• An escalating trade war could spiral out of control and bring the world to the brink of an economic collapse on the scale of the Great Depression of the 1930s, said John Doody, founder of Gold Stock Analyst. (kitco.com)
  • In 2008 the world experienced one of the largest economic crisis, next to the great depression of the 1930's. (bartleby.com)
  • After the great depression the US went 40 consecutive years without any financial crisis. (bartleby.com)
  • The assigned readings offered an interesting and complex view of some of the diverse groups of people who were marginalized in California during the Great Depression of the 1930s. (bartleby.com)
  • The nation's wealth doubled throughout the roaring twenties, and lead the Stock Market Crash of 1929 where the Great Depression followed after this time period. (bartleby.com)
  • The Great Depression was a time in America where the economy and American lifestyle completely crashed. (bartleby.com)
  • It happened back in the 1930s and [during] the Great Depression. (theguardian.com)
  • The 1930s brought the Great Depression. (joemckeever.com)
  • The Great Depression in the years 1929 - 1933 brought a massive unemployment. (tanvald.cz)
  • Painted during the Great Depression, the mother's clothing and surroundings are typical of 1930s America. (akronartmuseum.org)
  • The Great Depression of the 1930s brought a different kind of class leveling as both workers and owners struggled to survive. (historylink.org)
  • In short, the Great Depression forced many to question, and then begin to abandon, long and deeply held assumptions about the nature of the very economic and political systems on which states and economies stood. (socialistproject.ca)
  • After the Great Depression and the Second World War, a return to pre-depression liberalism just wasn't in the cards. (socialistproject.ca)
  • Some want to see the current crisis as our Great Depression. (socialistproject.ca)
  • At the outset of the Great Depression, most of the world's political and economic leaders refused to believe that a crisis was looming on the horizon. (socialistproject.ca)
  • Times of severe drought, mixed with the Great Depression of the early 1930s, forced many farmers to abandon the area. (australianexplorer.com)
  • When Franklin Delano Roosevelt took office in 1933, he enacted a range of experimental programs to combat the Great Depression. (khanacademy.org)
  • The New Deal was a set of domestic policies enacted under President Franklin D. Roosevelt that dramatically expanded the federal government's role in the economy in response to the Great Depression. (khanacademy.org)
  • It was the massive military expenditures of World War II , not the New Deal, that eventually pulled the United States out of the Great Depression. (khanacademy.org)
  • Though Roosevelt did not have concrete policy proposals in mind at the time, the phrase 'New Deal' came to encompass his many programs designed to lift the United States out of the Great Depression. (khanacademy.org)
  • Hemp, if not made illegal, would have brought America out of the Great Depression. (in5d.com)
  • Bernanke typically is described as that rarest of combinations: a Republican yet also an Ivy League academic, a bureaucrat who's nevertheless respectful of markets, an expert on the Great Depression yet aware of the Fed's role in it, and above all a man supposedly wise enough to not let "it" happen again. (forbes.com)
  • Set during the Great Depression, Sarah Bird's Last Dance on the Starlight Pier is a novel about one woman-and a nation-struggling to be reborn from the ashes. (bookpeople.com)
  • Blending the enthralling world of dance marathons during the Great Depression, with characters based on famous and Galvestonian from the 1930s, Last Dance on the Starlight Pier by award-winning author Sarah Bird might just become one of the most popular beach-reads of 2022. (bookpeople.com)
  • Last Dance on the Starlite Pier brings to raucous life the dance marathons of the Great Depression, a lowdown world of strivers, grifters, innocents, and gangsters all trying to survive the hardest of hardscrabble times. (bookpeople.com)
  • Her book, No Depression in Heaven: the Great Depression, the New Deal, and the Transformation of Religion in the Delta , tells a story of faith, famine, and the fight for survival in the Great Depression South. (religiondispatches.org)
  • Your book issues a corrective to one popular but inaccurate narrative about the Great Depression and those who struggled through it. (religiondispatches.org)
  • Basically, it's the idea that the Great Depression really wasn't all that bad-or it was bad, but from adversity came redemption. (religiondispatches.org)
  • Are You Prepared For The Coming Economic Collapse And The Next Great Depression? (theeconomiccollapseblog.com)
  • Though remembered now for bringing the troops home, his primary intellectual interest was economic policy rather than defence policy and the biggest influence on his thinking was not Australia's experience of war against Japan in the 1940s but its experience of the Great Depression in the 1930s,' Edwards writes. (theage.com.au)
  • In the 1930s, Wolfe became increasingly aware of the suffering brought to millions of Americans by the Great Depression, and his views strengthened. (wolfememorial.com)
  • Like the vast majority of businesses, Beckett encountered severe difficulties during the Great Depression. (fundinguniverse.com)
