The Great Depression and the New Deal
- Franklin Delano Roosevelt (was in wheelchair)
- 1932: worst year of the Great Depression and it was an
election year
- Hoover ran for reelection
- Democrats nominated Franklin Delano Roosevelt (FDR).
- In his youth he was tall and
athletic
- He got polio in 1921, and confined
to a wheelchair.
- Helped tone down his temper
and humble his personality
- He was articulate with his
words and conveyed a sense of caring.
- His wife, Eleanor Roosevelt, was also active in
politics.
- She would become the most
involved First Lady up to that time
- Presidential Hopefuls of 1932
- During the campaign, the Democrats appealed to the
common man and exuded confidence.
- Democarats used "Happy
Days are Here Again" as a jingle
- his buzzword was
"confidence." FDR had a mile-wide smile.
- Hoover used slogans like "The Worst is Past"
and "It Might Have Been Worse." To defiend his actions during
the Depression
- Hoover's Humiliation in 1932
- FDR won 472 to 59 in the electoral vote.
- black voters switched from the Republican party to the
Democratic party.
- This was a big change. The
Republicans had been the Party of Abe Lincoln, anti-slavery, and
Reconstruction whereas the Democrats had been the pro-slavery,
anti-black party. In 1932, blacks were tired of being the "last
hired, first fired" and saw the Democrats as the party to help in
that department.
- Hoover was something of sore loser. During the four
month lame duck period (when the president-elect waits for the leaving
president to depart), Hoover tried to wrangle FDR into some unflattering
politics. FDR stayed away.
- The switch of 1932-1933 was the rock bottom. Unemployment
was at 25%, the highest in America's history and bankruptcies were an
epidemic.
- Cynical opponents of FDR said
he purposely allowed things to get worse just so he could emerge that
much more as the savior.
- FDR and the Three R’s: Relief, Recovery, and Reform
- In his inaugural address, FDR famously said,
"…the only thing we have to fear is fear itself." He was
referring to people's fears of spending until things got better and that
their money was not safe in banks.
- In essence, FDR was saying,
"If we don't panic, we'll be okay. Confidence!"
- To help cut the panic in
banks, FDR quickly issued a "bank holiday" which closed
banks for one week. It was simply a "time out," to stop
the bleeding, sit and relax before moving forward.
- FDR started the "Three R's": relief,
recovery, and reform.
- Relief was
for the right-now (food, shelter),
- recovery was for a year or so to get out of the
Depression,
- reform was to
ensure it wouldn't happen again.
- Congress was controlled by Democrats.
Anything FDR wanted passed, was passed.
- FDR's "Hundred
Days" saw a shipload of bills passed into law.
- The laws are often called the
"Alphabet Soup" of their
acronyms
- TVA, CCC, WPA, PWA, and on
and on. The New Deal, FDR's plan for fighting the Great Depression,
was under way.
- Roosevelt’s money management
- In only eight hours, Congress passed the Emergency
Banking Relief Act which set up the bank holiday.
- Roosevelt saw the power of radio. Most families had
one by then and FDR used a series of "Fireside Chats" to
talk to America on the radio. He went over what the problems were
and what was being done about them. These talks were very popular.
- The Glass-Steagall Banking Reform Act set up
the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC). It insured
people's money in the bank up to $5,000. There was no need to fear
losing one's money in the banks anymore.
- In fear of paper assets, people were hoarding gold.
FDR took the dollar off the gold standard, ordered people to relinquish
gold in exchange for paper money.
- FDR wanted to create
inflation (a rise in prices). This would make it easier for debtors to
pay off their debts (since the money had less value and was thus easier
to get). Those who'd given the loans were not happy to get back
not-so-valuable money.
- To create inflation, FDR
ordered the Treasury to buy up gold at increasingly higher prices. $35
per once became the norm for 40 years. This meant more paper money in
circulation, which is less valuable than gold, and did cause inflation.
