Great Depression
Great Depression
The Great Depression began in late 1929 and lasted for about a decade. The economic depression that beset many countries in the 1930s was unique in its magnitude and its consequences. “At the depth of the depression, in 1933, one American worker in every four was out of a job. In other countries unemployment ranged between 15 percent and 25 percent of the labor force.” The great industrial slump continued throughout the 1930s, shaking the foundations of Western capitalism “an economic system based on the private ownership of the means of production and distribution of goods, characterized by a free competitive market and motivation by profit” and the society based upon it. Despite the seeming business prosperity of the 1920s, there were serious economic weak spots, a chief one being a depression in the agricultural sector. Also depressed were such industries as coal mining, railroads, and textiles. By 1928 the construction boom was over. The spectacular rise in prices on the stock market from 1924 to 1929 bore little relation to actual economic conditions. In fact, the boom in the stock market and in real estate, along with the expansion in credit (created, in part, by low-paid workers buying on credit) and high profits for a few industries, concealed basic problems. Thus the U. S. stock market crash that occurred in October 1929, with huge losses, was not the fundamental cause of the Great Depression, there was the trade barriers along with the unevenly distributed income were big factors leading to this financial collapse, although the crash sparked, and certainly marked the beginning of, the most traumatic economic period of modern times.
There were some economic problems that were in evidence during the 1920’s. one problem consisted of unevenly distributed income. The economy was not stable. National wealth was not spread evenly. Instead, most money was in the hands of a few families who saved or invested rather than spent their money on American goods. Thus, supply was greater than the demand for goods. For an economy to function properly, total demand must equal total supply. Some people profited, but others did not. While businesses’ productivity remarkably increased during the 1920’s, workers received relatively small share of the wealth this produced. Between 1923 and 1929, manufacturing output per person-hour increased by 32 percent, but workers’ wages only grew by 8 percent. Thus wages increased at a rate one