  • Even today there isn't a total consensus on what actually triggered the Great Depression but there is agreement that it resulted from the confluence of a number of events, the stock market crash ranking high on the list. (opednews.com)
  • Discussing the contribution of all of these to the Great Depression and the legislation that followed would be well beyond the scope of this article so I'll limit it primarily to the stock market and to banking. (opednews.com)
  • In gouache and tempera, he recreated the "hard, bright, and brittle" feel of Harlem during the Great Depression ( 2 ). (cdc.gov)
  • By the 1830s the Harpers' reputation for excellence made them the largest printing firm in the country, and the brothers continued to bring new and important authors into America both in general and textbook form. (fundinguniverse.com)
  • Powerful and sweeping, the critically acclaimed CRADLE WILL ROCK, starring Hank Azaria, Joan Cusack, John Cusack, Bill Murray, and Susan Sarandon, takes a kaleidoscopic look at the extraordinary events of 1930s America. (microsoft.com)
  • The Federal Writers Project (FWP) of the Works Progress Administration (WPA) not only provided jobs and income to writers during the Depression, it created for America an astounding series of detailed and richly evocative guides, recounting the stories and histories of the 48 states (plus THE Alaska Territory and Puerto Rico) and many of the country's major cities. (ucpress.edu)
  • The securitization of mortgages in recent decades has brought investor capital into the housing market, something seen much less frequently outside of America. (northerntrust.com)
  • It was in the 1930s that the repression of marijuana use gained strength in Brazil, although it remained cited in medical textbooks and its recognized therapeutic properties 4 . (bvsalud.org)
  • During the depression in the early 1930s, gold mines were brought back to life and prospectors thoroughly searched the known and little-known gold-producing areas. (utah.gov)
  • In the early 1930s, Depression relief programs sprang up all over the United States. (cdc.gov)
  • The book "De Matéria Médica", written by the doctor Pedânio Dioscórides 3 - considered the founder of pharmacology, brings Cannabis as one of the natural substances that can relieve pain. (bvsalud.org)
  • Once the plant was popularized among French intellectuals and English doctors in the Indian imperial army, it started to be considered in our country as an excellent medicine for men, until it was suppressed by the police authorities in the 1930s. (bvsalud.org)
  • We're going to get a replay, to some extent, of the 1930s episode where the U.S. put the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act, imposed taxes on 20,000 imports, and basically made what was going to be a recession into a depression," Doody told Kitco News. (kitco.com)
  • After the Prussia-Austrian War in 1866 economic growth brought further development of the textile, glass and machinery industry. (tanvald.cz)
  • In the beginning of 1930s the economic growth got over. (tanvald.cz)
  • Instead, most of the western industrialized world fell precipitously into a deep and prolonged economic depression. (socialistproject.ca)
  • The Panic of 1907 ushered in a multi-year economic depression. (fundinguniverse.com)
  • Outside of agriculture, which had been experiencing an economic depression since the end of World War I, the American economy during the 1920s was robust, vibrant and it seemed as though it would grow forever. (opednews.com)
  • The Depression brought the kind of suffering that tore families and communities and churches apart as often as it brought them together. (religiondispatches.org)
  • This depression impacted the workforce of the time greatly, causing people to lose jobs and soon go homeless. (bartleby.com)
  • While medical educators have started teaching concepts such as structural competency and cultural safety, careful consideration of who enters the medical workforce and what values they bring is also important. (bvsalud.org)
  • Minor's cousin, Guy Beckett, son of Thomas's brother William, was also brought into the business at this time. (fundinguniverse.com)
  • But then, the story often goes, Franklin Roosevelt took office and put the government to work to end the Depression, and maybe people needed a little help getting back on their feet or maybe not, but either way, he really should have left things alone after a year or two. (religiondispatches.org)
  • But nestled deep within the narrative are the more mundane public policy stories that actually pulled the world out of depression. (socialistproject.ca)
  • The next decade brought more bestsellers for the Harper imprint, including Dana's Two Years Before the Mast, the abridged Webster's Dictionary, and a contract to supply the N.Y. state school system. (fundinguniverse.com)
  • The tumultuous economy of the 1920s would find its antithesis in the dark years of the 1930s and hard lessons would be learned only to be forgotten in the 1990s. (opednews.com)
  • In March 1865, General William T. Sherman brought his Union troops to Cheraw for several days. (wikipedia.org)
  • In 1934, Roosevelt supported the passage of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) , which brought important federal government oversight and regulation to the stock market. (khanacademy.org)
  • The latest EconTalk is Bob Higgs talking about his work on regime uncertainty in the 1930s and the failure of the war to bring prosperity. (cafehayek.com)
