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The Great Depression and the Authoritarian Response

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Title: The Great Depression and the Authoritarian Response


1
Chapter 30
  • The Great Depression and the Authoritarian
    Response
  • I) The Global Great Depression
  • II) Economic and Political Changes in Latin
    America
  • III) The Militarization of Japan
  • IV) Stalinism in the Soviet Union
  • V) New Political and Economic Realities

2
Chapter 30 Introduction
14map
  • The Great Depression that began in 1929 ushered
    in a number of important developments.
  • Among the continuities from World War I were the
    decline of European hegemony and instability of
    Western democracies.
  • New developments included Fascist governments in
    Italy, Germany, Spain, and Japan and a police
    state in Stalins Soviet Union.
  • China continued to turn away from
    democratization, while new authoritarian regimes
    arose in Latin America.
  • The economic depression and the resulting radical
    political forms led to World War II.

3
I) The Global Great Depression
  • The Great Depression had worldwide causes and
    effects.
  • Reactions to this economic earthquake were
    varied.
  • The most startling change in western Europe was
    the rise of Nazism.

4
a) Causation
  • The Depressions roots were long.
  • The effect of World War I on Europes economy had
    a ripple effect around the world.
  • Farmers in the West and in the colonies in Africa
    and Asia overproduced, causing prices (and
    therefore income) to fall.
  • Governments provided little guidance at this
    time.
  • Nations that had loaned money insisted they be
    repaid tariffs reached all-time highs.
  • By the late 1920s, employment in key Western
    industries was declining.

5
b) The Debacle
  • When the New York stock market collapsed in
    October 1929, the wheels came off the worlds
    economic wagon. U.S. banks failed, taking their
    depositors with them. Banks in Europe followed,
    industrial production fell, jobs and wages were
    cut.
  • This downward spiral continued from 1929 until
    1933 when the economic bottom was reached.
    Economic disaster was not a new phenomenon, but
    this one was the longest lasting and most
    far-reaching because of the Wests unprecedented
    global reach.
  • The Great Depression was an enormous social and
    political event as well. It revealed the
    fragility of nineteenth-century optimism. Popular
    culture took on an escapist theme.
  • Western democracies came under pressure to take a
    stronger role in their economies. In the Soviet
    Union, Stalins determination to create an
    industrial society under the heading socialism in
    one country manifested itself in a brutal regime,
    yet he succeeded in his goal. In Japan, the
    worldwide economic decline led to a political
    crisis.

6
c) Responses to the Depression in Western Europe
  • In western Europe, the Depression revealed that
    the economic and political achievements of the
    1920s were not permanent.
  • Early governmental responses were generally
    ineffective. In many countries, the economic
    collapse heightened political polarization.
  • The Great Depression led to one of two effects
    an incapacitated parliamentary government or the
    overturning of parliamentary government.
  • France, which elected the ineffective party the
    Popular Front, and England provided examples of
    the first pattern Italy, Germany, and Spain, the
    latter.

7
d) The New Deal
  • In the United States, the government offered
    direct aid to Americans in economic trouble in
    the form of the New Deal.
  • The Social Security system, government economic
    intervention and agricultural planning, and
    banking regulations were all attempts to recover
    from the depression.
  • Most importantly for Americans, the New Deal
    restored confidence in the economy and in the
    government.
  • It also established a path for future
    governments, between the ineffectiveness of the
    English and French and the extremism of the
    Italians, Germans, and Spanish.

8
e) Nazism and Fascism
  • Fascism in Italy and Germany was a product of
    World War I. The movements advocates were often
    war veterans who attacked the apparent weakness
    of their countries parliamentary system. Fascist
    attacks on unions and on Communists pleased many
    in the upper classes.
  • Although the movement started in Italy, it was in
    Germany that this movement became a major force
    in world history. Hitler made promises of a
    brighter future to many groups in return, he
    sought not the democratic voices of many but
    instead the lone voice of the leader. Once in
    power, he established a totalitarian state
    replete with a secret police, the Gestapo, which
    purges of the opposition, strident nationalism,
    and an incessant attack on Germanys large Jewish
    minority.
  • Hitlers foreign policy was based on a
    preparation for war to avenge the outcome of
    World War I and to create an empire that
    stretched across Europe. In 1938 Hitler
    proclaimed that a long sought union, or Anchluss,
    with his homeland of Austria as a fellow Geman
    speaking nation, and marched into Czechoslavakia.
    Meanwhile, the international community did
    little to check him, appeasement being the coin
    of their realm.

