The Inevitable Causes Of The Great Depression

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During 1928, the stock market continued to roar, as average price rose and trading grew; however as speculative fever grew more intense, the market began to fall apart around 1929. After the stock market crash, a period began that lasted for a full decade, from 1929 to 1939, where the nation plunged into the severest and the most prolonged economic depression in history - the Great Depression. During this inevitable period, the economy plummeted and the unemployment rate skyrocketed due to poor economic diversification, uneven distribution of wealth and poor international debt structure. The United States began a period of uninterrupted prosperity an economy expansion during the 1920s, coining the term, the roaring twenties. Automobiles and construction became the most important and excessively relied industries in the nation as a result of the assembly line and other innovations. However, the prosperity depended only on these few basic industries, thus,
The expenditures on construction fell from $11 billion in 1926 to under $9 billion in 1929, and automobile sales fell by more than a third in the first nine months of 1929. Therefore, when these overinvested
The symptoms of the Great Depression began since the World War I and the economic boom of the 1920s, which was built on a shaky foundation. As a result, the Great Depression remained inevitable due to poor economic diversification, uneven distribution of wealth and poor international debt structure. However, although the Depression shook much of American society and culture, the capitalist system survived, the American people remained receptive and the belief in the "American way of life" didn't falter throughout the long years of economic

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