  • The work that brought Lawrence national recognition was The Migration of the Negro, a series of 60 panels recounting the mass movement of African Americans from the rural South to northern urban centers. (cdc.gov)
  • As one historian has put it: "Before the 1930s, national political debate often revolved around the question of whether the federal government should intervene in the economy. (khanacademy.org)
  • From high society to life on the streets, director Tim Robbins brings Depression-era New York City to vivid life. (microsoft.com)
  • World War I brought high demand and a period of profitability for the company, which carried it through the 1910s, such that the mill was even expanded in 1918. (fundinguniverse.com)
  • The late 1840s brought the publication of Thackeray's Vanity Fair, as well as Jane Eyre and Wuthering Heights by the Bronte sisters. (fundinguniverse.com)
  • A media blitz of 'yellow journalism' raged in the late 1920s and 1930s. (in5d.com)
  • To assist further, the first U.S. mortgage agency was founded in the 1930s to facilitate flows of credit to the housing sector. (northerntrust.com)
  • The war mobilization also brought prosperity as American industries converted to war production. (h-net.org)
  • They guide and inspire us today whenever we decide to bring the gospel to the people of our communities. (joemckeever.com)
  • @hedgopia brings us this look at the CFTC Commitment of Traders report. (seekingalpha.com)
  • His presence here is another demonstration of his commitment to the cause that brings us together - the advancement of global public health for all. (who.int)
  • By the end of the nineteenth century, brickmaking was established, and the railway line brought people and commercial development from 1890. (dictionaryofsydney.org)
  • Take a front row seat to the astonishing world of Depression-era dance marathons---where the poor and the struggling could distract themselves from their troubles, and where former vaudevillians could keep being paid. (bookpeople.com)
  • Lou Gehrig was a famous baseball player in the 1930s who had ALS. (msdmanuals.com)
  • These latter demands are reminiscent of 1930s efforts to maintain laissez-faire policies at all costs. (socialistproject.ca)
  • Though his changes were vehemently resisted by some managers, modernizations kept the company's costs competitive and eventually brought it out of the red. (fundinguniverse.com)
  • Yet in 2008-2009 Bernanke did nearly let "it" happen again -- a banking collapse, a depression, deflation -- by bringing the U.S. financial system to its knees by roughly the same Fed policy adopted in the 1930s, followed by his blizzard of paper-money printing that has caused a dollar debasement unprecedented in U.S. history. (forbes.com)
  • Andrew Haldane, said it was "a fair cop" referring to a series of forecasting errors before and after the financial crash which had brought the profession's reputation into question. (theguardian.com)
  • A whole room is devoted to Losey's costume and stage designs for the Federal Theatre Project and Negro Repertory Company in Seattle in the 1930s. (seattletimes.com)
  • The second-generation leader brought new production methods to the company, including modern paper making machines that used wood pulp. (fundinguniverse.com)
  • World War II brought the United States out of the depression of the 1930s. (h-net.org)
  • San Diego in the 1930s offers a lively account of the city's culture, roadside attractions, and history-from the days of the Spanish missions to the pre-Second World War boom. (ucpress.edu)
  • He preferred to paint scenes from daily life and believed that the artist "brings past and future into the present moment. (akronartmuseum.org)
  • Unlatching a remarkable trapdoor into the past, this compact and charming document of the Depression era invites repeated browsing and is generously illustrated with striking black-and-white photographs that bring the period to life. (ucpress.edu)
  • Last Dance on the Starlight Pier is a sweeping novel that brings to spectacular life the enthralling worlds of both dance marathons and the family-run empire of vice that was Galveston in the Thirties. (bookpeople.com)
  • Last Dance on the Starlight Pier is like a rediscovered movie from the 1930s, starring a colorful cast of indelible characters from the indomitable heroine Evie Grace Drake to the low-rent showbiz types grabbing for the brass ring and the menacing wise guys who controlled the real-life Boardwalk Empire of Galveston, Texas in 1932. (bookpeople.com)
  • In the Pee Dee area, planters organized a group called the Regulators to help bring order to the area. (wikipedia.org)
  • In 1935, construction on the Mulwala Canal began in order to provide employment and bring water to the area's rich farmland. (australianexplorer.com)
  • In the mid 1930s, the M-word was created to tarnish the good image and phenomenal history of the hemp plant…as you will read. (in5d.com)
  • As a result, it is a good idea to be prepared for the chill and bring clothes that can be layered as well as a jacket. (holiday-weather.com)
  • In Brazil, African slaves brought a cannabis during the colonial period, around 1549. (bvsalud.org)
  • In Brazil, it is estimated that Cannabis was brought by African slaves in the colonial period, around 1549. (bvsalud.org)
  • Martin notes that this part of the exhibit reveals "the significant contributions made by the regional black theater community" in Depression-era Seattle. (seattletimes.com)
  • The Southern leaders accepted, albeit reluctantly, that northern labor brought unionism. (h-net.org)