Western Civilization The Great Depression Term Paper

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" Getting Rich Quickly

The crash on Wall Street can be attributed to too much speculation in stocks. This was a "symptom of the feverish 'get rich quick' mentality that had accompanied almost a decade of growth following post-war reconversion.

The over-valued commodity markets suddenly lost confidence, and prices tumbled, setting in motion a sequence of disasters that became an economic catastrophe for the richest nation in the world (Unknown)."

Under-Consumption

Another cause of the Great Depression was under-consumption. It was not noticed that the "distribution of national income was not only inequitable but was failing to generate sufficient demand at the broadest level of society to meet the rising levels of supply made possibly by new production technologies, thus under-consumption was both a cause and a symptom of the Great Depression (Unknown)."

Irony

An unusual chain of events may have triggered the Great Depression. "American farmers and workers were producing too much. They were too inventive in their modes of production and the enormous power of their economy crushed those of other states. With cruel irony, a surfeit of wealth and power brought disabling poverty (Unknown)."

Effects on Thousands

During the Great Depression, a number of banks failed, resulting in thousands of people losing their entire life savings. In 1930, the failure of Bank of the United States caused many "thousands of men, women and children, mostly immigrants and the working poor, to line up at the bank's doors through the night in a vain hope of getting their money back (Byrd)."

The failure of banks was not the only negative impact of the Great Depression. Businesses "laid off workers or closed their doors altogether, mortgages were foreclosed, and people who, a few years earlier had been prosperous found themselves out of work, homeless, and hungry (Byrd)."

Turning to the Government

During the period between "March 1930 and March 1931, unemployment doubled from four to eight million, grossly overburdening local and state relief agencies. The private sector simply could not handle the immensity of the human tragedy, and forcing Americans to turn to Washington for help. The federal government was the people's last...

...

economy. Between 1929 and 1933 in the United States, real output per adult fell more than 30%, and total factor productivity (TFP) - changes in output not accounted for by changes in measured inputs - fell about 18%. This TFP decrease is much larger than just extrapolating the TFP decrease that typically has occurred during postwar U.S. recessions (Ohanian)."
Figures of the Depression

The facts and figures of what occurred during this era are startling. During the Great Depression "United States Steel and General Motors had dropped to 8% of their pre-Crash prices, stocks listed on the Big Board were worth 11% of their 1929 value, investors lost 74 billion dollars, more than 5,000 American banks failed and 86,000 businesses closed their doors. The country's Gross National Product fell from 104 billion dollars to 41 billion, in 1932, 273,000 families were evicted from their homes, and the average weekly wage of those who had jobs was $16.21 (Byrd)."

Conclusion

While it is not clearly understood what caused the Great Depression, a number of theories provide insight into what may have triggered the collapse of America's economy. It is important to understand these theories, and learn from them, in order to protect not only the United State's economy in the future, but the world's as well.

Works Cited

Byrd, Robert C. "The Senate - 1789-1989: Chapter 24A the Great Depression: 1929-1939"

U.S. History. (1990): 01 September.

McGrattan, Ellen R. "Accounting for the Great Depression." Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Quarterly Review" (2003): 22 March.

Ohanian, Lee E. "Why did productivity fall so much during the Great Depression?" Federal

Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Quarterly Review" (2002): 22 March.

Unknown. "The Great Depression: Causes." The Hutchinson Encyclopedia. (2003):

22 September.

Sources Used in Documents:

Works Cited

Byrd, Robert C. "The Senate - 1789-1989: Chapter 24A the Great Depression: 1929-1939"

U.S. History. (1990): 01 September.

McGrattan, Ellen R. "Accounting for the Great Depression." Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Quarterly Review" (2003): 22 March.

Ohanian, Lee E. "Why did productivity fall so much during the Great Depression?" Federal


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