The New Deal Did Not Help The Great Depression

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The New Deal did not help the Great Depression. The Great Depression started on October 29 1929 when the stock market that had been steadily climbing crashed. Companies started firing their workers because they themselves were going bankrupt which resulted in 1932 when the great depression was at its worst when one quarter of the American workforce were unemployed. Two months after Roosevelt gained his presidency on March 4 1933 he worked swiftly to get the economy running again and get the united states out of the Great Depression by creating the New Deal.The New Deal was a set of programs that were set to help end the Great Depression in 1933 trying to lower the unemployment rate from 22.5% in the year before. The second new deal would come in at 1935 and would also come in to help with the problem …show more content…

The Farm Relief Bill was meant to help U.S. farmers but what they didn’t think about was the how they were hurting the economy. In “Don't Crush Them” (Halladay) The Farm Relief Bill can be depicted as a bulldozer going through a road and destroying the federal economy, economic laws and the traditional american principles affecting the consumer, Taxpayer, and the businessman. The agriculture adjustment administration (Birdsell) created a tax that paid farmers to not make certain crops. An individual could argue that this was helping farmers gain money which would help them live through the depression. This may be true but the way they were getting money was from taxpayers and those taxpayers were also living through the depression and this new program was bleeding them dry and lower production of products would make prices higher for these products. This evidence show that some bills were hurting the economy. This also means that some of the New Deal programs/bills did not help the economy but actually hurt the economy and made the Great Depression

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