- Critics said FDR was creating
"baloney" money. FDR did backtrack and, in 1934, put the U.S.
back on the gold standard partially (when trading with other nations).
- Creating Jobs for the Jobless
- FDR was willing to use government money to help those
in need. One of his main weapons was to "prime the pump", or use
federal money on programs in hopes that it would jump start the economy
to run on its own.
- Likely the most popular New Deal program was the Civilian
Conservation Corps (CCC).
- In the CCC, young men were
hired to work in the national forests. They lived in camps like boy
scouts and did things like clearing land, blazing trails, planting
trees, draining swamps, etc.
- The CCC provided some
experience, some adventure, and a wage to send home to the folks—things
healthy young men couldn't turn down.
- The Federal Relief Administration (FERA) sought
relief in the form of the dole (government hand-outs). Harry L.
Hopkins was placed in charge of the administration and $3 billion was
given to the states for doling out.
- He proudly said they'd spend,
tax, and get themselves reelected. Others saw this scheme as simply
taking one person's money in taxes and giving it to another person to
buy his vote.
- The Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA) offered
low interest loans to farmers.
- The Home Owners' Loan Corporation (HOLC)
refinanced people's home loans at lower interest rates.
- Unemployment was a lingering problem. In hopes of
fighting it, FDR started the Civil Works Administration (CWA). It
was to provide temporary jobs to see folks through a short period
(winter).
- Finding jobs was hard to do
and many were just made-up jobs, called "boondoggling."
Critics saw the frequent result of a boondoggle job - just
leaning-on-a-shovel and while collecting taxpayer money.
- Notably, the Great Migration was wrapping up at about this time. It's the massive movement by blacks from the rural South to the cities up North. It roughly went on between 1910 and 1930.
- A Day for Every Demagogue
- There were many voices on the subject of the Great
Depression. Catholic priest Father Charles Coughlin was one of the
most persistent. He gave a regular radio address discussing
"Social Justice."
- He was first pro-FDR, then
very much anti-New Deal. He eventually went overboard and was silenced
by higher-up clergy.
- One of the more flamboyant critics was Sen. Huey
Long of Louisiana. He ranted about a "Share the Wealth"
plan and promised "every man a king."
- He spoke of giving $5,000
per family to the poor, likely taking it from those who had it. The
mathematics of the scheme were silly.
- King got passionate
responses. Many down-and-out folks loved him. Many despised him and
feared he might become some type of dictator. One person assassinated
him, in 1935.
- Dr. Francis Townsend also came up with a wild idea. He proposed to dole
out $200/month to 5 million senior citizens. They would have to spend
it, thus helping pump-prime the economy. Like Huey Long's idea, this was
a mathematically ludicrous plan.
- Congress started the Works Progress Administration
(WPA) in part to quiet these troublemakers. $11 billion was spent
building public facilities like bridges, public buildings, and roads.
- The WPA's goals were to help
curb unemployment (9 million people were put to work) and help improve
the nation's infrastructure (roads, bridges, etc.).
- Many students were set up
with part-time jobs. Work was also drummed up for artists and writers,
although it was often boondoggling: John Steinbeck, future Nobel
literature prize winner, counted dogs in Salinas county California.
- There was some other waste,
like controlling crickets and building a monkey pen.
- New Visibility for Women
- After having the right to vote for over 10 years now,
women began taking a more active role in things. Leading the way was Eleanor
Roosevelt but there were other ladies too.
- Frances Perkins
was the first female cabinet member as Sec. of Labor.
- Mary McLeod Bethune was in charge of the Office of Minority Affairs. She
was the highest ranking black in FDR's administration. She later
held found a college in Daytona, FL.
- Ruth Benedict,
an anthropologist, studied cultures as personalities in Patterns
of Cultures.
- One of her understudies was Margaret
Mead. She wrote the landmark anthropology book Coming of Age in
Samoa about adolescence in that culture.
