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Causes of the Great Depression

By John Washington. Causes of the Great Depression. List of causes. Although the stock market crash was the ultimate cause, many other long and short term causes greatly affected and worsened the Great D epression Extreme Unequal distribution of wealth High tariffs and war debts

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Causes of the Great Depression

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  1. By John Washington Causes of the Great Depression

  2. List of causes • Although the stock market crash was the ultimate cause, many other long and short term causes greatly affected and worsened the Great Depression • Extreme Unequal distribution of wealth • High tariffs and war debts • Overproduction in industry and agriculture • Farm crisis • Buying on credit

  3. Unequal Distribution of Wealth • 1% of the richest owned 40% of the wealth of the U.S. • Part of this was due to Warren G. Harding reducing taxes and regulations which allowed monopolies to form • As you can see, from about 1924 to the early 1930’s, the top 1% started controlling more and more

  4. High tariffs • After World War 1, European countries owed the United States billions of dollars • In 1922, the U.S. passed the Fordney-Mc Cumber Act which instituted high tariffs • European nations retaliated with high tariffs and world trade declined

  5. Overproduction • After World War 1 factories and farms were producing more than was needed • Americans were buying items on credit which got them into debt. The bank took the item if one payment was missed • Debt meant less spending • Workers made too little to buy their own output

  6. Continued • It was hard to sell overpriced food and items overseas due to high tariffs • Prices dropped dramatically due to overproduction • Farmers and businesses could not repay their debts which resulted in some bank failures and even more unequal distribution of wealth

  7. Farm Crisis • Due to price drops, farmers made so little money • In the early 1930’s, the depression worsened greatly because of the dust bowl, which was caused by severe droughts and producing the same crop over and over • This resulted in a huge decrease of food from the Midwest, previously called the bread basket because of its huge food production

  8. Stock Market • Calvin Coolidge’s years marked 5 years of artificial rise in the stock market • The value was overpriced due to speculation • Fraud and illegal activity ran rampant due to lack of regulation and rules • The Stock Market was unregulated so some investors were able to manipulate huge amounts of money to their advantage

  9. Continued • On September 3rd, 1929, prices reached an all time high • Market wobbled for several weeks • On Thursday, October 24, known as Black Thursday, many major investors tried to sell their stock, but were unable to find enough buyers due to the high prices • Prices dropped which encouraged more attempted selling

  10. Continued • Nearly 13 million shares changed hands, more than 3 times as many as a typical heavy day, and stock values fell more than 8 billion dollars • The next day, buying and selling was still high and President Hoover and newspapers made statements about the stability of the market

  11. The Crash • However, Monday, October 28, was another horrible day • Nine million shares changed hands • It now became obvious that the stock market had crashed • Over the next few weeks, stock investors lost over 30 billion dollars • Reports of suicides over lost fortunes were rampant

  12. Effect of the Crash • Banks would loan money to buy stocks with Banks with only a 10% down payment • After the crash, many investors and non investors tried to draw out their savings at the same time • Savings accounts were uninsured and did not have the money in cash for the people withdrawing their savings

  13. Continued • Thousands of U.S. banks declared bankruptcy and more than 9 million savings accounts were wiped out, dragging the United States into the Great Depression • The crash wiped out many middle class Americans • Unequal distribution of wealth and the middle class getting a severe setback led to poverty for an extremely high percentage of Americans

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