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B1 Intermédiaire Anglais 14:27 Educational

The Great Depression: Crash Course US History #33

CrashCourse · 7,670,139 vues · Ajouté il y a 3 semaines

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B1

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Sous-titres (208 segments)

00:00

Hi, I'm John Green, this is Crash Course U.S. history

00:02

and Herbert Hoover's here, which is never a good sign.

00:05

Today we're gonna return to two of my favorite topics:

00:07

economics and inaccurate naming conventions.

00:10

That's right, we're gonna be talking about the Great Depression,

00:13

which was only great if you enjoy, like, being a hobo or selling pencils.

00:17

Now some of you might get a bit frustrated today because there's no real consensus about the Great Depression,

00:22

and simple, declarative statements about it really say much more about you than they do about history.

00:27

Why are you looking at me, Mr Green? I didn't say anything. I thought it.

00:31

Because, Me From the Past, you always want things to fit into this simplistic narrative:

00:34

she loves me, she loves me not, the Great Depression was caused by x or was caused by y.

00:38

It's complicated!

00:39

(Intro Music)

00:48

Many people tell you that the Great Depression started with the stock market crash in October 1929,

00:53

but a) that isn't true and b) it leads people to mistake correlation with cause.

00:57

What we think of as the Great Depression did begin AFTER the stock market crash,

01:01

but not because of it. Like, as we saw last week, the underlying

01:04

economic conditions in the U.S. before the stock market crash weren't all moonshine

01:08

and rainbows. The 1920s featured large-scale domestic consumption of relatively new consumer

01:13

products, which was good for American industry. But much of this consumption was fueled by

01:17

credit and installment buying which, it turned out, was totally unsustainable.

01:21

The thing about credit is that it works fine unless and until economic uncertainty increases

01:26

at which point POW. That's a technical historian term, by the way.

01:31

Meanwhile the agricultural sector suffered throughout the 1920s and farm prices kept

01:35

dropping for two reasons. First, American farms had expanded enormously during World

01:39

War I to provide food for all those soldiers, and second, the expansion led many farmers

01:45

to mechanize their operations. As you'll know if you've ever bought a

01:48

tractor, that mechanization was expensive, and so many farmers went into debt to finance

01:52

their expansion. And then a combination of overproduction and low prices meant that often

01:57

their farms were foreclosed upon . And other signs of economic weakness appeared

02:00

throughout the decade. Like by 1925, the growth of car manufacturing slowed, along with residential

02:05

construction. And, worst of all was what noted left wing

02:07

radical Herbert Hoover labeled "an orgy of mad speculation" in the stock markets

02:12

that began in 1927. By the way I'm kidding about him being a left wing radical. Just

02:16

look at him. According to historian David Kennedy, "By

02:19

1929, commercial bankers were in the unusual position of loaning more money for stock market

02:24

and real estate investments than for commercial ventures."[1]

02:28

I wonder if we would ever find ourselves in that position again. Oh right we did in 2008.

02:31

Anyway, it's tempting to see the stock market crash as the cause of the depression, possibly

02:35

because it turns American economic history into morality play, but the truth is that

02:39

the stock market crash and the depression were not the same thing. A lot of rich people

02:44

lost money in the market, but what made the Great Depression the Great Depression was

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