New Deal Programs
New Deal Programs
Leaders of the New Deal
New Deal Knowledge
100

Glass-Stegall Act of 1933
•Helped rebuild trust in banks & prevent bank runs
•Still exists today; protects the savings accounts of individual bank depositors

Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC)

100

•Protects investors in the stock market in ways like how the FDIC insures bank depositors
•Oversees the stock market today, regulating stock-trading procedures and managing the nation's economic growth

Security and Exchange Commission (SEC)

100

the 1932 presidential candidate, known for his "can-do" attitude and optimism

Franklin Delano Roosevelt (FDR)

100

radio broadcasts that were intended to bring hope to those suffering in the Great Depression

fireside chats

200

•A law that provided old-age insurance, unemployment insurance, and financial assistance to the disabled
+Pension fund
+Funded by tax-paying employees and employers
•Issue: excluded the self-employed, farmers, and domestic workers, payments were small (between $20-30 a month)

Social Security Act

200

•Provided outdoor jobs to young men 17-24
+Soil-erosion, flood-control projects
+developed many state parks by paving roads, building cabins, planting trees
•Lowered unemployment & urban crime rates

Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC)

200

First Lady, known for reshaping the role of first lady into an activist

Eleanor Roosevelt

200

a union that included industries with a large percentage of minority workers

Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO)

300

•Direct cash relief, work projects to employ people, and rural relief for farmers
•Changed the relationship of government intervention in times of crisis

Federal Emergency Relief Administration (FERA)

300

•Provided jobs with small construction projects in communities
•Funded projects that employed writers, teachers, musicians, and artists
•National Youth Association (NYA)

Works Progress Administration (WPA)

300

a group of university professors that advised FDR on how to repair the economy

brain trust

300

This act resulted in minimum wage, a 40 hour work week, and abolished child labor 

Fair Labor Standards Act

400

•Utilized two programs to experiment with centralized economic planning:
+Public Works Administration (PWA)
+National Recovery Administration (NRA)

National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA)

400

•Provided jobs for the unemployed
•Created new orders for factories in the steel, glass, rubber, & cement industry
•Helped individual contractors hire and pay their own workers


Public Works Administration (PWA)

400

a critic of the New Deal who was known for his "Share Our Wealth" plan that would give each household a minimum of a 5,000 income

Huey Long

400

peaceful, effective protests where workers would sit on the job, shutting down production; first one happened at General Motors (Flint, MI)

sit-down strikes

500

•Established fair business practices to set standards for workers and business owners to avoid labor strikes
•Main goals were to end child labor and give labor unions the right to organize and negotiate contracts
•Issues: small business owners claimed the NRA encouraged monopolies; labor leaders claimed employers were still discouraging unions, & the cost of implementing this program was causing a rise of price on goods
•DEEMED UNCONSTITUTIONAL IN 1935 BECAUSE IT GAVE THE PRESIDENT TOO MUCH LEGISLATIVE POWER

National Recovery Administration (NRA)

500

•Paid subsidies to farmers who voluntarily did not farm on parts of their land & offered loans to farmers who stored their crops in government warehouses
+planned scarcity
•Funded by taxing farm products
•Issue: sharecroppers were often evicted by landlords who wanted to take land out of production

Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA)

500

Known as the Woman Behind the New Deal, Secretary of Labor under FDR, Department of Labor in DC is named after her today

Frances Perkins

500

Under this plan, the Supreme Court would gain six new members (making the total 15 members)

Court-Packing Plan

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