- Novelist Pearl S. Buck wrote the timeless The
Good Earth about a peasant farm family in China. She won the Nobel
prize for literature in 1938.
- Helping Industry and Labor
- The National Recovery Administration (NRA) was
the most complex of the New Deal programs. It's goal was to help
industry, labor, and the unemployed.
- To try and achieve those
goals, it set codes of "fair competition." This meant working
hours would be spread out to more people. Maximum work hours were set
up; minimum wages were set up.
- Labor unions were given the
right to organize and collectively bargain. Antiunion yellow-dog
contracts were forbidden; child-labor was curbed.
- Businesses could agree to go along with the NRA's
principles. If they did, they displayed the blue NRA eagle and slogan,
"We do our part."
- There was enthusiasm for the
NRA. Philadelphia named their new pro football team the
"Eagles." Still, FDR knew the NRA was a gimmick in essence,
and temporary, saying, "We can't ballyhoo our way to
prosperity."
- The NRA soon fell to unpopularity. Businesses,
at heart, hate running themselves in any way other than what's best for
them (not with artificial restrictions). Henry Ford called the eagle
"that damn Roosevelt buzzard."
- The final blow came in the
1935 Schechtner case when the Supreme Court declared
the NRA unconstitutional.
- In the same law as the NRA, Congress had set up the Public
Works Administration (PWA). Like the PWA, it sought to build
public works and infrastructure.
- Headed by Sec. of the
Interior Harold Ickes, it started 34,000 projects. Noteworthy was
the Grand Coulee Dam on the Columbia River. It was the biggest
human-built structure since the Great Wall of China.
- Early on, FDR and the Democrats passed legislation legalizing
beer and wine with alcohol not over 3.2%.
- The Twenty-first Amendment
(1933) repealed the Eighteenth, thus ending the prohibition of
alcohol.
- Paying Farmers Not to Farm
- The Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA) tried to
help farmers by creating "artificial scarcity." It paid
farmers to not farm, thus reducing the supply.
- The AAA's start was shaky.
Cotton farmers plowed under already planted crops. Pigs were slaughtered
and some of the meat turned to fertilizer. The law seemed cruel and
wasteful.
- Farm incomes did rise, but
farmer unemployment rose too.
- The Supreme Court ended the
AAA when it declared the AAA unconstitutional in 1936.
- Congress passed the Soil Conservation and Domestic
Allotment Act. It paid farmers to plant crops that preserved and
reinvigorated the soil, like soybeans. The Supreme Court went along with
this plan.
- A Second Agricultural Adjustment Act was passed
in 1938. Farmers were encouraged to plant less acreage in exchange for
payments. Again, it was simply payment to not farm.
- Dust Bowls and Black Blizzards
- A long drought hit the lower Plains in 1933. The winds
kicked up and started the Dust Bowl. The fertile topsoil of many
farms simply blew away, mostly in parts of Oklahoma, Kansas, and Texas.
- The causes were drought and
wind, but also the "dry-farming" technique where farmers
repeatedly plowed the top few inches of soil. It created a powdery layer
that simply blew away.
- With the farms not unable to
grow crops, many people headed west to California in search of
farm-jobs. This inspired John Steinbeck's classic novel The Grapes of
Wrath about the "Okies" long,tough trip looking for work.
- Congress tried to aid debtors with the Frazier-Lemke
Farm Bankruptcy Act (1934). It held off mortgage foreclosures for
5 years. However, the Supreme Court struck it down the next year.
- The Resettlement Administration (1935) tried to
resettle farmers onto better soil.
- The CCC boys planted 200 million trees trying to grow
windbreaks.
- The government's relationship with the Indians was
changing again.
- John Collier headed the Bureau
of Indian Affairs and wanted to change the policies of the old Dawes
Plan. It had tried to end tribes and the old ways of the Indians—to force
Indians to become "white."
