Transcript Slide 1

The Great Depression
1929-1939
Immediate Cause:
Stock Market Crash:
> "Black Tuesday" – Oct. 1929
- 16 mil shares sold on NY Stock Ex
• People buy into stock market, prices inflated,
prices of stocks fall quickly,
• Investors who had borrowed $ to buy share,
went bankrupt in single day
• Losses due to over-speculation & “Buying on
Margin” = Bad
• many people lost entire life savings
Background Causes:
1.Overproduction:
• Eg. overproduction of wheat = fewer sales
to foreign markets
»decreased sales farmers not make
$  higher unemployment
Background Causes cont.
• 2). High Tariffs - protectionism:
• U.S. raises tariffs, other countries respond
by doing the same
• Slow down in world trade b/c fewer
export opportunities
Background Causes cont.
• 3). Germany can’t pay reparations:
• German economy ruined, can’t pay
• Britain & France depended on these payments
in order to repay their debts to the US
Background Causes: International Debt cont.
Consequences:
> countries lost ability to re-pay war loans
> US loans to Germany; G repays Br/Fr /Belg as
reparations
> When US stops loans, Germany can't pay
reparations
> Br/Fr can't pay war loans
> economies collapse
Sustaining Causes:
1. Dust Bowl / Droughts/ wind storms
> over farming wheat - no crop rotation
http://www.history.com/topics/dustbowl/videos/black-blizzard#blackblizzard
Sustaining Causes cont.
2. Locust Plagues
> grasshoppers like hot, dry conditions.
Millions descended on farms, eating
entire crops, and even farm tools in
hours.
http://www.livinghistoryfarm.org/farmingi
nthe30s/pests_02.html
Effects on Canada:
• Canada depended on export of primary
resources esp. wheat & newsprint
• Canadians lose jobs when demand decreases
• When US economy crashed, Canada’s crashed
too b/c of major trade ties
• working class people most affected
Effects on Canada – cont.
• had to collect “pogey”  government relief
payments
• applied for assistance, get food vouchers 
humiliating
• soup kitchens
Effects on Canada – cont.
• by 1933 more than ¼ of Canadian workforce
unemployed
• many young, unemployed men looking for
work, travel by trains:
- roof, “riding the
rods” underneath
Effects on Canada – cont.
• shanty towns spring up
 “jungles”
Effect on Prairies:
• - Prairies hit the hardest:
–droughts
–locusts
–falling wheat prices = farm
bankruptcies
Disadvantaged:
• difficult for women to find work – paid very
poorly
• Aboriginal families  $5 a month; expected to
“live off the land”
• Chinese discriminated against; many starved.
• Jewish immigrants targeted
• Almost 10,000 immigrants deported from
Canada in 1st half of Depression
• 1931, gov’t stop all immigration
Mackenzie King’s response to Depression:
• King unprepared, thought depr. temporary
• King said provincial & municipal gov’t
responsible for people
he would not give a
“five cent piece” to
Tory Provincial gov’t
“LAISSEZ- FAIRE”
• election in 1930- King loses, Conservative RB
Bennet wins
RB Bennett’s response to the Depression:
(Conservative Party)
1). raise tariffs  protect
Canadian business from
foreign competition
2).Gov’t feared men join
Communist party > Gov’t ban party
- mid-class Canadians scared of jobless drifting
men.
RB Bennett’s response – cont.
3). Create work camps
 unemployed, single men
 isolated camps
 work projects; roads, clearing land, ditch
digging
 paid 20 cents / day + room & board
 bad food, bugs, nothing to do
RB Bennett’s response – cont.
4). Bennett's (Little) New Deal 1935 - based on FDR's
New Deal
Called for:
- Taxes based on income
- Max # hours in work week
- Minimum wage
- Regulation of working conditions
- Unemployment insurance
- Health and accident insurance
- Support for farmers and seniors
- > revised Old Age Pension to help seniors 65+
>1935 Prairie Farm Rehabilitation Administration Act
> created Canadian Wheat Board to regulate prices
- Unemployment Relief Act – gave provinces money for
work-creation programs
* things get worse
* Bennett targeted, blamed
“Bennett barnyard” “Bennet blanket”
“Bennett Buggy”
On-to-Ottawa Trek:
• 1935, over thousand men meet with Relief
Camp Workers Union
• decide to take complaints to Ottawa
• Start in Vancouver
• ride trains across Prairies, more people join
On-to-Ottawa Trek – cont.
• By Regina, 2000 men part of the trek
• in Regina, RCMP keep them there, only
leaders go to Ottawa
• Bennett not trust leaders, call them
“criminal”, “thief”
• RCMP clear protesters out of Regina stadium
• protesters resist > REGINA RIOT
• 1 man killed, many injured, 130 arrested
Vancouver Protest:
• gov’t close relief camps 1937
• gov’t reduce relief payments
• men hold “sit-ins”  occupy Vancouver Art
Gallery & post office
• police use tear gas, much damage
1930 Election
• King’s attitude towards
the Depression cost him
the 1930 election
• R.B. Bennett, leader of
Conservatives, becomes
Prime Minister
Bennett’s Response to the Great
Depression 1930-1935
• Gave provinces $20 million for work-creation
programs/relief such as relief camps and
pogey
• Increased tariffs by 50%
• Prairie Rehabilitation Act
• Economy does not improve
Bennett’s (Little) New Deal 1935
• Based on FDR’s New Deal
• Called for:
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
Taxes based on income
Max. # of hours in work week
Min. wage
Regulation of working conditions
Unemployment insurance
Health and accident insurance
Support for farmers and seniors
• Too little, too late