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The Great Recession PDF

96 Pages·2013·13.334 MB·English
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Other titles in the series include: Ancient Egypt Ancient Greece Ancient Rome Th e Black Death Th e Decade of the 2000s Th e Digital Age Th e Early Middle Ages Elizabethan England Th e History of Rock and Roll Th e Holocaust Th e Industrial Revolution Th e Late Middle Ages Pearl Harbor Th e Renaissance Victorian England Understanding World History The Great Recession Stuart A. Kallen Bruno Leone Series Consultant ® San Diego, CA 3 ® © 2014 ReferencePoint Press, Inc. Printed in the United States For more information, contact: ReferencePoint Press, Inc. PO Box 27779 San Diego, CA 92198 www. ReferencePointPress.com ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. No part of this work covered by the copyright hereon may be reproduced or used in any form or by any means—graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, taping, web distribution, or information storage retrieval systems—without the written permission of the publisher. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA Kallen, Stuart A., 1955- The Great Recession / by Stuart A. Kallen. pages cm. -- (Understanding world history) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN-13: 978-1-60152-597-0 (e-book) 1. Global Financial Crisis, 2008-2009--Juvenile literature. 2. Recessions--History--21st century-- Juvenile literature. 3. Economic history--21st century--Juvenile literature. I. Title. HB37172008 .K35 2014 330.9’0511--dc23 2013001180 Contents Foreword 6 Important Events of the Great Recession 8 Introduction 10 Th e Defi ning Characteristics of the Great Recession Chapter One 15 What Conditions Led to the Great Recession? Chapter Two 30 Meltdown on Wall Street Chapter Th ree 43 Troubles on Main Street Chapter Four 55 A Global Recession Chapter Five 68 What Was the Impact of the Great Recession? Source Notes 82 Important People of the Great Recession 86 For Further Research 88 Index 90 Picture Credits 95 About the Author 96 Foreword W hen the Puritans fi rst emigrated from England to America in 1630, they believed that their journey was blessed by a cov- enant between themselves and God. By the terms of that covenant they agreed to establish a community in the New World dedicated to what they believed was the true Christian faith. God, in turn, would reward their fi delity by making certain that they and their descendants would always experience his protection and enjoy material prosperity. More- over, the Lord guaranteed that their land would be seen as a shining beacon—or in their words, a “city upon a hill,”—which the rest of the world would view with admiration and respect. By embracing this no- tion that God could and would shower his favor and special blessings upon them, the Puritans were adopting the providential philosophy of history—meaning that history is the unfolding of a plan established or guided by a higher intelligence. Th e concept of intercession by a divine power is only one of many explanations of the driving forces of world history. Historians and phi- losophers alike have subscribed to numerous other ideas. For example, the ancient Greeks and Romans argued that history is cyclical. Nations and civilizations, according to these ancients of the Western world, rise and fall in unpredictable cycles; the only certainty is that these cycles will per- sist throughout an endless future. Th e German historian Oswald Spengler (1880–1936) echoed the ancients to some degree in his controversial study Th e Decline of the West. Spengler asserted that all civilizations inevitably pass through stages comparable to the life span of a person: childhood, youth, adulthood, old age, and, eventually, death. As the title of his work implies, Western civilization is currently entering its fi nal stage. Joining those who see purpose and direction in history are thinkers who completely reject the idea of meaning or certainty. Rather, they reason that since there are far too many random and unseen factors at work on the earth, historians would be unwise to endorse histori- cal predictability of any type. Warfare (both nuclear and convention- al), plagues, earthquakes, tsunamis, meteor showers, and other cata- strophic world-changing events have loomed large throughout history and prehistory. In his essay “A Free Man’s Worship,” philosopher and 6 mathematician Bertrand Russell (1872–1970) supported this argu- ment, which many refer to as the nihilist or chaos theory of history. According to Russell, history follows no preordained path. Rather, the earth itself and all life on earth resulted from, as Russell describes it, an “accidental collocation of atoms.” Based on this premise, he pessimisti- cally concluded that all human achievement will eventually be “buried beneath the debris of a universe in ruins.” Whether history does or does not have an underlying purpose, histori- ans, journalists, and countless others have nonetheless left behind a record of human activity tracing back nearly 6,000 years. From the dawn of the great ancient Near Eastern civilizations of Mesopotamia and Egypt to the modern economic and military behemoths China and the United States, humanity’s deeds and misdeeds have been and continue to be monitored and recorded. Th e distinguished British scholar Arnold Toynbee (1889– 1975), in his widely acclaimed twelve-volume work entitled A Study of His- tory, studied twenty-one diff erent civilizations that have passed through history’s pages. He noted with certainty that others would follow. In the fi nal analysis, the academic and journalistic worlds mostly regard