Angela Brown Chapter 11 A B USINESS B OOM 1.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
In just ten years there was a huge increase in production. It has been called the SECOND INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION. It was a boom in CONSUMER GOODS, that is.
Advertisements

Inventions.
Henry Ford Power point created by Robert L. Martinez
Chapter 22 Section 2 A Business Boom.
1920s – A Business Boom Kansas City = nations first shopping center A&W Root Beer = first fast-food chain restaurant Advertising became big business.
Chapter 24 – Section 1 “Boom Times”. Post WWI Economic Problems Govt. cancelled billions of dollars of contracts with factories when war ended Factories.
Unit 5 - The Business of America
Chapter 21 section 2 and 4 question/answers
Chapter 8 Lesson 1: The Rise of Big Business
Greatest Innovations… List the most important innovations of all time. What is the criteria for your decision? –Revenue generated? –Benefit to humanity?
The Economy During the 1920s
EQ: WHAT ECONOMIC PROBLEMS THREATENED THE BOOM OF THE 1920S? The Economy of the 1920s.
A Growing Economy Chapter 10 Lesson 1 Page 322. The Expansion of Industry Industries thrived: telephone companies, new phones, electric companies, large.
The Business of America Main Idea: The prosperous 20’s led to a rise in the American standard of living. The US owned 40% of the world’s wealth Many Americans.
1 Warm Up: Describe the economic policy of 1920s Republicans with one term. DOK: 1; S. 2; Learning Target: I can describe people, events, ideas and changes.
Chapter 13, Section 1 Things to Know
Business Boom & The Economy in the Late 1920s
Economics of the 1920s. NEW INVENTIONS PROMOTE PROSPERITY CONSUMER REVOLUTION!
1920s A Growing Economy What led to the Economic Boom of the 1920s?
In just ten years there was a huge increase in production. It has been called the ‘SECOND INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION’. It was a boom in CONSUMER GOODS, that.
Trade THE DAWES PLAN US Germany England & France 1. US loans Germany money to pay reparations 2. Germany pays back allies on agreed upon lower rate 3.
Warm-ups In 1925, a high school biology teacher from Tennessee named John Scopes was put on trial for teaching evolution to his students. Why do you think.
Your Task for the Day: Poetry Your Poem Must Include:  What was good about the economy in the 1920s?  How did consumers behave?  Effects of the automobile.
Warm-up: Why do you think the US economy boomed after the war ended?
C HAPTER 24 Section 3 A Booming Economy Made by 6 th grade student 2008.
Economy of the 1920s Chapter 14.2, 14.3 Signs of Prosperity Signs of Problems.
The Business Boom of the 1920’s
Politics and Prosperity
Business Fever Chapter 24, Section 2. In the 1920’s factories poured out new goods Refrigerators Other electric appliances New low priced cars Output.
LT: I can explain how new technology caused the economy of the 1920’s to boom.
Chapter 24, Section 3 Notes. Recession When the economy turns downward and is not doing well.
1920’s Economic Boom New Appliances and New Debt
Describe each picture. What might each represent about the 1920’s?
In just ten years there was a huge increase in production. It has been called the “SECOND INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION”. It was a boom in CONSUMER GOODS, that.
21.2 The Business Boom of the 1920’s. Four Main Factors fueled boom : 1.Effect of WWI on Technology: * during the war there was a labor shortage, combined.
Emergence of the Automobile Industry. Objective: To analyze the effect the car had on U.S. society Ford Model T.
Coolidge (Cont.) FOREIGN POLICY FOREIGN POLICY Continued isolationist policies Continued isolationist policies Kellogg-Briand Pact- 60 nations sign to.
Business of America Objective: Analyze the growth of cities, production, and credit Production – Red City – Blue Credit - Green.
