In our previous posts, we examined how empires fell, how maps were redrawn at conference tables, and how new superpowers emerged in the Far East. Actually, I had briefly touched upon this dark era when writing about American Culture and Literature in my previous blogs, because this massive collapse in 1929 did bankrupt the economy, as well as it profoundly shaped the spirit and the literary works of the period. However, in this specific blog series, we will leave the literary analysis aside and focus entirely on the historical context.
The 1920s were a golden era for the United States, famously known as the “Roaring Twenties,” a time of jazz music, endless parties, and boundless consumerism. Everyone believed the stock market would go up forever, and people recklessly bought stocks with borrowed money. That is, until that dark day... October 24, 1929, went down in history as “Black Thursday.” In just a few hours, billions of dollars vanished into thin air, banks closed their doors, and the world plunged into an economic crisis of unprecedented scale: The Great Depression
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The roots
of the 1929 crash actually lay in the massive destruction left by World War I
and the distorted economic order established in its aftermath. Even the
European countries that seemed to be the victors of the war were economically
exhausted. For instance, Britain, “once the empire on which the sun never
sets,” was struggling just to pay the interest on the loans it had taken
from America during the war. With its exports melting away day by day, Britain
was forced to borrow from the US once again just to survive.
However,
the real tragedy was unfolding in defeated Germany. Unable to pay the massive
war reparations demanded by the Allies, which the US expected to be repaid in
turn, Germany resorted to printing unbacked money. The result was one of the
most terrifying hyperinflations
in history. The German Mark became so worthless that people started burning
stacks of money in their stoves instead of wood just to keep warm.
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The Dawes Plan
Realizing
that the total collapse of the European economy would jeopardize its own
receivables, America stepped in and proposed the Dawes Plan in 1924. According to this plan, a perfect yet highly
dangerous cycle was established: America would provide massive loans to Germany
for its reconstruction; once its factories were running, Germany would pay its
war reparations to Britain and France; and these countries, in turn, would use
that money to pay off their war debts to America.
The
system worked wonderfully, but it had a fatal flaw: The entire world’s economy
was now dependent on America keeping the financial taps open. If America
sneezed, the whole world would catch a cold.

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German External Loan, issued 15 October 1924
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Black Thursday and the Market Crash
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Until the
beginning of October 1929, the New York Stock Exchange was living a dream,
bringing unprecedented profits to its investors. However, on October 3, 1929,
partly due to the reflection of the fragile economic issues America had with
Germany and Britain, the stock prices of some giant holding companies, once
seen as unshakable pillars of trust, began an unexpected decline.
This
minor tremor turned into an avalanche on October 21, when panicked foreign
investors rapidly started selling off their shares. And when the calendar
turned to Thursday, October 24, 1929, the dreaded moment arrived: On the day
forever etched in history as “Black Thursday,” the stock market hit rock
bottom. In just a matter of hours, billions of dollars were wiped out, and the
life savings of thousands of people turned into absolute nothingness.
As cash
literally evaporated from the market, the economy came to a standstill, and
people became unable to meet even their most basic food needs. Facing
starvation, thousands tried to survive by growing and selling fruits and
vegetables in their own yards. The desperation caused by the absence of cash
reverted the system centuries back; people resorted to a barter (exchange)
economy just to survive. The devastating impacts of the Great Depression brought
nations to the brink of bankruptcy and dragged humanity into the darkest
depths of poverty, which would persist until the outbreak of World War II triggered a
new era of industrial and military mass production.  | Crowd gathering on Wall Street after the 1929
crash Roosevelt and the “New Deal” Era In the
darkest days of the crisis, a political earthquake occurred in America in 1933.
Franklin D. Roosevelt came to power promising radical changes to this collapsed
economic system and a new pledge, launching his massive project known in
history as the “New Deal.” Roosevelt's plan meant breaking a huge taboo
for American capitalism. The traditional “laissez-faire” (let them do it)
free-market mind-set was set aside, and for the first time, the state
intervened in the economy so comprehensively and directly.
To
rebuild the public's completely shattered trust, the first major surgery was
performed on the banking system. The structure of the Central Bank (FED) was
strengthened to regulate the system, and strict laws were passed to prevent
banks from making speculative investments. They even introduced state insurance
for bank deposits to secure people's money. Roosevelt's statist and
interventionist "New Deal" not only saved America from the brink of
collapse but also laid the foundations of the modern state concept in the
lead-up to World War II.
In our
next post, we will focus on the dark shadows rising from this economic
wreckage: The Establishment of Totalitarian Regimes in Europe. We will
explore how Mussolini's Fascism in Italy, Hitler’s Nazism in Germany, and
Franco’s rise in Spain dragged the world step-by-step toward a devastating
second global war. See you then! |
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