- Collier's new plan was the Indian
Reorganization Act (1934), called the "Indian New Deal",
did the opposite of Dawes—it encouraged Indians to keep their
traditional ways.
- To many Indians, this was a
slap in the face too. This "back-to-the-blanket movement"
implied Indians were to be like museum artifacts, frozen in the stone
age, hunting buffalo and weaving baskets. Almost 200 tribes accepted the
Reorganization Act, 77 did not.
- Battling Bankers and Big Business
- Prior to the stock crash, some businesses had fudged
on their financial reports. Investors invested, and lost, partly due to
the phony numbers. Congress tried to fix this with the Federal
Securities Act (AKA the "Truth in Securities Act"). It required
companies to report honest financial numbers.
- The Securities Exchange
Commission (SEC) was set up as the stock watchdog.
- The multi-billion dollar financial empire headed by
Chicagoan Samuel Insull crashed in 1932. He held the tip of the pyramid,
but headed up the entire rest of the pyramid—when he came down,
everything did. Congress passed the Public Utility Holding Company
(1935) in hopes of avoiding to such schemes.
- The TVA Harnesses the Tennessee River
- The electricity industry attracted New Dealers. They
felt electricity companies of gouging consumers with high rates. They
also wanted to expand electricity to rural areas.
- The Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) was set up
in 1933 to build a series of dams along the Tennessee River.
- This would be a
"double-barreled" plan: provide jobs, help with housing via
the jobs, provide electricity.
- The TVA's area would help
improve the lives of some 2.5 million people.
- Housing Reform and Social Security
- The Federal Housing Authority (FHA) was set up to
offer low interest home loans. It was a "double-barreled"
program: it got people in homes and put people to work building them.
- It was a popular program and
outlasted FDR and the New Deal.
- The program got a shot-in-the-arm in 1937 with the U.S.
Housing Authority (USHA). It lent money to states or localities
for construction projects
- These laws helped stop the
growth of slums.
- The Social Security Act (1935) was perhaps the
most far-ranging law.
- It set up a payment plan
for old age, the handicapped, delinquent children, and other dependents.
- The payments were funded by
taxes placed on workers and employers, then given to the groups above.
- Republicans opposed the act
saying it was little more than a government-knows-best program with
socialist-leaning policies. Worse, taxing one person's work and giving
the money to another person seemed to discourage effort and encourage
a feeling of entitlement to having someone else pay.
- A New Deal for Labor
- An epidemic of strikes occurred in 1934. Some were
violent. Congress sought to replace the killed NRA and passed the Wagner
Act (AKA the National Labor Relations Act) (1935). It guaranteed
the right of unions to organize and to collectively bargain with
management.
- Unskilled workers began to organize. They were usually
left out because, being unskilled, they were easily replaced in a strike.
- John L. Lewis, head of the United Mine
Workers, organized the Committee for Industrial Organization
(CIO) which admitted the unskilled.
- The CIO started within the AF
of L, but later split out on its own (the AF of L didn't want to weaken
itself with the unskilled). The CIO scored a victory in a dispute with
General Motors in a "sit-down" strike.
- The CIO won again vs. the
U.S. Steel Company. Smaller steel companies fought back and bloody
strikes ensued, like the Memorial Day massacre in Chicago killing or
wounding over 60.
- The Fair Labor Standards Act (AKA Wages and
Hours Bill) set a minimum wage, maximum working hours, and forbade
children under 16 from working.
- Unsurprisingly, unions loved FDR. Membership in labor
unions began to shoot upward.
- Landon Challenges “the Champ”
- In 1936, the Republicans nominated Alfred M. Landon,
governor of Kansas, as candidate for president.
- Landon criticized FDR's
massive spending. But, he was hurt with a weak radio voice, a poor
campaigner, and the fact that he supported many of the programs that he
criticized FDR for spending on.
- Some Democrats joined
Republicans to form the American Liberty League. It didn't like
the "socialist" direction the New Deal was taking America.
