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The Great Depression
Canada’s Economic State, 1920s
• Image of prosperous ’20s – “Roaring”?
• Reality: boom and bust roller coaster
• Late 1920s – resource boom
• Growing American influence – now largest investor; by 1926 Canada’s most important trading partner
• Women’s increasing role in the economy
Economy (continued)• New consumer products – automobiles
• Communications – airplanes; telephones
• Middle- and upper-class consumption
Bombardier – first snowmobile, 1923
Regional Variations
• Maritimes and Prairies left out of the “boom”?
• Coal and steel in decline
• Low wheat prices for much of decade– vagaries of international markets; expansion and borrowing of First World War & when prices good in parts of 1920s
The Collapse“Black Tuesday” 29 October 1929
Causes of the Great Depression
Not caused by a “crisis of capitalism,” but became one!
★ overproduction; stock speculation
★ Protectionism ( using tariffs) – Canada retaliated
★ Decline in international trade severely hurts Canada (2nd worst off in world, after US)
★ SO NOT AN OVERNIGHT PROBLEM CAUSED BY STOCK MARKET CRASH!
Effects of the Great Depression
Stocks, production, wages, GNP, imports, exports, all decline
but unemployment increases to 20-25% nationally (1933)
Hardest Hit … The PrairiesCompounding factors: natural disasters (drought, grasshoppers, etc.)
The Political Response - King
Do nothing!
Balance the budget and slash spending
“Not a five cent piece” to any Conservative
provincial government
But had to face election…
1930 ElectionFought on leadership issue
R.B. Bennett (Conservative) makes tariffs and unemployment the key issues
“Five cent piece” comment thrown in King’s face
Bennett victorious – largely on rural vote!
The Political Response R.B. Bennett
Leadership of Conservatives – “one man show”
Also personal altruism
Bennett’s Policies
• Simply not enough
• Unemployment Relief Act (1930) - $20M for relief (mostly administered by provinces and municipalities)
• To 1938: $350M federal on relief; $650 M provincial and municipal! crushing burden!
• Response: balance budgets by cutting services
Relief – “going on the pogey”
Line up for a soup kitchen, Toronto
Humiliation
“Failure”
Food vouchers
Private charity
Relief work
Work Camps
On to Ottawa Trek (1935)
Regina Riot, 1 July 1935
THIRD PARTIES
Leader:J.S. Woodsworth
1933 – Regina ManifestoSocialist (but not communist,
nor doctrinaire)
9% of popular vote in 1935
The Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (1932)
Social Credit
William “Bible Bill”Aberhart
1935 – sweeps to power in Alberta
Each citizen to have a ‘credit’ to achieve prosperity
Reconstruction Party (1935)
H.H. Stevens
8% of popular vote in 1935(taken from Conservatives)
Communism and Fascism
Communist march, Vancouver, c.1933
Canadian fascist paraphernalia
Also Intolerance
KKK to Canada
The Atlantic CoastNEWFOUNDLAND
The threat of bankruptcy – Britain will not allowFrom dominion to colonial status[Prerequisite to Confederation?]
MARITIMESVote Liberal
But social and economic reforms cannot be achieved for lack of $
QuebecScandals and corruption
Maurice Duplessis
The Union Nationale
“The Padlock Law” (1937)
The Padlock Law
• The Act prohibited the "use [of a house] or allow any person to make use of it to propagate communism or bolshevism by any means whatsoever" as well as the printing, publishing or distributing of "any newspaper, periodical, pamphlet, circular, document or writing, propagating communism or bolshevism." A violation of the Act subjected such property to being ordered closed by the Attorney General - "padlocked" - against any use whatsoever for a period of up to one year, and any person found guilty of involvement in prohibited media activities could be incarcerated for three to thirteen months.
Ontario
“Mitch” Hepburn’s Liberals
Schisms with federal Liberals
Provincial Rights and the “Unholy Alliance” with
Duplessis
British ColumbiaT.D. “Duff” Pattullo (Liberal)
The “little New Deal”:•“work and wages”• state health-insurance plan• reduced taxes for lower incomes• unemployment insurance• public works
But lacks the $ to put it into effect!
Bennett’s “New Deal”Borrows from FDR’s New Deal in US• sweeping social reform platform announced on radio
“The capitalist system has failed” • promised laws to control big business•to increase income and business taxes•to reduce farm debts•to introduce minimum wages, the 8 hour day•unemployment insurance, health insurance•better old age pensions
Key: Govt now promising to do things within provincialjurisdiction under BNA Act! but most declared ultra vires (beyond the power)
What people remembered…
Bennett buggies, Bennett boroughs, …
THE ELECTION OF 1935: “KING OR CHAOS”
Public does not go for Bennett’s “deathbed
repentance” (New Deal promises)
Liberal Policies
• Relief for farmers – Prairie Farm Rehab. Act
• Lower tariffs
• Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (1936)
• Trans-Canada Airlines (1937) – Crown Corp.
• National Economic Commission – advocates Keynesian approach (deficit financing)
• Royal Commission on Dominion Provincial Relations (est. 1935) Rowell-Sirois report
The Rowell-Sirois Commission
• A Canadian Royal Commission looking into the Canadian economy and federal-provincial relations. It was called in 1937 and reported in 1940.
• It was called as a result of the Great Depression. The attempts to manage the Depression by the government illustrated grave flaws with the Canadian constitution. While the federal government had most of the revenue gathering powers, the provinces, unexpectedly, had to make the greater expenditures ~health care, education, and welfare. By 1937 they were all massive expenditures, however.
• The Commission recommended that the federal government take over control of unemployment insurance and pensions. It also recommended the creation of equalization payments and large transfers of money from the federal government to the province each year.
“A Low, Dishonest Decade”?
Bennett cannot “blast into foreign markets”
The Manchurian Crisis (1931) - no coherent stand against Japan
The Riddell Incident (1935) - how to deal with Mussolini’s Italy? Sanctions?
- WLMK repudiates Riddell – no sanctions
WLMK sees League as place for conciliation, not arbitration
Isolationism and Appeasement
WLMK to Germany, 1937
North American Nation
Neville Chamberlain & appeasement
WLMK on Hitler- Saw what he wanted
to see
Assessing King’s approach
• “low and dishonest” – a weak and sleazy performance of delay and moral corruption?
• Or was indecision the price that had to be paid for internal Canadian unity?
Royal Visit, Spring 1939
The Road to War
Hitler’s lebensraum living space", i.e. land and raw materials
Jewish refugees – “None is too many”
September 1939 – PolandAnother world war…
CATASTROPHE OF THE WAR ENDED THE
CATASTROPHE OF THE DEPRESSION