U.S. History

The longest and most severe economic downturn ever experienced by the industrialized Western world, the Great Depression began in 1929 and lasted until about 1939. It caused drastic declines in output, severe unemployment, and acute deflation in almost every country of the world. For Americans, the 1930s conjures images of breadlines, shuttered factories, rural poverty, and homeless families seeking refuge in shelters cobbled together from salvaged wood, cardboard, and tin. Bank panics destroyed faith in the economic system, and joblessness limited faith in the future. In 1934 the worst drought in modern American history struck the Great Plains. Windstorms stripped topsoil and turned the whole area into a vast Dust Bow, destroying crops and livestock and displacing some 2.5 million people. Aggressively combatted by the New Deal policies of the administration of Pres. Franklin D. Roosevelt, the Great Depression spawned fundamental changes in economic institutions, macroeconomic policy, and economic theory. Its social and cultural effects were equally staggering. 

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Causes of the Great Depression

Four factors of varying importance contributed to the Great Depression: (1) The stock market crash of 1929 shook confidence in the U.S. economy, leading to dramatic reductions in spending and investment. (2) Banking panics in the early 1930s resulted in the failure of many banks, reducing the amount of money available for loans. (3) The gold standard required foreign central banks to increase interest rates to counter trade imbalances with the United States, which depressed spending and investment in those countries. (4) The Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act (1930) imposed high tariffs on many agricultural and industrial goods, prompting retaliatory measures that led to reduced output and caused international trade to contract. 

Learn about the economic devastation of the Great Depression in three facts.

Stock market crash of 1929

The Great Crash was a sudden, steep decline in U.S. stock prices in late October 1929. Over the course of four business days—Black Thursday (October 24) through Black Tuesday (October 29)—the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped from 305.85 points to 230.07 points, a 25 percent decrease in stock prices.

Gold standard

Under the gold standard monetary system, the standard unit of currency is kept at the value of a fixed quantity of gold and is freely convertible at home or abroad into a fixed amount of gold. The gold standard created, in effect, a single world money called by different names in different countries.

Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act

The Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act (1930) raised already high import duties on a range of agricultural and industrial goods by some 20 percent, making them unaffordable for all but the wealthy. It dramatically decreased the amount of exported goods, contributing to bank failures, especially in agricultural regions.

Dow Jones Average

The Dow Jones average is stock price average computed by Dow Jones & Company, Inc. The averages are among the most commonly used indicators of general trends in the prices of stocks and bonds in the United States.

Bull market

A bull is an investor who expects prices to rise and purchases a security or commodity in hopes of reselling it later for a profit. A bull market is one in which stock prices are generally expected to rise.

Bear market

A bear is an investor who expects prices to decline and sells a borrowed security or commodity in the hope of buying it back later at a lower price, a speculative transaction called selling short. A bear market is a declining stock market.
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What contributed to the financial crisis, and who was involved? Test your economic knowledge with this quiz.

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Stock market crash and beyond

View archival footage of the impoverished American population after the stock market crash of 1929.

Hoover’s attempts to effect economic recovery

Only months after Herbert Hoover took office as the 31st U.S. president, the stock market crashed. Unlike earlier administrations, which had done little to cope with panics except reduce government spending, he took prompt action. Hoover urged businesses not to cut employments, wages, or production. He signed the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act and legislation that generously funded public works. He also backed creation of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation. But as the economy failed to respond to Hoover’s initiatives and the Depression worsened, Americans began blaming Hoover for the calamity. The homeless began calling their shantytowns “Hoovervilles.”

Herbert Hoover

Herbert Hoover’s reputation as a humanitarian—earned as the head of the American Relief Administration during and after World War I—virtually disappeared when, as president, he was unable to alleviate widespread joblessness, homelessness, and hunger in the U.S. during the early years of the Great Depression.

U.S. presidential election of 1928

In the 1928 U.S. presidential election, Republican Herbert Hoover defeated Democrat Al Smith in the electoral college 444–87.

Bonus Army

In spring 1932, some 10,000 to 25,000 World War I veterans, along with their wives and children converged on Washington, D.C., to demand immediate bonus payment for wartime services to alleviate the economic hardship of the Depression. They were known as the Bonus Army.

Reconstruction Finance Corporation

Established by Congress on January 22, 1932, the Reconstruction Finance Corporation was created to provide financial aid to railroads, financial institutions, and business corporations. With the passage of the Emergency Relief Act in July 1932, its scope was broadened to include aid to agriculture and financing for state and local public works.
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Video: Spanish Civil War

Examine the roles of communism and fascism in the Spanish Civil War.

Global concerns

Although it originated in the United States, the Great Depression caused drastic declines in output, severe unemployment, and acute deflation in almost every country of the world. Europe was also menaced by the expansionist desires of German leader Adolf Hitler and the tumult of the Spanish Civil War. In Asia the decade of the 1930s is linked to the spread of Japanese imperialism. The Soviet Union, the most uncompromising opponent of Nazi Germany, sought alliances with Britain, France, and the United States and promoted a “popular front”  partnership of liberals and socialists to halt the spread of fascism.

Adolf Hitler

The Great Depression created the perfect environment—political instability and an economically devastated and vulnerable populace—for the Nazi seizure of power and for the fascist empire building of Adolf Hitler, who became chancellor of Germany in 1933.

Spanish Civil War

The Soviet Union was the only country besides Mexico to aid in any serious way the Spanish Republicans against the armies of Francisco Franco, which were supported by Hitler and Italian Fascist leader Benito Mussolini during the Spanish Civil War (1936–39).

Hirohito

Hirohito was the emperor of Japan during the country’s militaristic period from the early 1930s to 1945, the end of World War II. Historians have debated the role he played in planning Japan’s expansionist policies.
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