The Great Depression
By: Stenly • Essay • 377 Words • April 6, 2010 • 1,081 Views
The Great Depression
The Great Depression
The 1920’s started a very slow and sad time in the United States. People lost jobs, money, and even their houses. Banks could not give money back to people and no one had any trust left in the stock market. The great depression had hit and everyone was in chaos; no one knew how to make it better, and things only got worse.
Stock speculation was very big in the 1920’s. People bought stocks and then sold them for a quick profit. To get rich faster, they did not have patients to keep their stocks for a long period of time. This made the stock market unstable. Since people were not investing for extensive periods of time, they were basically gambling. Since there were no regulations, people could do whatever they wanted to.
Lots of people bought things on loans. If a person could not afford a house, he would borrow money from friends or more likely from the bank, this was called easy credit. But when the depression hit those people lost their homes; since they could not pay the banks back.
Banks were loosely regulated, people borrowed money with not much intent to pay it back, and when the depression hit, they could not return the money. So when people who invested in the banks, wanted their money back, the banks didn’t