The Great Depression: Difference between revisions
BloomWiki: The Great Depression |
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{{BloomIntro}} | {{BloomIntro}} | ||
The Great Depression is the "Study of the Crash"—the investigation of the "Worst Economic Disaster" in history (1929–1939) that proved that "Free Markets" can "Collapse" if they aren't "Managed." While the "Roaring Twenties" was a time of "Infinite Optimism," the "Great Depression" was a time of "Infinite Breadlines." From the "Stock Market Crash" and the "Dust Bowl" to the "Keynesian Revolution" and **Franklin D. Roosevelt's** "New Deal," this field explores the "Fragility of Money." It is the science of "Recovery," explaining how the world learned that the "Government" must sometimes "Spend its way out" of a "Hole" to save civilization. | The Great Depression is the "Study of the Crash"—the investigation of the "Worst Economic Disaster" in history (1929–1939) that proved that "Free Markets" can "Collapse" if they aren't "Managed." While the "Roaring Twenties" was a time of "Infinite Optimism," the "Great Depression" was a time of "Infinite Breadlines." From the "Stock Market Crash" and the "Dust Bowl" to the "Keynesian Revolution" and **Franklin D. Roosevelt's** "New Deal," this field explores the "Fragility of Money." It is the science of "Recovery," explaining how the world learned that the "Government" must sometimes "Spend its way out" of a "Hole" to save civilization. | ||
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== Remembering == | __TOC__ | ||
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== <span style="color: #FFFFFF;">Remembering</span> == | |||
* '''The Great Depression''' — A severe world-wide economic depression that took place mostly during the 1930s. | * '''The Great Depression''' — A severe world-wide economic depression that took place mostly during the 1930s. | ||
* '''Black Tuesday''' (October 29, 1929) — The day the "Stock Market Crashed," wiping out "Billions of dollars" of wealth in hours. | * '''Black Tuesday''' (October 29, 1929) — The day the "Stock Market Crashed," wiping out "Billions of dollars" of wealth in hours. | ||
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* '''The Gold Standard''' — A monetary system where money was "Back by Gold," which "Prevented" governments from "Printing Money" to help the poor. | * '''The Gold Standard''' — A monetary system where money was "Back by Gold," which "Prevented" governments from "Printing Money" to help the poor. | ||
* '''The Social Security Act (1935)''' — A landmark "New Deal" law that provided "Retirement Income" and "Unemployment Insurance." | * '''The Social Security Act (1935)''' — A landmark "New Deal" law that provided "Retirement Income" and "Unemployment Insurance." | ||
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== Understanding == | <div style="background-color: #006400; color: #FFFFFF; padding: 20px; border-radius: 8px; margin-bottom: 15px;"> | ||
== <span style="color: #FFFFFF;">Understanding</span> == | |||
The Great Depression is understood through '''Liquidity''' and '''Confidence'''. | The Great Depression is understood through '''Liquidity''' and '''Confidence'''. | ||
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'''The 'Bank Holiday' (1933)'''': One of FDR's first acts. He "Shut down every bank in the country" for 4 days. Only "Healthy Banks" were allowed to re-open. This "Shock to the System" stopped the "Panic" and proved that the "Government was in Control" of the money. | '''The 'Bank Holiday' (1933)'''': One of FDR's first acts. He "Shut down every bank in the country" for 4 days. Only "Healthy Banks" were allowed to re-open. This "Shock to the System" stopped the "Panic" and proved that the "Government was in Control" of the money. | ||
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== Applying == | <div style="background-color: #8B0000; color: #FFFFFF; padding: 20px; border-radius: 8px; margin-bottom: 15px;"> | ||
== <span style="color: #FFFFFF;">Applying</span> == | |||
'''Modeling 'The Keynesian Multiplier' (Calculating how '$1 of Spending' grows the economy):''' | '''Modeling 'The Keynesian Multiplier' (Calculating how '$1 of Spending' grows the economy):''' | ||
<syntaxhighlight lang="python"> | <syntaxhighlight lang="python"> | ||
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: '''The 'Bretton Woods' Conference (1944)''' → (See Article 518). The world leaders met to "Ensure a Great Depression Never Happens Again" by creating the **IMF** and **World Bank**. | : '''The 'Bretton Woods' Conference (1944)''' → (See Article 518). The world leaders met to "Ensure a Great Depression Never Happens Again" by creating the **IMF** and **World Bank**. | ||
: '''The 2008 Financial Crisis''' → A "Modern Echo" of 1929. Governments "Learned the lesson" and "Injected Billions" into the banks to prevent a "Second Great Depression." | : '''The 2008 Financial Crisis''' → A "Modern Echo" of 1929. Governments "Learned the lesson" and "Injected Billions" into the banks to prevent a "Second Great Depression." | ||
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== Analyzing == | <div style="background-color: #8B4500; color: #FFFFFF; padding: 20px; border-radius: 8px; margin-bottom: 15px;"> | ||