- But, with FDR's wide popularity, the election was
almost a moot point. FDR won 523 to 8 in the electoral vote.
- FDR won because he never
forgot the "forgotten man."
- Nine Old Men on the Bench
- FDR was sworn in for his second term on January 29,
1937 (instead of March 4). The Twentieth Amendment had cut the
"lame duck" period by six weeks.
- The Democrats still controlled Congress and were
essentially "yes-men" to FDR, but the Supreme Court was a thorn
in FDR's side.
- In 1937, FDR proposed
increasing the Supreme Court to perhaps 15 justices. This would greatly
increase FDR's power (because he'd make the appointments).
- Congress was shocked at this little disguised attempt
at power-grabbing. Congress didn't want the power see-saw to tip too
far toward FDR, and for once, FDR did not get his way. Congress
voted no. This was perhaps FDR's first mistake and his first loss.
- The Court Changes Course
- FDR was widely accused of trying to turn dictator.
- Although the "court-packing scheme" was
voted down, the Court did begin to sway FDR's way. Formerly conservative
Justice Owen j. Roberts started to vote liberal.
- For examples, by a 5-to-4
vote, the court upheld minimum wages for women. The court upheld the
Wagner Act and the Social Security Act.
- So, though not expanding the court's numbers, FDR did
get the Supreme Court to go his way. The only bad news for FDR was the
suspicion that the court-packing scheme started. Very few New Deal-like
bills were passed afterward.
- Twilight of the New Deal
- Despite the New Deals plethora of spending and
programs, the depression did not go away during Roosevelt's first term.
- Unemployment went from 25% in
1932 to 15% in 1937, lower, but still very high.
- The economy took a second downturn in 1937. The
"Roosevelt Recession" was caused the government's policies.
- Social Security was cutting
into people's take-home pay, and thus, their spending power.
- FDR seemed to admit too much
spending was risky and cut back on the spending.
- Then, FDR changed his mind and went back to heavy
spending.
- British economist John
Maynard Keynes ideas were coming en vogue. Keynesian economics says
that it's okay, even good, for governments to engage in "deficit
spending" (spending more money than they take in).
- Congress went along with more spending and FDR went
back to work.
- The Reorganization Act
gave FDR some authority for administrative reforms, including the
new Executive Office in the White House.
- The Hatch Act (1939) banned federal
officials from political campaigning and soliciting, except for the
highest officers. The goal was to clean up campaigning and make sure
federal employees weren't turned into just political campaigners.
- New Deal or Raw Deal?
- New Deal critics saw a ton of spending, a lot of
waste, and little accomplished.
- FDR was criticized for moving away from American laissez-faire
capitalism and moving toward Russian communism/socialism/Marxism.
- The debt had been $19 billion
in 1932; in 1939, the debt was $40 billion.
- The U.S. seemed to be
attempting to achieve prosperity without working for it. Fears were that
Americans were getting a bad case of the "gimmies" and the
U.S. was becoming a "handout state." When times go tough in
the 1800's Americans went west, in the 1900's Americans sought handouts.
- The New Deal may have helped, but it did not get the
U.S. out of the depression. It would take WWII to end the Great
Depression.
- The war solved unemployment.
Massive spending during the war jacked the debt up even higher, to $258
billion.
- FDR’s Balance Sheet
- FDR's supporters said the New Deal had avoided the
Depression from being even worse than it was.
- FDR was hated by capitalists due to his taxation
policies, but was also dislike by socialists. The New Deal may have
actually cut down on socialism by avoiding a more radical turn to
the left or right.
- In a very tough time, FDR
provided considerable change with no revolution. Other nations (Italy,
Germany) were taking very radical changes.
- Like Thomas Jefferson, though wealthy and of the elite
class, FDR always spoke on behalf of the "forgotten man."
- Maybe his greatest achievement was yet to come—his
leadership during WWII.
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