Conditions of the Depression
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Transcript Conditions of the Depression
Conditions In
The Great Depression
1929-1939
BIG 3 REVIEW QUIZ
Who were the two Prime Ministers during
the Depression? What parties were they
from? (/2)
In the Supply and Demand concept, if
Demand goes down and Supply remains
constant, what happens to prices? (/1)
Name one initiative taken to try to solve
the depression by each Prime Minister.
(/2)
Bonus: What years was Bennett in office?
1933- The worst year
GNP in 1933 had dropped 40% from
pre-crash levels
Canada’s exports declined by half
Over-dependence on natural
resource exports
26.6% unemployment
In some regions of Canada
unemployment was 30-50%
Richard Bedford Bennett
Relief
Most relief funds came in the form of
public works
Disorganized attempt meant that only $4
million of the $20 million went in direct
relief to people
Registering for relief was humiliating and
difficult
Relief usually came in vouchers (food
stamps)
Soup Kitchens
Depression in the Prairies
Record low prices for grain
Most severe and prolonged drought in
history
1929-1937 drought in Palliser’s Triangle
WWI $2 a bushel for wheat
1932-33: 39.375 cents
The Dustbowl
Labour Camps
Riding the Rails made government
nervous
Work camps for unemployed, single men
Under the jurisdiction of the Department
of National Defence
20 cents a day
1932 saw the establishment of the first
labour camps
Lack of funds
Single men could not get relief
Relief Camps
Unrest in the camps
In the four years of the camps there
were 359 strikes, riots and
disturbances
RCWU was associated with the
Communist party and began to
organize protests for decent wages
On to Ottawa began in BC
On to Ottawa Trek
The On to Ottawa Trek
April 1935 - 3000 relief camp workers
converged on Vancouver riots and
protests for weeks
1800 got on trains for Ottawa
June 14, 1935 - 2000 men converged on
Regina
Arthur “Slim” Evans and seven of his men
agreed to a meeting with the Prime
Minister
The Six Demands of the
workers
50 cents an hour wage for unskilled
labour and union rates for skilled labour
All workers must be covered by the
Compensation Act and adequate first aid
for the jobs
Elected committee of relief workers
Department of National Defence no
longer be in charge of the camps
A genuine system of social and
unemployment insurance
All workers guaranteed the right to vote
Regina Riot
The meeting ended in a stalemate
Evans returned to Regina
July 1, 1935 rally in Market Square
Riot ensued
1 police office dead and 100
protesters arrested
8, including Evans were sent to jail
Regina Riot
Confronting the Depression
Tariffs for protection
Smoot-Hawley tariff devastated
Canada (30-60%)
In July 1932 Bennett makes a half
hearted attempt at free trade at the
Imperial Conference in Ottawa
Bennett’s New Deal
1935 election year
Proposed a “New Deal” like FDR’s in the
US
Proposed a government program of
unemployment insurance
Prairie Farm Rehabilitation Act
The Canadian Wheat Board
The Natural Products Marketing Board
New Deal
Thwarted in the courts, but also
proposed UI and national health
insurance
Bank of Canada Act- created a
central bank
Canadians did not trust Bennett
1935 Election
Mackenzie King made few promises
Promised to disband the work camps
1935 the Conservatives lost 3/5 of
the vote capturing only 40 seats
King won 125 seats
King adopted some New Deal
policies, but not much changed for
Canadians
New Political Parties
Social Credit- William Aberhart $25
a month to make up for the lack of
purchasing power
56/63 Albertan seats
15/17 seats in Ottawa from Alberta
“Bible Bill” (William) Aberhart
New Political Parties
The Co-operative Commonwealth
Federation formed in 1932
Regina Manifesto- social democracy
Government control of key industries
Welfare state- medicare, welfare and UI
J.S. Woodsworth
1944 Tommy Douglas elected in
Saskatchewan
New Political Parties
In Quebec the Church pushed for reform
Anti-socialist but proposed programs to
regulate monopolies and improve
conditions
Some Liberals broke away and formed
the Action Liberale nationale
Maurice Duplessis of the Conservative
party formed an alliance to create the
Union Nationale in 1935
Maurice Duplessis
The Communist Party
Tim Buck leader
Communist Party found an audience
during the Great Depression
The Party was outlawed in 1931
Tim Buck and other leaders jailed
from 1932-1934
Protests, marches and hunger
strikes
The Communist Party of
Canada
Aboriginal Peoples in the
Depression
Services cut back to bare minimum
as outlined by Treaties
Birthrate twice as high
Death rate 4x as high
Metis had it worse as there were no
treaties
1934 90% of Metis in Alberta had
TB, paralysis, blindness or syphilis
Confronting the Outsider
Relief for Chinese $1.12 versus $2.50 a
week for non-Chinese
Sections 40 and 41 of the Immigration
Act allowed for deportation of
unemployable recipients of relief
In Alberta 1930-1934 2547 immigrants
were deported
This discouraged many from applying for
relief
Immigration
Even before the Depression,
immigration was discouraged
Jews were especially discouraged
Canada not welcoming to Jews
escaping Nazi Germany
Frederick Blair “none is too many”
Jewish Refugees
Country admitting Jewish
Refugees from the Nazis 1933-45
Number of Refugees
United States
240 000
Great Britain
85 000
China
25 000
Argentina
25 000
Brazil
25 000
Columbia and Mexico 40 000
Canada
5000 (pathetic)
Conclusion
The demand for goods in World War
II finally pushed Canada out of the
Great Depression
The growth of the welfare state and
gov’t supervision of vital aspects of
the economy continued into the
1980s as a result of the Great
Depression