== <span style="color: #FFFFFF;">Analyzing</span> == | |||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
|+ Laissez-Faire vs. Keynesianism | |+ Laissez-Faire vs. Keynesianism | ||
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'''The Concept of "The Paradox of Thrift"''': Analyzing "Individual vs. Group." For **one person**, "Saving Money" is "Smart." But if **everyone** "Saves Money" at the same time, "No one spends," "No one earns," and the **Whole Economy Dies**. What is "Good for the part" can be "Deadly for the whole." | '''The Concept of "The Paradox of Thrift"''': Analyzing "Individual vs. Group." For **one person**, "Saving Money" is "Smart." But if **everyone** "Saves Money" at the same time, "No one spends," "No one earns," and the **Whole Economy Dies**. What is "Good for the part" can be "Deadly for the whole." | ||
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== Evaluating == | <div style="background-color: #483D8B; color: #FFFFFF; padding: 20px; border-radius: 8px; margin-bottom: 15px;"> | ||
== <span style="color: #FFFFFF;">Evaluating</span> == | |||
Evaluating the Great Depression: | Evaluating the Great Depression: | ||
# '''The "War" Solution''': Did the "New Deal" end the depression, or did **World War II** (massive military spending) do it? | # '''The "War" Solution''': Did the "New Deal" end the depression, or did **World War II** (massive military spending) do it? | ||
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# '''The "Moral Hazard"''': If the "Government Saves the Banks," do the banks "Learn their lesson" or just "Take bigger risks" next time? | # '''The "Moral Hazard"''': If the "Government Saves the Banks," do the banks "Learn their lesson" or just "Take bigger risks" next time? | ||
# '''Equality''': Did the "Great Depression" lead to the "Rise of Fascism" (Hitler/Mussolini) by making people "Desperate" for a "Strong Leader"? | # '''Equality''': Did the "Great Depression" lead to the "Rise of Fascism" (Hitler/Mussolini) by making people "Desperate" for a "Strong Leader"? | ||
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== Creating == | <div style="background-color: #2F4F4F; color: #FFFFFF; padding: 20px; border-radius: 8px; margin-bottom: 15px;"> | ||
== <span style="color: #FFFFFF;">Creating</span> == | |||
Future Frontiers: | Future Frontiers: | ||
# '''The 'Digital' New Deal''': A "Global Spending Plan" to "Build the Internet" in every poor country, "Creating Jobs" and "Demand" for the 21st century. | # '''The 'Digital' New Deal''': A "Global Spending Plan" to "Build the Internet" in every poor country, "Creating Jobs" and "Demand" for the 21st century. | ||
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[[Category:Science]] | [[Category:Science]] | ||
[[Category:Great Depression]] | [[Category:Great Depression]] | ||
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Latest revision as of 01:59, 25 April 2026
How to read this page: This article maps the topic from beginner to expert across six levels � Remembering, Understanding, Applying, Analyzing, Evaluating, and Creating. Scan the headings to see the full scope, then read from wherever your knowledge starts to feel uncertain. Learn more about how BloomWiki works ?
The Great Depression is the "Study of the Crash"—the investigation of the "Worst Economic Disaster" in history (1929–1939) that proved that "Free Markets" can "Collapse" if they aren't "Managed." While the "Roaring Twenties" was a time of "Infinite Optimism," the "Great Depression" was a time of "Infinite Breadlines." From the "Stock Market Crash" and the "Dust Bowl" to the "Keynesian Revolution" and **Franklin D. Roosevelt's** "New Deal," this field explores the "Fragility of Money." It is the science of "Recovery," explaining how the world learned that the "Government" must sometimes "Spend its way out" of a "Hole" to save civilization.
Remembering[edit]
- The Great Depression — A severe world-wide economic depression that took place mostly during the 1930s.
- Black Tuesday (October 29, 1929) — The day the "Stock Market Crashed," wiping out "Billions of dollars" of wealth in hours.
- The Dust Bowl — A period of severe "Dust Storms" that greatly damaged the "Ecology and Agriculture" of the American prairies.
- Hoovervilles — "Shanty towns" built by homeless people during the depression, named after President Herbert Hoover.
- Keynesian Economics (John Maynard Keynes) — The theory that "Government Spending" can "Jump-start" a stalled economy.
- The New Deal — A series of "Social Programs," "Financial Reforms," and "Public Works" enacted by FDR to end the depression.
- Protectionism — When countries "Raise Taxes on Imports" (Tariffs) to protect their own businesses, which actually "Made the Depression Worse" by killing global trade.
- Bank Run — When "Everyone" tries to "Withdraw their money" at the same time, causing the "Bank to Fail."
- The Gold Standard — A monetary system where money was "Back by Gold," which "Prevented" governments from "Printing Money" to help the poor.
- The Social Security Act (1935) — A landmark "New Deal" law that provided "Retirement Income" and "Unemployment Insurance."
Understanding[edit]
The Great Depression is understood through Liquidity and Confidence.
1. The "Downward Spiral" (Deflation): Why did it last so long?
- Prices "Started to Fall."