9
f) In Depth The Decline of the West?
  • It is clear the West declined in power during the
    twentieth century. Various thinkers and leaders
    have commented on this trend. As in the classical
    civilizations, slow or zero population growth was
    a sign to some of a general decrease in vitality.
    Decolonization and loss of economic clout in Asia
    were other indicators.
  • Many commentators used the theme of the cyclical
    nature of history, of the inevitable decline that
    occurs after a period of intense vigor. Others
    saw decay from within, bemoaning the lack of
    standards in the arts, for example.
  • On the other hand, Western nations have shown an
    unprecedented ability to bounce back from
    adversitythe resurrection from the Great
    Depression, for example. However, past examples
    show it typically takes several centuries for
    decline to become fall.

10
g) The Spread of Fascism and the Spanish Civil War
  • East of Germany, Fascist movements arose in
    Hungary and Romania. Hitler expanded into
    Czechoslovakia and Austria.
  • Italys Fascist dictator Mussolini attacked
    Ethiopia as the League of Nations and the rest of
    the world predictably did nothing.
  • The Spanish Civil War was fought between those
    favoring a parliamentary republic and those who
    wanted Fascism. The U.S.S.R. provided some
    assistance to the republic. With help from
    Germany and Italy and with only verbal opposition
    from France, Britain, and the U.S., the Fascists
    won.

11
II) Economic and Political Changes in Latin
America
  • During World War I Latin America was cut off from
    supplies of traditional imports, these countries
    experienced a spurt of industrial growth in what
    economists call import substitution
    industrialization.
  • Moreover during the war European demand for some
    products increased, but this industrialization
    proved to be a false start.
  • The economic boom that began in the late
    nineteenth century faltered after World War I and
    was crushed by the Great Depression.
  • Rapid population growth swelled the ranks of the
    rural and urban working class, creating a series
    of social problems.

12
a) Labor and the Middle Class
  • The rising importance of urban labor and the
    growth of an urban middle class led to political
    changes in some Latin American countries.
  • Traditional elites forged alliances with the new,
    growing middle class, but this often led to
    opposition from the military, peasants, and
    bandits.
  • Immigrants from Europe came with well developed
    political goals and ideologies, ranging from
    anarchism to syndicalism, which aimed to use
    organized labor to gain power.
  • Between 1914 and 1930, waves of labor unrest were
    met with brutal government oppression, such as
    the 1919 Tragic Week in Argentina

13
b) Ideology and Social Reform
  • By the 1930s, the failures of liberalism were
    becoming apparent in Latin America.
  • Instead of creating its own identity as it had in
    western Europe and the U.S., the middle class
    linked forces with the traditional wealthy rulers
    and/or the military.
  • Artists, intellectuals, and students complained
    about the system.
  • Socialist and Communist parties arose.

14
c) The Great Crash and Latin American Responses
  • Its economic dependency and weak liberal regimes
    were made clear by the world financial crisis of
    the 1930s.
  • Reform movements gained momentum.
  • Corporatism, with its roots in Fascism, sought to
    create states acting as mediators between
    different social groups.
  • The most successful example of political change
    came from Mexico, where land was redistributed
    and oil wells were nationalized under President
    Lazaro Cardenas.

15
d) The Vargas Regime in Brazil
  • Getulio Vargas established a corporatist regime
    in Brazil modeled on Mussolinis Italy, but he
    backed the Allies in World War II.
  • In return Brazil obtained arms, financial support
    for industrial development, and trade advantages.
  • Under criticism from both the right and left,
    Vargas committed suicide in 1954.
  • Much of Brazilian history since his death has
    been a struggle over his legacy.

16
e) Argentina Populism, Peron, and the Military
  • Juan Peron emerged as the leader of a
    military-style government in Argentina, and
    forged an alliance with workers and
    industrialists at the expense of civil liberties.
  • Aided by his wife Eva Duarte, known as Evita, she
    became a spokesperson for Peron among the lower
    class.
  • His program was couched in nationalistic terms,
    taking control of foreign-owned railroads and oil
    resources, but Argentinas economy faltered
    anyway.
  • He was exiled but returned briefly to power in
    the 1970s.
  • After his death, the military took control again.

