Weak governmental intervention and stubborn responses by overzealous investors led to the stock market crash in October of 1929. Non-existent money artificially inflated the prices of stocks traded on the market and caused firms to produce more than they could sell. When reality hit, it was too late to prevent the market from crashing.
President Hoover reacted by stimulating construction and public works projects. Urging firms to keep wages steady and relatively high, he cut taxes and increased allocations for public spending. Hoover was initially praised for his approach and for his awareness of ancillary factors causing the recession including his blaming rampant stock speculation. His reputation fell when he passed the Smoot-Hawley Tariff. Moreover, his pro-development policies did not help circulate the surplus goods. Oversupply and under-demand were still core problems that needed to be addressed. Worker wages remained too low to stimulate consumer spending. In the absence of unemployment insurance or welfare assistance programs, many Americans went hungry even in the midst of surplus goods.
Hoover's successor, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, initiated big-government policies to make up for Hoover's more lax response to the crisis. When he took office in 1933 Roosevelt began delivering regular radio addresses to the public to stimulate confidence and hope. His set of big-government responses was collectively known as the New Deal. New Deal programs stimulated key industries. Not all of Roosevelt's New Deal programs succeeded and many failed. However, his interventionist politics changed the course of American History by redefining the role of the government in economic affairs, in the market, and in global policy.
Two of the predominant failures of the New Deal include the Agriculture Adjustment Administration (AAA) and the National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA). Both were later declared unconstitutional, and they failed to achieve their stated objectives. The AAA was intended to raise the price of agricultural goods to help farmers...
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