Causes of the Great Depression - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Causes of the Great Depression

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Title: Causes of the Great Depression


1
Causes of the Great Depression
  • And how Britain, Germany, France, Italy, and the
    Soviet Union dealt with it.

2
Intro
  • The severity and length of the Great Depression
    have three interrelated causes
  • the financial crisis caused by the Great War and
    the Paris peace settlement
  • the global crisis in the production and
    distribution of goods, especially after 1929
  • the failure of western European and U.S.
    governments to respond appropriately to these
    conditions.

3
Intro
  • European governments had an overriding fear of
    inflation, based on their recent experience and
    the example of Germany's uncontrolled inflation.
  • The Allies, and particularly France, depended on
    payments from Germany to subsidize their
    economies and pay their own debts to the United
    States the German economy, in turn, had become
    heavily dependent on U.S. private investment in
    the mid-1920s.

4
Intro continued
  • When the U.S. stock market collapsed in 1929,
    U.S. loans to Europe dried up, and the German
    economy very nearly collapsed. Reparations were
    finally cancelled in 1933.
  • Meanwhile, production and trade faced their own
    difficulties, including agricultural
    over-production, which caused raw-product prices
    to plummet farmers could no longer afford to
    purchase industrial products, so the manufacture
    of consumer goods stagnated this led to a
    reduction in demand for coal, iron, and textiles,
    crippling those industries as well..

5
Intro continued
  • Economic theory in this period held that
    governments should cut spending in these
    circumstances, in order to avoid inflation.
    Governments did experiment with other forms of
    intervention, though, and these influenced the
    politics of the period. (Think the rise in
    Keynesian economics).

6
Britain Responding to the Depression
  • The political responses to the Depression were
    very different in Great Britain and France, and
    yielded quite different results.
  • In Britain, Ramsay MacDonald's coalition
    ministry, the National Government, was basically
    a sell-out by the Labor leader to the
    Conservative party. It produced impressive
    results industrial production increased beyond
    1929 levels by 1934, and the housing market
    boomed.

7
GB continued
  • Unemployment persisted, however, with nearly 1.5
    million still unemployed in 1937. Most British
    citizens remained confident in their government,
    and radical politics of both the right and left
    held little appeal.

8
France Responds
  • In France, the Depression came later and lasted
    longer. Right-wing political groups grew, as did
    political bitterness, incivility and violence. A
    right-wing political demonstration in Paris in
    1934 resulted in fourteen deaths and many
    injuries. A coalition ministry dealt with
    economic matters by decree. Leftist groups made
    alliances in the fact of right-wing threats, and
    formed the Popular Front in 1935. Socialist Leon
    Blum became premier of a Popular Front government
    in June, 1936..

9
French response continued
  • Blum instituted progressive labor policies and
    made other moves that alienated the banking and
    business communities, leading Blum to resign in
    June 1937. A Radical ministry came to power in
    1938. In contrast to Britain, French industrial
    production did not regain 1929 levels until 1939.
    Also in contrast to the British experience, many
    French citizens had lost faith in the Republic
    itself, and in republican principles

10
Germany during the depression
  • In the late 1920s, the Nazis were visible on the
    Weimar political scene, but had little influence.
    The effects of the Depression allowed them to
    seize power. In the early 1930s, unemployment
    soared as did membership in the Nazi storm
    troopers (SA). President von Hindenburg appointed
    Hitler chancellor of Germany in January 1933,
    hoping to control him through conservatives he
    also appointed to the cabinet.

11
Germany
  • But Hitler and the Nazis had a broad base of
    support, because they combined an understanding
    of the electorate's social and economic
    insecurities with an inspirational nationalism.
    Hitler consolidated his power by capturing full
    legal authority, crushing alternative political
    groups, and purging the Nazi Party of rivals..

12
Germany continued
  • The February 1933 Reichstag fire gave Hitler a
    pretext for suspending civil liberties. In March
    1933, the Enabling Act allowed Hitler to rule by
    decree. By the end of 1933, the Nazis had
    disabled or outlawed all institutions that might
    oppose Hitler. Through violence and intimidation,
    the Nazis created a terroristic police state,
    directed particularly against German Jews. The
    Nuremberg Laws and Kristallnacht marked the
    escalation of official anti-Semitism, which
    culminated in the so-called Final Solution. Nazi
    racial ideology called for selective breeding.

13
Germany continued
  • They encouraged or discouraged women to
    reproduce, depending on their ethnic and health
    characteristics, and women were given special
    responsibilities in transmitting the approved
    culture.
  • Hitler's economic policies, by subordinating all
    economic enterprise and policies to the state
    while retaining private ownership and capitalism,
    achieved stunning successes, particularly in
    eliminating unemployment. Rearmament and other
    preparations for war became the engine for
    economic growth.

14
Italy
  • In the 1920s, Mussolini used massive public works
    projects, subsidies, and tariffs to attempt to
    stimulate the economy. The fascists sought a
    middle course between socialism and liberal
    laissez-faire capitalism, in a policy known as
    corporatism. Private ownership was preserved, but
    industries were organized into syndicates
    representing labor and management, both of which
    were supposed to maximize productivity for the
    sake of the nation rather than pursuing their own
    class interests.

15
Italy continued
  • After 1930, industrial syndicates were replaced
    by bodies called corporations, which grouped
    industries by production area. Neither form of
    organization increased productivity, but they did
    foster bureaucracy and corruption. With Italy's
    1935 invasion of Ethiopia, the economy was
    mobilized for war. Taxes rose, while wages and
    the standard of living declined.

16
Soviet Union
  • Stalin led a plan for rapid industrialization,
    which led to tremendous economic growth through
    the 1930s but cost millions of lives. Starting in
    1928, a succession of five-year plans set
    production goals, and the State Planning
    Commission organized the economy to meet those
    goals. Huge new factories were built, and
    millions of workers were employed.

17
Soviet Union
  • Between 1928 and 1940, Soviet industrial
    production rose a mind-boggling 400 percent.
    Meanwhile, in 1929, Stalin had ordered the
    collectivization of agriculture, so that
    production could be increased under state control
    and so that restive peasants could be transformed
    into obedient industrial laborers in the new
    factories.

18
Soviet Union
  • The elimination of the kulak class successful
    farmers who had gained wealth but made the
    political mistake of expressing their discontent
    at having little to buy with it was part of the
    program. Both collectivization and liquidation of
    the kulak class were ill-defined, however, so the
    state could and did turn against peasants at
    will.

19
Soviet Union
  • Religious leaders became targets of the state, as
    well. Millions of peasants migrated to the
    cities, where housing, food, clothing, and
    consumer goods were in perennially short supply.
    Stalin retained his grip on power largely through
    the Great Purges and the "show trials" of the
    late mid to late 1930s.
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