-Faire economics – if business is left unregulated by the government it would benefit the nation. • Believed that government should not address social and economic problems. • Congress passed a bill to help farmers – Coolidge vetoed it.

  10. Prosperity • Americans had more leisure time. • Labor-saving appliances and shorter working hours, higher wages. • By the end of the 20s Americans spending money on movies, spent time listening to radio and attending sporting events; 100 percent jump in a decade. • All Americans did not prosper -

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