The Great Depression

Great Depression: The Worst in Recent History

First Published: ADawnJournal.com March 26, 2010

The worst depression in recent history, and one of the defining periods of the 20th century was The Great Depression. From 1929 to 1939, many of the world’s economies suffered high unemployment and greatly decreased GDPs, putting great hardship on citizens and restricting trade between countries.

The Great Depression is the longest and deepest depression of the 20th century and it is now used as the benchmark for how bad a recession or depression is.

In the United States, unemployment rose to 25 percent, while other countries saw their unemployment rise past 30 percent. Many cities and industries were hit very hard, and international trade fell by 66 percent around the world, greatly impacting people around the world.

As well, crop prices fell by 60 percent, causing many farmers to lose their homes as record amounts of foreclosures occurred. Other industries that suffered greatly included banking, mining and logging.

Causes of the Great Depression

There is no one cause to The Great Depression, but these five are considered to have all played a part in it.

1.   The crash of the stock market in 1929 occurred on October 29, and is considered the start of The Great Depression. This event had a major impact on the economy of the United States, and within two months of the initial crash, stockholders had lost over $40 billion, causing many to lose everything they owned.

2.   The failure of banks was widespread in the United States during The Great Depression. From 1929 to 1939, over 9,000 banks failed because the deposits of the banks were not insured and when banks failed, depositors lost everything. The banks that were still around stopped giving out loans out of worry of going under themselves. This put a lot of people in difficult positions as they lost what they had and could not get money anywhere.

3.   Since people now had less money during The Great Depression, many people stopped buying things they did not need. This caused a reduction in the amount of items being made around the country, which then caused companies to go out of business. Hence, the unemployment rate rose to a record of 25 percent, which only made things worse.

4.   Another cause of The Great Depression was the Smoot-Hawley Tariff, which was created in 1930 to protect American companies from failing. This tariff charged very high taxes for imports, which caused trade between the United States and other countries to fall drastically. As a result, rather than helping the economy, it hurt it even more and further made The Great Depression worse.

5.   To make matters worse, when the economy started failing, so to did crops in the Mississippi Valley during 1930. The crop failures reached such high numbers that many farmers lost their homes as the breadbasket of the world turned into a dust bowl. This is the reason that the 1930s are often called The Dirty Thirties.

How the Great Depression Ended

Countries around the world began to move out of The Great Depression at various times throughout the 1930s. Many countries began to recover around 1933, while the United States reached its full recovery around 1940, just before the country’s entry into World War Two.

One reason for the United States coming out of The Great Depression was the New Deal created by President Roosevelt, which accelerated the recovery of the country due to aggressive spending to help create jobs for the citizens of the country.

However, for the United States, the biggest reason for recovery was the outbreak of the Second World War. When World War Two was declared, economies around the world were stimulated due to the rearmament policies of Allied countries to prepare for war. This was done to such a degree that Britain eliminated unemployment by 1939 when war was officially declared.

When the United States entered the war in 1941, the unemployment rate fell to below 10 percent, and war spending doubled the growth rate of the American economy, thereby stopping The Great Depression for good.

The Great Depression was a watershed moment in the 20th century that ranks with World War One and World War Two as the darkest times in the history of the 20th century. The Great Depression also taught the economists and policy makers in the United States how to avoid a depression and how to keep the economy of the country going. Since 1940, there have been no new depressions in the United States, partly in thanks to what was learned during The Great Depression.