1 / 31

UNITED STATES HISTORY AND THE CONSTITUTION

UNITED STATES HISTORY AND THE CONSTITUTION. South Carolina Standard USHC-6.4 Mr. Hoover Abbeville High School. Questions to Answer. How did President Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal resolve the economic crisis of the Great Depression?

gita
Télécharger la présentation

UNITED STATES HISTORY AND THE CONSTITUTION

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. UNITED STATES HISTORY AND THE CONSTITUTION South Carolina Standard USHC-6.4 Mr. Hoover Abbeville High School

  2. Questions to Answer • How did President Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal resolve the economic crisis of the Great Depression? • How was the New Deal programs effective in relieving suffering and achieving economic recovery? • Did the New Deal help in protecting the rights of women and minorities, and in making significant reforms to protect the economy such as Social Security and labor laws?

  3. A New president • As a result of the economic and personal destitution of many of the American people, voters looked to the presidential candidate in 1932 to solve the problems that beset the nation and to protect the rights and well being of the American people. • They elected Franklin Delano Roosevelt who immediately initiated a series of relief and recovery measures that came to be called the New Deal.

  4. The New Deal • The New Deal is one of the most complex and controversial topics in United States History. • The New Deal was not an attempt to introduce socialism in the United States, although that is what its critics claimed. • Indeed, many historians argue that because of New Deal policies, capitalism was saved.

  5. Massive Spending • Although New Deal policies alleviated some suffering and offered hope to Americans in their bleakest hour, they did not solve the economic problems of the Depression. • Rather, massive government spending during World War II ended the Depression. • As a result of the reforms initiated during the New Deal, the United States has not suffered another economic depression of the magnitude of the Great Depression

  6. FDR • President Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s initial purpose in the New Deal was to stabilize the economy, help it recover, and relieve human suffering. • The closing of the banks for a bank holiday stopped the escalating collapse of the banking industry.

  7. Bank Holiday • Roosevelt’s first Fireside Chat encouraged people to trust in the banks. • When the banks reopened, the panic had subsided and the Government insurance of bank deposits instilled confidence in the safety of banks [Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC)].

  8. prime the pump • Regulations were placed on the stock market to prevent the conditions that led to the crash [Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)]. • The federal government sent millions of dollars to the states to use for relief, using deficit spending to boost the economy and ‘prime the pump.’

  9. government subsidies Monetary assistance granted by a government to a person or group in support of an enterprise regarded as being in the public interest • Farmers were paid government subsidies so that they would not plant so many crops, which addressed the traditional problem of overproduction and low prices [Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA)]. • Although this program stabilized prices and raised farm income, it hurt sharecroppers and tenant farmers by taking some farm land out of production

  10. Rural electrification • Rural electrification programs brought power to many. • The government built dams to generate electricity for people in seven states [Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA)]. • This created jobs for thousands of people who spent their government paychecks in the marketplace and thus stimulated the economy.

  11. Civilian Conservation Corps • Unemployed young men were given work in the nations’ parks [Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC)]. • Other programs built bridges, hospitals, schools and air fields.

  12. Works Progress Administration • Spending on cultural programs provided work to thousands of writers, artists, and actors and established the precedent for federal support of the arts [Works Progress Administration (WPA)].

  13. New Deal ? • Job creation programs put some people to work, alleviated their despair, and pumped some money into the economy. • However, the New Deal did not result in economic recovery.

  14. criticism of the New Deal • Critics on the political left, including workers and labor unions, claimed that Roosevelt was not doing enough to redistribute income and help the elderly and the poor. • Labor unions also demanded recognition of their right to bargain collectively. • Criticism from wealthy business owners on the political right was that the New Deal was too expensive and socialist. • Franklin Delano Roosevelt was accused of taking too much power for the federal government and the executive branch and critics compared him to fascist leaders in Europe.

  15. Supreme Court • The conservative Supreme Court undermined New Deal programs by ruling several of them unconstitutional, including programs for farmers and workers. • Conservatives also criticized Roosevelt for the unbalanced budget that provided the economic stimulus to halt the downward spiral and relieve the suffering of the people.

