What Caused the Great Depression?
What Caused the Great Depression?
The Great Depression was a global phenomenon that significantly changed the course of
history. In America, people lost their life savings when banks collapsed. The severe
decline in US capital triggered economic troubles overseas. The resulting German
poverty ultimately contributed to the rise of Nazism and World War II! What sparked the
world-changing Great Depression?
Historians cite many contributing factors. Most agree that the downturn began with the
US stock market crash of 1929. Throughout the 1920s, rapid economic growth and
industrialization had been accompanied by easy lending. There was a vast amount of
unsecured consumer debt. But in October of 1929, the prosperity and optimistic
speculation of the “roaring twenties” suddenly collapsed. A Black Thursday on Wall
Street was followed by a Black Tuesday, and investors quickly lost $40 billion! Many
had invested their life savings and mortgaged their homes.
President Herbert Hoover failed to realize that his nation’s economy could collapse; he
believed he was witnessing a mere recession and said the market would naturally recover
within a couple of months. He refused to establish a federal unemployment program, and
he dismissed public construction projects as “progressive ideas” that wouldn’t improve
the economy. Hoover was a sort of “trickle-down” theorist who was inclined to support
businesses before unemployed individuals. He tried to protect American companies with
the Hawley-Smoot Tariff, but by reducing trade he only worsened the faltering American
and global economies.
When the American economy sputtered to a standstill, others suffered through
association. America had been an important trade partner for England, France, Germany,
Japan, Argentina, and Brazil. These countries suddenly saw sharp declines in demand for
their products. Also, all of the countries’ currencies were linked through their adherence
to the gold standard. Virtually every industrialized nation suffered wholesale price
declines of 30 percent or more at the start of the Depression.
The 1930s were particularly harsh for farmers in the United States. In the Great Plains,
the Depression was worsened from 1933 to 1939 by a severe drought and dust storms.
Unable to produce crops, farmers lost their farms and banks seized their homes. Farm
families were reduced to living in shantytowns, which Hoover’s critics called
Hoovervilles. These farmers and other destitute citizens turned to bartering for basic
goods in the absence of cash.
Farmers’ losses increased bank failures in rural areas, and urban bank failures had already
been escalating rapidly. When stock investors lost their capital, banks started to fail at ten
times the 1920s rate. Nine thousand banks failed during the 1930s. And when banks
failed, customers lost their savings! By the end of Hoover’s term in 1933, Americans had
$140 billion missing from their accounts. The bank failures limited new enterprise and
growth across the country. Banks started to limit how much money customers could
deposit, and loans became scarce. Hoover was not about to win a second term.
After Franklin D. Roosevelt was inaugurated in 1933, he instituted a bank holiday. Banks
would rest for several days while Congress passed the Emergency Banking Relief Act to
stabilize the banking system. The new President told his nation, “The only thing we have
to fear is fear itself.”
Roosevelt tried to end the Great Depression by creating dozens of government agencies
to support the people. Unemployment fell by two-thirds during his first presidential term.
If it weren’t for his programs, surely many more people would have died from starvation
and lack of shelter. Still, daily life remained precarious for most Americans until the
depression ended six years later with America’s involvement in World War II.