- People "Stopped Spending" because they thought "Prices will be lower tomorrow."
- Businesses "Fired Workers" because no one was buying.
- Workers "Had no money" to spend.
- The cycle "Feed itself" until **25%** of people were unemployed.
- It was a "Black Hole" of "Missing Demand."
2. The "Keynesian" Fix (Spending): John Maynard Keynes argued: "The Market is Stuck."
- If the "People" can't spend, the **Government** must spend.
- Even if you "Pay people to dig holes and fill them back up," they will "Have a paycheck."
- They will "Buy Bread." The Baker will "Hire a Helper." The Helper will "Buy a Coat."
- This is the **Multiplier Effect**. "Spending" is the "Fuel" of the machine.
3. The "Confidence" Game (Psychology): FDR's famous line: "The only thing we have to fear is **Fear Itself**."
- The depression was a "Mental Sickness."
- People "Lost Faith" in the future.
- FDR used "Fireside Chats" (Radio) to "Talk to the Nation" and "Restore Trust."
- He created the **FDIC** (Bank Insurance) so people would "Feel Safe" keeping their money in banks again.
The 'Bank Holiday' (1933)': One of FDR's first acts. He "Shut down every bank in the country" for 4 days. Only "Healthy Banks" were allowed to re-open. This "Shock to the System" stopped the "Panic" and proved that the "Government was in Control" of the money.
Applying[edit]
Modeling 'The Keynesian Multiplier' (Calculating how '$1 of Spending' grows the economy): <syntaxhighlight lang="python"> def calculate_economic_stimulus(spending_amount, saving_rate):
"""
Shows how 'Spending' ripples through the city.
"""
# Marginal Propensity to Consume (MPC)
mpc = 1 - saving_rate
# The Multiplier = 1 / (1 - MPC)
multiplier = 1 / (1 - mpc)
total_impact = spending_amount * multiplier
return f"SPENT: ${spending_amount} | TOTAL ECONOMIC IMPACT: ${round(total_impact)}"
- If people save 20% and spend 80%
print(calculate_economic_stimulus(1000000, 0.20)) # $1M becomes $5M! </syntaxhighlight>
- Depression Landmarks
- The 'Grapes of Wrath' (Steinbeck) → The "Great Novel" of the depression: it told the "Human Story" of families "Losing their land" and traveling to California for a "Better Life."
- The 'Hoover Dam' → A "New Deal" project: it "Employed Thousands" and created "Clean Power," a symbol of "Government as Builder."
- The 'Bretton Woods' Conference (1944) → (See Article 518). The world leaders met to "Ensure a Great Depression Never Happens Again" by creating the **IMF** and **World Bank**.
- The 2008 Financial Crisis → A "Modern Echo" of 1929. Governments "Learned the lesson" and "Injected Billions" into the banks to prevent a "Second Great Depression."
Analyzing[edit]
| Feature | Classical (Pre-1929) | Keynesian (Post-1936) |
|---|---|---|
| Market View | "Self-Correcting" (Invisible Hand) | "Unstable" (Needs a 'Nudge') |
| Government Role | "Do Nothing" (Stay out of it) | "Intervene" (Manage Demand) |
| Goal | "Balanced Budget" | "Full Employment" |
| View of Debt | "Evil" and "Dangerous" | "A Tool" for Growth |
| Analogy | A 'Tree' (Let it grow naturally) | A 'Car' (The government is the driver) |
The Concept of "The Paradox of Thrift": Analyzing "Individual vs. Group." For **one person**, "Saving Money" is "Smart." But if **everyone** "Saves Money" at the same time, "No one spends," "No one earns," and the **Whole Economy Dies**. What is "Good for the part" can be "Deadly for the whole."
Evaluating[edit]
Evaluating the Great Depression:
- The "War" Solution: Did the "New Deal" end the depression, or did **World War II** (massive military spending) do it?
- Gold: Was the "Gold Standard" the "True Villain" that "Trapped" countries in poverty?
- The "Moral Hazard": If the "Government Saves the Banks," do the banks "Learn their lesson" or just "Take bigger risks" next time?
- Equality: Did the "Great Depression" lead to the "Rise of Fascism" (Hitler/Mussolini) by making people "Desperate" for a "Strong Leader"?
Creating[edit]
Future Frontiers:
- The 'Digital' New Deal: A "Global Spending Plan" to "Build the Internet" in every poor country, "Creating Jobs" and "Demand" for the 21st century.
- AI 'Early Warning' Systems: A "Macro-Economic AI" that "Detects a Spiral" (like in 1929) before it happens, "Automatically Adjusting" taxes and interest rates to keep the "Confidence" high.
- Universal Basic Income (UBI): The "Permanent New Deal"—giving everyone a "Basic Paycheck" to ensure the "Economic Engine" never "Stalls" due to "Lack of Demand."
- Blockchain 'Bank Runs' Prevention: A system where "Bank Liquidity" is "Visible to Everyone" on a blockchain, so people "Never Panic" because they can "See" the money is there.