After the stock market crash of 1929, the economy of the United States was hit very hard. This period is referred to as the Great Depression that last twelve years (1929-1941). During this time, the standard of life of the American people dropped considerably with over fifty percent of children living without adequate medical care, food or even shelter. Unemployment rate hit almost twenty-five percent and close to three quarter of a million farmers declared bankruptcy.
In 1933, Franklin Delano Roosevelt replaced Herbert Hoover as President of the United States and among the first steps he took was to get Congress to pass a number of measures to launch a series of economic programs as a response to the Great Depression. They have come to be known as the New Deal with a focus on what some historians have referred to as the “3 Rs” (Relief, Recovery and Reform).
This 1933 cartoon depicts Roosevelt exhausting
Congress with his many reform policies.
The New Deal consisted of measures aiming at bringing some form of relief to the millions of Americans who had lost their jobs to the crisis and the poor by providing programs such as the Social Security Act of 1935 to assist the handicapped and the elderly or the Works Progress Administration (1935) to provide work to unskilled men, women and artists. Another goal of the New Deal was to launch programs to create jobs and try to bring the economy back to its feet at least to the level prior to the Great Depression. For this purpose, many projects were launched such as the Tennessee Valley Authority which was a project to build a dam in order to produce electricity and prevent floods in the Tennessee Valley, or the Civil Work Administration of 1933 that provided temporary jobs to millions of unemployed.
Unemployed workers sit on a street in a 1936
workers sit on a street in a 1936 photograph by Dorothea Lange.
Finally, the New Deal also aimed at reforming the economic system to prevent another depression to ever happen again. For that, the US Government established different agencies for that purpose among others the Federal Deposit Insurance Company which insured bank deposits and therefore helped restore the confidence in banks that people had lost after the stock market crash of 1929. Another agency was the National Labor Relations Board which goal was to act as the mediator between the management and the workers in resolving matters that arose between them.
All these programs and many others had an impact on the American people depending on the category to which each person belonged to. A farmer was affected by the Farm Security Administration which was created to help farmers with economic and educational programs or by the Federal Crop Insurance Corporation which helped compensate loss of revenue or production for the farmers.
For those in the finance field, the US Government created the Reconstruction Finance Corporation to lend large amounts of money to big companies, and the Security Exchange Commission to ensure that the companies fully disclosed financial information to allow investors to make advised decisions when they want to purchase stocks.
For the unskilled men, many projects were launched to allow them to get a job, such as the construction of the Empire State building in New York or the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco, California.
One particular category, the African-American, suffered terribly of the Great Depression. Because of the segregation and racism that was rampant in the country, and especially in the South, many of them did not have access to the programs the New Deal had just created such as the Social Security.
In definitive, the New Deal had a very considerable impact on the American people because it changed the relationship between the people and their government. As the Federal Government’s power increased with the different reforms and regulations passed so did the American people’s expectation toward that same government. At one level or another, everyone was affected in some way, and so were businesses which had to face regulations and restrictions in the way of conducting business. The New Deal also brought some negative impact such as pollution.