  16. court-packing • Roosevelt responded to the actions of the Supreme Court by proposing a plan to increase the size of the Court. • Roosevelt’s so-called “court-packing” plan fueled criticism from the Right; however, the Supreme Court did not overturn any subsequent New Deal reforms.

  17. Social Security Act • Roosevelt championed some successful and enduring reforms to meet the criticisms from the left. • A national insurance policy was established for the unemployed, the disabled, the elderly and dependent children [Social Security Act]. • Workers would pay into the plan for protection against unemployment as well as for retirement.

  18. More Tax To Pay • Although the program did not cover all workers, it became the most significant and enduring part of the New Deal and later significantly impacted the poverty level. • Social Security, however, did nothing to immediately aid the recovery from the Depression since it took money out of paychecks and did not make payments immediately.

  19. Fair Labor Standards Act • Conservative critics of the New Deal cite the Social Security Act as evidence of going too far and laying the foundation for the welfare state. • The New Deal also established minimum wage and maximum hours [Fair Labor Standards Act] and recognized the right of workers to organize in labor unions and bargain collectively [Fair Employment Practices Act (Wagner Act)]. • Such recognition had been a goal of unions since the late nineteenth century.

  20. Taxes and the wealthy • Taxes on those with large incomes, as well as estate taxes and taxes on corporate profits were raised in order to fund New Deal programs. • Since the wealthy now had to bear a larger share of all government programs, their criticism for New Deal programs increased.

  21. Deficit spending • FDR responded to conservatives’ criticisms of the unbalanced budget due to deficit spending designed to stimulate the economy by cutting spending in 1937. • The result was the recession of 1937 during which unemployment rates that had been on the way down went back up again. • Deficit spending has been used since the 1930s to prevent depressions.

  22. last hired and the first fired • Historians criticize the New Deal for not doing enough to protect the rights of women and African Americans. • African Americans were the last hired and the first fired and so were disproportionally affected by the privation of the Depression. • They continued to suffer discrimination and racial hostility.

  23. tenant farmers • Forty-eight percent of black workers were unemployed in 1933 but they were not protected by the programs of the New Deal. • The farm subsidies paid to landowners hurt sharecroppers and tenant farmers, who were often African American. • The CCC was racially segregated and the TVA gave skilled jobs to whites.

  24. Black Cabinet • However there were significant attempts to address racial discrimination. President Roosevelt was the first president to make a concerted effort to consider the needs of African Americans. • FDR regularly consulted the “Black Cabinet,” a group of African American government employees but not Cabinet members.

  25. Eleanor Roosevelt • Eleanor Roosevelt championed Marian Anderson against the Daughters of the American Revolution and arranged for her concert on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial.

  26. Fair Employment Practices Commission • After African Americans threatened a march on Washington, a commission was established to protect the rights of African American workers in wartime industries [Fair Employment Practices Commission (FEPC)]. • Consequently, northern blacks began to vote for the Democratic Party.

  27. job discrimination • During the Depression, women had to “use it up, wear it out, and make it do or do without.” • They also had to find whatever work they could to help their families, despite job discrimination based on the idea that they were taking jobs away from men.

  28. National Recovery Administration • The New Deal did not address the specific problems of women. • The CCC was limited to young men and other New Deal programs hired many more men than women. • Some early business codes [National Recovery Administration (NRA)] allowed a lower minimum wage for women.

  29. Frances Perkins • The Social Security Act failed to provide coverage for many women workers. • President Roosevelt named the first woman to a cabinet level position, Frances Perkins, and relied upon his wife Eleanor for information and advice.

  30. reform movements • The New Deal should be understood as part of the pattern of reform movements that are followed by a conservative reaction in United States history. • The New Deal recognized the role of labor unions and established minimum wage and maximum hours that were a goal of the unions of the late 1800s and the progressive movement of the early twentieth century; however, advancements for unions came under attack again in the 1950s.

  31. Great Society • The New Deal was both a continuation of the progressive movement and a precursor to the reform movements of the 1960s, including the civil rights movement and the Great Society.

More Related