17
III) The Militarization of Japan
  • Although badly damaged by the Great Depression,
    Japan recovered faster than the West did, but in
    the context of authoritarianism and military
    expansion.
  • Even before it happened in the West, military
    rule took over Japan.
  • After 1936, a series of increasingly militaristic
    prime ministers were appointed, despite the
    wishes of the voters.
  • By 1938, Japan controlled Manchuria, Korea,
    Taiwan, and a substantial part of China.
  • An even wider reach of its empire was on the way.

18
The Spread of Japan Prior to World War II
19
a) Industrialization and Recovery
  • Japan made a full turn toward industrialization
    after 1931, and its economy responded.
  • Production of iron, steel, and chemicals soared.
  • Big companies offered lifetime contracts and
    activities designed to promote nationalism and
    hard work.
  • The nation became self-sufficient in tools and
    scientific equipment, and the basis was set for
    more expansion that occurred later in the
    twentieth century.

20
IV) Stalinism in the Soviet Union
  • A totalitarian state emerged in the Soviet Union
    beginning in the late 1920s.
  • Under Communism, the largely independent economy
    avoided the Great Depression.
  • Stepped up industrialization, abject worship of
    the leader, and a violently repressive police
    state marked a system very similar to Nazism.
  • The experimental mood of the middle of the 1920s
    faded when Joseph Stalin acquired unquestioned
    power.
  • He sought to make the U.S.S.R. an industrial
    society under full control of the state.

21
HOME
Totalitarianism
CASE STUDY Stalinist Russia
MAP
Key Idea
After Lenins death, Stalin transforms the Soviet
Union into a totalitarian state. He
revolutionizes the economy and uses terror,
propaganda, and censorship to maintain power.
Overview
Assessment
22
a) Economic Policies
  • Large, state-run farms called collectives were
    formed to replace private land ownership. To
    ensure cooperation, Stalin approved a policy of
    starving and murdering millions of peasants.
  • Those who survived, planted and harvested, but
    not in the amounts Stalin had envisioned. For
    decades, agricultural production was one of the
    Soviet Unions great weaknesses.
  • The area of industrial production was a different
    story. A system of five-year plans under the
    state planning commission began to set clear
    priorities for industrial development, including
    expected output levels and new facilities. The
    government ordered the building of massive
    factories and an extensive power grid, making the
    U.S.S.R. a world-class power in heavy industry.
    Consumer goods were not a priority to Stalin, nor
    to his successors.
  • The top-down structure of the Soviet system led
    to considerable waste of resources

23
b) Toward an Industrial Society
  • For all its distinctive features, the
    industrialization process in the Soviet Union
    produced many results similar to the West.
  • Incentives and nationalist fervor pushed workers
    to produce more. Cities grew rapidly.
  • Welfare services, old-age pensions, and health
    programs were provided by the government.

24
c) Totalitarian Rule
  • Stalinism instituted new controls over many
    aspects of life. Artists, writers, and
    intellectuals who did not toe the line were
    exiled to labor camps in Siberia. Socialist
    Realism emphasized heroic images of workers and
    others. Free scientific inquiry was quashed.
  • Many thousands of real and imagined opponents of
    Stalins vision were executed many more were
    exiled within the U.S.S.R. The Politburo, or
    executive committee, sycophantically followed
    his lead.
  • In foreign relations, the Soviet Union was
    recognized in the West by the 1930s. Germany
    arose as a threat.
  • After the West showed little interest in fighting
    Fascism in Spain, Stalin signed a nonaggression
    pact with Hitler and attacked eastern Poland and
    Finland in an early sign of Soviet conquest that
    became a hallmark of post-World War I foreign
    policy.

25
V) New Political and Economic Realities
  • The 1930s clearly changed the world balance that
    had existed since World War I. Germany and the
    Soviet Union reasserted their positions as powers
    to be reckoned with in Europe. Like Germany,
    Japan recovered to an extent from the effects of
    the Great Depression and became more militaristic
    in its outlook.
  • The political tradition since the Enlightenment
    was called into question in western Europe and
    the United States. Revolutionary forces remained
    in Latin America and China.
  • Movements against Western colonialism continued
    in Asia, Africa, and, in particular, the Middle
    East.

26
a) Global Connections Depression and Retreat
15graph
  • The Great Depression promoted a wave of
    nationalist reactions and weakened global ties.
  • Increased tariffs decreased trade many of the
    countries dependent on trade with the West
    reacted with varying degrees of militarism and
    authoritarianism and yet, at the same time,
    economic isolation from the West.
  • The world as it had been known was falling apart
    for the second time in a generation, and no one
    seemed capable of putting it back together.
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