What Are The Effects Of The New Deal

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Imagine, as a child, walking miles and miles to school each day. Your only hot meal is provided by the Works Progress Administration (WPA) school lunch program, a solution created by the New Deal. These were some of the effects of the Great Depression, and the so-called solutions of the New Deal programs. It all started in the 1920s when people were frivolous with their money. The used credit to buy their daily wants and needs including inviesting in the stock market. When the stock market crashed in 1929 everything fell apart businesses went under, people lost their jobs, lost their homes and sometimes only had one meal a day provided by the WPA. The New Deal was created by the thirty-second president, Franklin Delano Roosevelt. The program lasted for roughly three years; from 1933 to 1935. It was created to provide relief, reform, and recovery to the American people. Roosevelt realized more needed to be done to relieve the Depression, so he made the Second New Deal to extend the effects of the first.The programs of the New Deal might have relieved some hardships, but many remained unsolved. For example, many Native Americans’ needs were unattended to, and African …show more content…

Discrimination was a large part of the New Deal by leaving many African Americans out of the work force. The Native Americans problems were supposedly looked at, but never actually solved. The effects of the Great Depression were so bad, that people were sick, miserable and depressed beyond compare as was written in the song, “No Depression in Heaven,” by the Carter family. The outcome of the Great Depression and the effects of the New Deal helped to decide the future of America and showed the program did not help the country get out of the economic depression. The New Deal solved some issues, but in the end there were many problems that needed more

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