In the 1930's, The United States suffered from The Great Depression. It was probably the worst depression The United States has ever known, but some say that the economy today is as worse as it was back then. Many people lost their jobs, homes, and many other personal possessions due to the stock market crash and the banks running out of money. One out of every four workers had no job and many families could not afford food to feed themselves and their children. As well-known as The Great Depression was, The New Deal, a system of reform programs created to solve the many problems made by The Great Depression, is not as well-known as it should be. It took place from 1933-1939 and its goal was for relief, recovery, and reform. The New Deal consisted of helping the victims of the depression, guaranteed minimum living standards, federal action to stimulate industrial recovery, and to make sure another economic crisis would never happen again. Many different agencies were made in 1933 under The National Recovery Act which regulated wages, working conditions, credit terms, and prices. The National Industry Recovery Act, another New Deal built libraries, schools, roads, and aircraft carriers for the navy. It also spent six billion dollars which made building contractors hire 650,000 workers. In all, The National Industry Recovery Act spent eleven billion dollars to give eight million people jobs. The next act was called The Fair Labor Standards Act in 1938 and it controlled the minimum wage and maximum-hours policy. But, it only made the economy worse and some people started to turn against The New Deal.
Some people may argue that The New Deal was a waste of money and proved to be ineffective in helping The Great Depression. Others argue that without The New Deal, the economy would have never been able to bounce back, at least not at the time that it did. There is proof that Roosevelt's New Deal actually made the economy worse. It tripled taxes and made it more expensive for people to be hired for jobs. Since many people were in search for jobs and the employers did not have enough money to hire them, this left millions of people without employment. President Roosevelt ordered many banks to be split up and it was extremely difficult to produce food and for people to buy it because the prices were at an extreme. If the purpose of The New Deal was to lower prices and help create jobs for workers, then why do so many people argue that it just made things worse? In today's society, the economy is much like The Great Depression. It seems as though the government is not spending any money to make the situation any better. Since society today is much the same as in the 1930's, if a "new deal" was made by President Obama would it help or hurt the economy? The government is spending loads of money on unnecessary things, like the war in Iraq when they could be spending it on relief programs to help the economy. But if they spent money to help the economy, it is difficult to tell if there would be a repeat of effects like The New Deal had. Without The New Deal ever being made, The Great Depression would have ended anyways due to World War II. WWII is the most probable cause of the end of The Great Depression. American factories produced war goods and sold them to many different nations, and many Americans joined the military, therefore ending The Great Depression. After WWII was over, many nations perished and The United States has stayed on top ever since. 617
Friday, March 5, 2010
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I didnt know about a lot of the things that you talked about in your blog. I enjoyed reading it and it was really interesting! Nice job!
ReplyDeleteKelsie Schiffer
Your right, I have never heard of "The New Deal" since now. I thought your article was very interesting and I liked it alot. I now know what "The New Deal" is and I would like to learn more about it. Good Job!
ReplyDeleteMcKenna Hutcheson
I think it's strange that there is no clear answer about what pulled us out of the Depression: WWII or the New Deal. But I think in our current economic situation, war is not helping but actually hurting our economy.
ReplyDelete-Hallie Rohr
Thank you guys! It is really weird that we don't know how we got out of the depression. I think that there are many causes that lead up to it, WWII and The New Deal most likely caused it.
ReplyDeleteAlly Huskey
I really liked the way you compared it to our current day economic crisis. Also, after reading this i think that The Great Depression would have ended at the same time weather or not The Great Planned happened. WWI just seems like the most probable cause of the end of The Great Depression, like you said.
ReplyDeleteReally good job!
Ally I like the way you compare the depression to the economic crisis we are having right now. I really enjoyed reading it.
ReplyDeleteIt is commonly known by all that WWII ended the Depression. What is debatable is the impact of the New Deal and whether it pointed things in the right direction. Remember too that many aspects of the New Deal were thrown out by the Supreme Court, including the National Recovery Administration. As for today, the principles of the New Deal have proven effective, but are often difficult to implement and require deficit spending. The war has certainly limited our ability to do that, though to call it unnecessary is a judgment not a fact.
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