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THE MAKING OF A NATION - January 17, 2002: Stock
Market Crash of 1929
By David Jarmul
VOICE 1:
THE MAKING OF A NATION -- a program in Special
English by the Voice of America.
(Theme)
The election of Republican presidential candidate
Herbert Hoover in nineteen-twenty-eight made Americans more hopeful
than ever about their future.
In March nineteen-twenty-nine, Hoover rode
down Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington in the rain to become the new
president. "I have no fears for the future of our country,"
he told the cheering crowd. "It is bright with hope."
Herbert Hoover seemed to have just the right
experience to lead the nation to new economic progress. He had training
in engineering, business, and national leadership. He understood economics
and had faith in the future of private business.
VOICE 2:
The clearest evidence of the public's faith
in the economy is the stock market. And the New York Stock Exchange
reacted to the new president with a wild increase in prices. During
the months after Hoover's election, prices generally rose like a rocket.
Stocks valued at one-hundred dollars climbed to two-hundred, then three-hundred,
four-hundred. Men and women made huge amounts of money overnight.
Publications and economic experts advised Americans
to buy stocks before prices went even higher. Time and again, people
heard how rich they could become if they found and bought stocks for
companies growing into industrial giants.
"Never sell the United States short,"
said one publication. Another just said, "Everybody ought to be
rich. "
VOICE 1:
A number of economic experts worried about the
sharp increase in stock prices that followed Hoover's election. The
president himself urged stock market officials to make trading more
honest and safe. And he approved a move by the Federal Reserve Board
to increase the interest charged to banks.
However, both efforts failed to stop the growing
number of Americans who were spending their money wildly on stocks.
Some experts pointed to danger signs in the
economy during the summer of nineteen-twenty-nine. The number of houses
being built was dropping. Industries were reducing the amount of products
that they held in their factories. The rate of growth in spending by
average Americans was falling sharply. And industrial production, employment,
and prices were down.
These experts warned that the American economy
was just not strong enough to support such rapid growth in stock prices.
They said there was no real value behind many of the high prices. They
said a stock price could not increase four times while a company's sales
stayed the same. They said the high prices were built on foolish dreams
of wealth, not real value.
VOICE 2:
But the prices went still higher. Buyers fought
with each other to pay more and more for company stocks. The average
price of all stocks almost doubled in just one year.
It seemed everybody was buying stocks, even
people with little money or economic training.
A clothing salesman got advice from a stock
trader visiting his store and made two-hundred-thousand dollars. A nurse
learned of a good company from someone in the hospital. She made thirty-thousand
dollars. There were thousands of such stories.
By early September, the stock market reached
its high point of the past eighteen months. Shares of the Westinghouse
company had climbed from ninety-one dollars to three-hundred-thirteen.
The Anaconda Copper company had risen from fifty-four dollars to one-hundred-sixty-two.
Union Carbide jumped from one-hundred-forty-five to four-hundred-thirteen.
Life was like a dream. But like any dream, it
could not last forever.
VOICE 1:
In September, nineteen-twenty-nine, stock prices
stopped rising.
During the next month and a half, stock prices
fell, but only slowly. Then suddenly, at the end of October, the market
crashed. Prices dropped wildly. Leading stocks fell five, ten, twenty
dollars in a single day. Everyone tried to sell their stocks. But no
one was buying. Fear washed across the stock market. People were losing
money even faster than they had made it.
VOICE 2:
The stock market collapsed on Thursday, October
twenty-fourth, nineteen-twenty-nine. People remember the day as "Black
Thursday," the day the dreams ended.
''On Margin'' by James Montgomery Flagg
(Library of Congress)
The day began with a wave of selling. People from across the country
sent messages to their stock traders in New York. All the messages said
the same thing: Sell! Sell the stocks at any price possible! But no
one was buying. And so down the prices came.
The value of stock for the Montgomery Ward store
dropped from eighty-three dollars to fifty in a single day. The R-C-A
radio corporation fell from sixty-eight dollars to forty-four ... twenty-four
dollars in just a few hours. Down the stocks fell, lower and lower.
Several of the country's leading bankers met
to discuss ways to stop the disaster. They agreed to buy stocks in large
amounts to stop the wave of selling. The bankers moved quickly. And
for two days, prices held steady.
But then, like snow falling down the side of
a mountain, the stocks dropped again. Prices went to amazingly low levels.
One business newspaper said simply: "The present week has witnessed
the greatest stock market disaster of all time. "
VOICE 1:
The stock market crash ruined thousands of Americans.
In a few short weeks, traders lost thirty-thousand-million dollars,
an amount almost as great as all the money the United States had spent
in World War One.
Some businessmen could not accept what had happened.
They jumped from the tops of buildings and killed themselves. In fact,
one popular joke of the time said that hotel owners had to ask people
if they wanted rooms for sleeping or jumping.
But the stock market crash was nothing to laugh
about. It destroyed much of the money that Americans had saved. Even
worse, it caused millions of people to worry and lose faith in the economy.
They were not sure what to expect tomorrow. Business owners would not
spend money for new factories or business operations. Instead, they
decided to wait and see what would happen.
This reduced production and caused more workers
to lose their jobs. Fewer workers meant fewer people with money to buy
goods. And fewer people buying goods meant less need for factories to
produce. So it went. In short, economic disaster.
VOICE 2:
Why did the stock market crash. One reason,
people had been paying too much for stocks. Everyone believed that prices
would go higher and higher forever. People paid more for stocks than
the stocks were worth. They hoped to sell the stocks at even higher
prices.
It was like a children's balloon that expands
with air, blowing bigger and bigger until it bursts.
But there were other important reasons. Industrial
profits were too high and wages too low. Five percent of the population
owned one-third of all personal income. The average worker simply did
not have enough money to buy enough of all the new goods that factories
were producing. Another problem was that companies were not investing
enough money in new factories and supplies.
There were also problems with the rules of the
stock market itself. People were allowed to buy stocks when they did
not have the money to do so.
VOICE 1:
Several government economic policies also helped
cause the stock market crash of nineteen-twenty-nine. Government tax
policies made the rich richer and the poor poorer. And the government
did little to control the national money supply, even when the economy
faced disaster.
The stock market crash marked the beginning
of the Great Depression -- a long, slow, painful fall to the worst economic
crisis in American history. The Depression would bring suffering to
millions of people. It would cause major political changes. And it would
be a major force in creating the conditions that led to World War Two.
We will look at the beginning of the Great Depression
in our next program.
(Theme)
VOICE 2:
You have been listening to THE MAKING OF A NATION,
a program in Special English on the Voice of America. Your reporters
have been Harry Monroe and Rich Kleinfeldt. Our program was written
by David Jarmul. The Voice of America invites you to listen again next
week to THE MAKING OF A NATION.
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