1 / 21

Group 5

Group 5. “Housing and Social Security” – “FDR’s Balance” Mel Rio, Adam Smith, Brooke Ferguson. Housing. New Deal sets up Federal Housing Administration in 1939 – one of the few committees set up by the New Deal that is still alive today

Télécharger la présentation

Group 5

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Group 5 “Housing and Social Security” – “FDR’s Balance” Mel Rio, Adam Smith, Brooke Ferguson

  2. Housing • New Deal sets up Federal Housing Administration in 1939 – one of the few committees set up by the New Deal that is still alive today • USHA – United States Housing Association – Lent money to states/communities for low-cost housing and construction • Not very effective: opposition from real estate agencies, builders, and landlords stopped expansion of the project • SLUMS stopped growing, and actually shrank during the Great Depression

  3. Insurance and Social Security • Social Security Act of 1935 – incredibly complex legislation providing insurance and compensation for the unemployed, retired, handicapped, and other dependents (including delinquent children) • Republicans were against such social securities • Such social securities were inspired by, but different from European ones – Americans had to work for their compensations

  4. Organized Labor • NRA Blue Eagles • New Deal lowered unemployment • Despite high unemployment rates, there were many walk-outs in the summer of 1934

  5. WE DO OUR PART

  6. Legislation and Strikes • Wagner Act of 1935 or National Labor Relations Act of 1935: Created the National Labor Relations Board; allowed workers to assert their rights as workers, such as striking, collective bargaining, etc. • Strikes began to get a little messy: the Committee for Industrial Organization organized to a “revolutionary” strategy and held a sit-in protest in the automobile industry; the United States Steel Company granted Unionization rights to its employees to avoid a costly strike; a strike by workers from a smaller steel company, the Republic Steel Company, turned into a massacre.

  7. Fair Labor Standards Act • Passed by Congress in 1938 • Affected interstate commerce companies • Strove to set up minimum wage and maximum hours • Goal: 40 hours a week, 40 cents an hour (at first) • Child labor: under 16 forbidden; in dangerous jobs, under 18 • Excluded agricultural, domestic, and service workers

  8. Twilight of the New Deal • Though unemployment rates dropped from 25% to 15%, the Depression didn’t vanish with FDR’s first term in office (1933-1937) • Another sharp recession, dubbed ‘Roosevelt’s recession’ arrived due to gov’t policies (ex: Social Services) • FDR took on the policies of British economist John Maynard Keynes (thus, “Keynesianism”) – a plan to stimulate the economy based on deficit spending • After two years of urging, Congress passed the Reorganization Act in 1939, which allowed FDR to arrange new administrative reforms • The Hatch Act of the same year prevented federal office officials – except a few select high-ranking policy-makers – from active political campaigning, and forbade the use of gov’t funds for political purposes

  9. John Maynard Keynes

  10. New Deal or Raw Deal? • New Deal was criticized for waste, incompetence, confusion, contradictions and cross-purposes, as well as being criticized for naming of many gov’t agencies (unnecessarily confusing ‘alphabet soup’) • FDR was “willing to try anything,” but had increased federal debt by almost 25 billion dollars in seven years • Businessmen criticized gov’t involvement in economy and business, saying they could get themselves out of their economic slump if the gov’t would just back off • New Deal also criticized as useless – Depression was still happening • WWII finally solved the unemployment problem, but the national debt increased astronomically – from 40 billion to 258 billion dollars

  11. Unemployed in the Great Depression

  12. FDR’s Balance Sheet • Many advocates of the New Deal claimed that it had indeed alleviated the worst of the Depression • Some other New Dealers said the gov’t was obliged to interfere with the economy in order to prevent mass starvation • FDR’s admirers claimed that he was the hero of business and free enterprise • FDR kept himself between the far left and the far right, possibly the “greatest American conservative” since Hamilton • Was vital in preserving democracy in America while it was dissolving all over Europe

  13. FDR

  14. Nine Old Men on the Bench • Supreme Court objects to “New Deal” policies • Roosevelt challenges the Constitution by changing the Supreme Court • Proposed that new judges be created, the number of new judges equal to the judges over 70 in the current government • Roosevelt used the basis of the presidential elections of 1932 and 1936, as well as congressional election of 1934 to prove people overwhelmingly supported the “New Deal” ideas • Lost a lot of support over proposal

  15. The Court Changes Course • Roosevelt seen as a dictator • Conservative judges start to lean to liberal policies, based upon fear of “being on the chopping block” • “A switch in time saves nine” • Social Security Act, Wagner Act (National Labor Relations Act), and state minimum wage for women all pass the Supreme Court • Congress passes a bill allowing for full pay for justices over 70 who retired • Succession of deaths and resignations allow Roosevelt to be the first president since George Washington to make 9 appointments to the tribunal • Aroused conservatives, thus causing a reduction of reform bills passing after 1937 (year of the court controversy)

  16. 1936 Election Gov. Alfred Landon FDR with Elenor after hearing results

  17. 1937 Supreme Court

  18. Political Cartoon Criticizing FDR

  19. Political Cartoon Criticizing the New Supreme Court

  20. Works Cited • http://www.philadelphia-reflections.com/images/keynes.jpg • http://s9.photobucket.com/albums/a79/n-jay/?action=view&current=FDR.jpg • http://vastate.files.wordpress.com/2009/02/depression.jpg • http://www.newdeal75.org/images/fdr31.jpg • http://www.nps.gov/archive/elro/images/iaacf-landon.jpg • http://cache.daylife.com/imageserve/0bAK8T711E2oC/610x.jpg • http://pro.corbis.com/images/BE036442.jpg?size=67&uid=%7B5C808E3B-D583-4446-9092-50DE2965A7EB%7D • http://newdeal.feri.org/court/toons/031.jpg • http://www.gooznersolar.com/20071016decathlon/MoreDecathlon.html • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1934_West_Coast_Longshore_Strike • Kennedy, David M., Lizabeth Cohen, and Thomas A. Bailey. The American Pageant A History of the Republic Advanced Placement Edition. 13th ed. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 2006.

More Related