2. Consumerism: Wanting to buy all of the best right away. It
is all about BUYING, BUYING, BUYING, BUYING……
“I want it all,
I want it all,
I want it all,
and I want it now.”
3. Great Depression – New Deal Module Two: Causes of
The Great Depression – Part 1
Overproduction in Agriculture and Industry
OVERPRODUCTION means making too much of something.
How do you know when you have made too much???
You know that you have OVERPRODUCED (made too much) when people will not buy what
you made to sell them.
Overproduction in Factories
What do YOU think the banks could do when the farmers and businesses could not pay
back their loans???
5. Sugar in storage
Made TOO much sugar. So
much that you could NOT sell
all of it.
How much was THIS sugar
making the person who grew
it?
Auto Assembly
Made TOO many cars. Could
NOT sell all of them.
How much were these cars
earning for the company.
6. How much is something worth if nobody wants to buy it??? Nothing.
Oh, people might offer you some amount of money, but they would not pay you
enough to even make up for what it cost to make the thing (expenses).
Do this for very long and you go BANKRUPT, out of business. Businesses could not
make enough money to pay their EXPENSES (bills) selling products nobody wanted to
buy.
7. Overproduction Question:
Then what will happen when the farmer, or factory owner, can’t pay back their loans because
they can’t sell their products?
How will it have an effect on him?
If the smaller bank can’t get back the money people like the farmer and
factory owner owe them, what will happen when larger banks this bank
owes asks them for their money?
8. Too Much Debt (What you owe):
Consumers Bought “On
Credit”
THEN
Could Not Pay Back Debt
Some consumers bought goods on credit but could not pay back their debts – the
businesses lost money on the sales and consumers stopped buying new items while they
worked to pay off their debts.
9. People wanted to buy all of the new products that were now available. Of course, if your
neighbor had a new car, YOU had to have an even better new car . It was no problem, you
were making lots of money at your job because the company you worked for was making
LOTS of money.
Bett
e
dio
cier Ra
Fan
r Car
10. Oh, you might not have enough to pay cash for all of this stuff you wanted.
Your new house,
your new cars,
your new electric washing machine,
your new electric vacuum cleaner,
your new electric stove,
your new radios,
your new record player,
AND all of the new food items now available (Planter's Peanuts, Wheaties, Del Monte canned
foods, Birds-Eye frozen vegetables, Peter Pan peanut butter).
What Can
You Do???
13. But what would happen if demand for
the product your company made ever
went down too much???
In other words, your company no longer
needed as many workers to make the
products.
14. You would lose your job.
If you lost your job:
•you would not be able to pay the bank
back the money you had borrowed.
•Also, if you lost your job you would NOT
be going out to buy new stuff.
This means demand for all kinds of
products would go down even more.
Everybody would suffer as more businesses
began to close because they could not sell
their products.
16. Say you deposited money in a savings
account in a bank.
You go back some time later to get it
back, but the bank tells you they do not
have it. They loaned it out, and cannot
get it back!!!
In fact they loaned out so much that they
can't get back that THEY can no longer
pay their bills, and are going out of
business.
17. Then all the money that you put there for safe keeping
( Savings Account) is gone.
You see, the bank does not keep the money you gave
them to save for you right there at their building. They
use it to make money for themselves by loaning it out to
other people. The BIG problem is that if loans are not
paid back then the money is gone.
18. With all these people working in the computing section of a lender, what does it
mean about the amount of borrowing going on?
19. Too much debt questions:
Describe the problem of too much debt as you learned in the presentation. Use some
specific examples.
What SHOULD people have done back in the 1920’s so the problem of too much debt did
not become such a big deal?
Pretend you are a person living back then, and have to make a plan for how you are
going to spend/use the money you make,. Briefly describe what it would be, and make
certain you say how you will deal with borrowing money (getting debt).