history as a record and explanation of past events. From a more practical perspective, history represents a sequence of building blocks—cultural, tech- nological, military, and political—ready to be utilized and enhanced or ma- ligned and perverted by the present. What that means is that all societies— whether advanced civilizations or preliterate tribal cultures—leave a legacy for succeeding generations to either embrace or disregard. Recognizing the richness and fullness of history, the ReferencePoint Press Understanding World History series fosters an evaluation and in- terpretation of history and its infl uence on later generations. Each vol- ume in the series approaches its subject chronologically and topically, with specifi c focus on nations, periods, or pivotal events. Primary and secondary source quotations are included, along with complete source notes and suggestions for further research. Moreover, the series refl ects the truism that the key to understand- ing the present frequently lies in the past. With that in mind, each series title concludes with a legacy chapter that highlights the bonds between past and present and, more important, demonstrates that world history is a continuum of peoples and ideas, sometimes hidden but there none- theless, waiting to be discovered by those who choose to look. 777 Important Events of The Great Recession 2005 Home ownership in the United States reaches a historic level of 69 percent. 2001 1994 Th e Federal Reserve drastically President Bill Clinton announces the lowers interest rates from 6.5 National Homeownership Strategy with percent to 1.75 percent to the goal of increasing home ownership counter the short recession after in low-income neighborhoods. the 9/11 terrorist attacks. 1990 2000 1999 2006 Th e Financial Services Modernization In July, Act is signed into law allowing banks and home insurance companies to invest in stocks, prices mortgage-backed peak in securities, and other the United fi nancial products. States, achieving their 2002 greatest In July President George W. average Bush sets a goal of increasing value the number of minority before the homeowners to 5.5 million. housing bubble collapses. 2003 Investor Warren Buff et calls credit default swaps “fi nancial weapons of mass destruction.” 8 2010 2008 In May the European Union agrees to a $147 On September 15 the billion bailout of Greece; in July Congress largest business failure passes the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and in US history occurs Consumer when the fi nancial fi rm Protection Lehman Brothers fi les Act. for bankruptcy; on September 16 the Federal Reserve announces it will rescue AIG with an $85 billion bailout; on October 3 Congress passes the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act, which 2012 sets aside $700 billion to On November 14, millions of purchase toxic mortgage demonstrators protest austerity assets from banks; in measures in twenty-three European December Bush approves Union nations for the European a $13.4 billion bailout of Day of Action and Solidarity. the auto industry. 2010 2007 2011 2013 Th e Great Recession On September 17 about one Home prices begins; Moody’s and thousand protesters from the jump more than 5 Standard & Poor’s Occupy Wall Street movement percent in twenty downgrade the triple-A gather for the fi rst time in New York major US cities, ratings on hundreds of City’s Zuccotti Park; on October 15 the largest annual mortgage-backed securities, the Occupy movement inspires an increase since the touching off a fi nancial international day of protest in 950 housing bubble panic on Wall Street. cities in eighty-two countries. popped in 2007. 2009 In January the United States loses over 740,000 jobs, the largest monthly decline in sixty years; in February Congress passes the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, allocating $787 billion to stimulate the economy; in May Chrysler fi les for bankruptcy, followed by General Motors a month later; in June the Great Recession offi cially ends in the United States; on July 1, the Cash for Clunkers program sets off a car-buying frenzy as consumers take advantage of a $3,500– $4,500 federal rebate for old, ineffi cient vehicles. 999 Introduction TTThhheee DDDeeefffiiinnniiinnnggg CCChhhaaarrraaacccttteeerrriiissstttiiicccsss ooofff ttthhheee GGGrrreeeaaattt RRReeeccceeessssssiiiooonnn Billions of people throughout the world depend on the economy for their basic survival. People work and earn money to pay for food, housing, education, and medical care. Many also borrow money to pay for expensive items such as cars and houses. In addition, in the United States alone over 200 million people use credit cards to pay for countless consumer goods, from clothing to computers. Whether peo- ple are buying homes with loans, called mortgages, or using credit cards to buy groceries, lenders expect them to pay the money back along with a borrowing fee, called interest. If a bank gives too many loans to people who do not pay the money back, however, then it goes out of business, or fails. Economic activity based on earning, spending, and borrowing money has created prosperity in the United States and other industrial nations for decades. Th ere have also been several notable periods when economies slowed down, unemployment increased, and business prof- its fell. Between 1930 and the early 1940s, during a period known as the Great Depression, the world economy experienced a steep decline of historic proportions. By 1933 in the United States, over fi ve thou- sand banks had failed, and 25 percent of all working-age adults were 10

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