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What does laissez-faire mean, and how does it relate to the causes of the Depression?
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All Flashcards in Topic 11.7
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11.7.112 cards
What does laissez-faire mean, and how does it relate to the causes of the Depression?
A hands-off government approach to the economy. In the 1920s it meant almost no regulation of banks or the stock market, letting speculation and risk build up unchecked.
Fordney-McCumber Tariff (1922)
Raised US import tariffs; other countries retaliated with their own tariffs, shrinking international trade and weakening the global economy before 1929.
Why was the US banking system so fragile in the 1920s?
About 25,000 small, local banks existed with limited reserves and no deposit insurance, so one bank failure could trigger panic and a chain of collapses.
How did agriculture suffer before the Wall Street Crash?
WWI overproduction continued after European demand recovered, so crop prices fell steadily through the 1920s, leaving indebted farmers in crisis years before 1929.
What was the Dust Bowl?
Severe dust storms across the Great Plains in the early 1930s, caused by drought combined with soil damaged by years of over-ploughing.
Black Thursday and Black Tuesday
24 and 29 October 1929 — the two catastrophic days of the Wall Street Crash, when panic selling wiped out billions in stock value.
Compare Hoover's and Roosevelt's approach to the Depression.
Hoover favoured voluntary cooperation and limited government (rugged individualism); Roosevelt used the New Deal to massively expand federal intervention and executive power.
What was the Wagner Act (1935)?
A New Deal law guaranteeing workers the right to unionise and bargain collectively, greatly strengthening organised labour's power.
What was the Social Security Act (1935)?
Created the first national safety net in US history, providing old-age pensions and unemployment insurance.
Who were the Liberty League, and what did they argue?
A group of conservative businessmen who claimed Roosevelt's New Deal threatened free enterprise and individual liberty by expanding government power too far.
How did Huey Long's criticism of the New Deal differ from the Liberty League's?
Long argued the New Deal did not go far enough to redistribute wealth to the poor, the opposite complaint from conservatives who said it went too far.
Explain the political significance of the 1932 election for US party politics.
Hoover and the Republicans lost in a landslide, and Roosevelt built a new Democratic coalition of urban, immigrant, and Southern voters that dominated politics for a generation.
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What triggered the political crisis that ended Brazil's Old Republic in 1930?
The 1929 Wall Street Crash collapsed world coffee prices; coffee was ~70% of Brazil's exports, destroying the economic base of the ruling coffee-and-dairy elite.
café com leite
'Coffee with milk' — the Old Republic system where power alternated between São Paulo (coffee) and Minas Gerais (dairy) elites.
How did Getúlio Vargas come to power in 1930?
After a disputed election result favoring São Paulo's candidate, Vargas's Liberal Alliance launched a revolt; the army did not defend the old regime, and Vargas became provisional president in November 1930.
What was the Estado Novo?
Vargas's authoritarian 'New State' dictatorship, begun in 1937 after he cancelled the scheduled 1938 election using a forged communist-plot pretext (the 'Cohen Plan').
Name Vargas's opposition on the political right and left in the 1930s.
Right: the São Paulo elite (1932 Constitutionalist Revolution) and the Integralistas (failed 1938 uprising). Left: the Communist-backed ANL (crushed 1935 uprising).
What labour rights did Vargas introduce, and what was the catch?
Minimum wage, labour courts, and pension institutes (IAPs) for urban workers — but unions were state-controlled and strikes were effectively banned ('state corporatism').
Which Brazilians were largely excluded from Vargas's labour reforms?
Rural laborers and Afro-Brazilian workers, who made up most of the workforce but stayed outside the formal-sector protections.
What major political right did Brazilian women gain in 1932?
The vote — the new Electoral Code granted women's suffrage, and women voted for the first time in the 1933 Constituent Assembly election.
How did the Estado Novo use culture and media?
It promoted a state-approved national identity ('brasilidade') built around samba and Carnival, and used the propaganda ministry DIP (1939) to control radio and press, e.g. the 'Hora do Brasil' broadcast.
What happened to Indigenous policy in Brazil during this period?
It stayed largely unchanged — the paternalist, assimilationist Indian Protection Service (SPI, est. 1910) continued its approach with no new reforms.
Debate: was Vargas's rise a power-grab or nation-building?
One view: an ambitious politician exploiting a crisis to seize power. Other view: a necessary modernizing response to a broken oligarchic system exposed by the Depression. A strong essay weighs both.
Structure of a Paper 3 'To what extent do you agree' essay
Thesis engaging the claim → argument for → argument against → a clear, substantiated judgement that directly answers 'to what extent'.
11.7.312 cards
What was the Reconstruction Finance Corporation (RFC)?
A 1932 Hoover programme that lent federal money to struggling banks and railroads, but gave no direct relief to individuals.
Why did the Bonus Army damage Hoover's reputation?
In 1932, unemployed WWI veterans camped in Washington DC demanding early bonus payments; Hoover sent the army to disperse them, making him look uncaring.
What is the difference between the First and Second New Deal?
First New Deal (1933–35): emergency rescue — banks, farmers, jobs (Emergency Banking Act, CCC, AAA, NRA, TVA). Second New Deal (1935 on): lasting reform — WPA, Social Security Act, Wagner Act.
What did the Social Security Act (1935) create?
The USA's first national system of old-age pensions and unemployment insurance.
What was the 'Roosevelt Recession'?
A sharp economic downturn in 1937–38 after FDR cut New Deal spending too early, showing the recovery was still fragile.
What was Mackenzie King's stance on Depression relief before 1930?
He believed relief was a provincial responsibility, not a federal one, and refused extra funds to opposition-run provinces.
What was the 'Bennett New Deal' and why did it fail?
R. B. Bennett's 1935 package of unemployment insurance, minimum wage and market regulation laws, inspired by FDR; came too late to save his government and was mostly struck down by the Privy Council as unconstitutional.
Who was Lázaro Cárdenas and when did he lead Mexico?
President of Mexico from 1934, known for radical agrarian reform, oil nationalization, ISI and labour rights.
What is Import Substitution Industrialization (ISI)?
A policy of protecting new domestic factories with tariffs so a country makes goods at home instead of importing them.
What happened in Mexico in 1938 regarding oil?
Cárdenas nationalized foreign-owned oil companies, creating the state oil company PEMEX — still a source of national pride today.
What is an ejido?
A plot of communal land, collectively farmed by a village, used in Cárdenas's agrarian land redistribution.
Compare the effectiveness of the USA's and Canada's Depression responses.
The USA's New Deal (especially the Second New Deal) built lasting institutions like Social Security; Canada's Bennett New Deal was mostly struck down by the courts and achieved little before his government fell in 1935.
Topic 11.7 study notes
Full notes & explanations for The Great Depression in the Americas (c.1920–1939)
History (2028+) exam skills
Paper structures, command terms & tips
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