The New Deal Essay

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“It is your problem no less than it is mine. Together we cannot fail,” President Franklin Delano Roosevelt said in the closing of his weekly “fireside chat” on March 12, 1933, while discussing, with the hundreds of thousands of bewildered United States citizens, the painful topic of the Great Depression. When Roosevelt took office in March of 1933, just five months after the fateful stock market crash that caused the depression, America was in full-blown economic turmoil. Every day after the crash, more and more people were laid off from their already low paying jobs, making it impossible for them to support their families, and even themselves. While characterizing the aftermath of the depression in his First Inaugural Address, FDR reveals that “the means of exchange are frozen in the currents of trade; the withered leaves of industrial enterprise lie on every side; farmers find no markets for their produce; the savings of many years in thousands of families are gone.” FDR had an indisputable determination to solve this nationwide dilemma, evident in his solution, named The New Deal. However, it has been constantly debated whether the New Deal was a success or a failure. This question is now brought up, once again. In the years preceding the stock market crash of 1929, the condition of America’s economy wasn’t anywhere near ideal, but it certainly was not at its worst either—not yet. Also known as “the Roaring Twenties,” this period before the crash brought with it an extreme over dependency on factories and production, especially because the automobile industry exploded in popularity among the opulent class. Also, the distinction between rich and poor was amplified. Poverty was common among 60% of the population, whil... ... middle of paper ... ...nge could be made and that their country will, in fact, be able to withstand the Great Depression. The evident question is: Did the New Deal succeed? It is true that it did not directly put an end to the Great Depression. That can be attributed to World War II. However, I do not believe that the New Deal was made for that purpose, per say. The New Deal was much greater than that. Its true purpose was to create a strong economic and political foundation for America to fall back on once the Great Depression concluded. And it did just that. Without Roosevelt’s New Deal, the United States economy after the Great Depression wouldn’t have been any better than it was before and during the Great Depression. A great country cannot exist without a stable infrastructure, and that infrastructure was established by none other than Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s New Deal.

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