The Economic Boom and Optimism of the 1920’s
NEW INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION Chapter 18 Section 1. The Centennial Celebrate US 100 th birthday (1876) in Philadelphia Fair to show American inventions.
A BOOMING ECONOMY SEC PAGES Define: Recession – scientific management – gross national product – productivity – welfare capitalism - installment.
What was the Status of Americans after WWI? WE SAW HOW BAD THINGS WERE FOR GERMANY UNDER THE TREATY OF VERSAILLES. WHAT WERE THE CONDITIONS IN THE UNITED.
October 28, Notes (part 1)- A Growing Economy of the 1920’s 2. Video Clip: Model T Vocabulary 4. Return Quizzes and Work ***Unit III.
Social, Economic, and Technological changes Developments in factory and labor productivity, transportation, communication and rural electrification of.
The Roaring 20’s The Economy of the 1920’s. A Consumer Economy Defined as: One that depends on a large amount of spending by consumers Buying on Credit.
1920s Business BOOM! America is awesome! s Economy Economy is booming.Economy is booming. Consumer economyConsumer economy –Depends on large.
Warm-up: Why do you think the US economy boomed after the war ended?
Economics of the 1920s. 1. HOW DID THE CAR INDUSTRY AFFECT AMERICAN ATTITUDES AND/OR VALUES? 2. EXPLAIN HOW ADVERTISING BECAME MORE OF A PSYCHOLOGICAL.
New Economic Era Mr. Williams 10 th Grade U.S. History.
Growth in the 1920sGrowth in the 1920s  Technology stimulated rapid economic growth  Before WWI only 30% of factories were run on electricity  By 1929.
1920s: Business Boom February 22,  Life before 1920…  No malls  No fast food  No highways  Few cars  No advertisements  Life before 1920…
1920s A Business Boom.
20’S TECHNOLOGY & IMPACT. THE 1920’S WERE A TIME OF INNOVATION…. Many products were invented… And many products which had been invented earlier were popularized!
The Growth of Industrial Prosperity
A Business Boom New products and Americans’ power to purchase Conditions that made a consumer economy possible in the 1920s What factors.
A New Economic Era Unit 2 Section 2 Part 7. Discussion Question How would you describe the United States after World War I? What were some things that.
The Twenties A Booming Economy. Prosperity 1920’s was country’s most economically prosperous era Factories were producing more & more goods Stock prices.
Birth of Modern America Chapter 11 Section 2 Mr. Smith.
CANADIAN HISTORY 1201 Unit 3: The Prosperity of the 20s.
Left Hand Side  27 Automobiles Right Hand Side  A roar or yawn?3/18.
Section 2 “A Business Boom” Page  Consumer economy  Installment plan  Gross National Product (GNP)  assembly.
Roaring 20’s.
The Postwar Economy Booms
A Growing Economy Chapter 16 Section 2.
Technology Changes American Life
What led to the Economic Boom of the 1920s?
A Booming Economy Chapter 7 Section 1.
The Changing Business of America
A Business Boom Chapter 21 Sec 2.
1920’s Business Boom 14.2 Notes.
Presentation transcript:

Angela Brown Chapter 11 A B USINESS B OOM 1

A C ONSUMER E CONOMY  Consumer Economy – One that depends on a large amount of buying by consumers  Consumers – individuals who use products  Wages rose 28%  # of millionaires doubled 2 /Rexall%20warehouse-1920%27s.jpg

B UYING ON C REDIT  Installment Plan – a system that lets customers make partial payments (installments) at set intervals over a period of time until the total debt is paid – fueled consumer economy  Up to this time borrowing money for anything except a house or land unthrifty even immoral  People bought who would not have – despite interest rates from 11 to 40%  % cars; 70% furniture; 80% vacuum cleaners, radios, and refrigerators; 90% sewing machines, washing machines 3

4

E LECTRIC P OWER  customers quadrupled  63% people with electric power (urban)  4% American farms (many used wind powered generators)  GE formed 1892 – take over Thomas Edison’s electric light business  Sold household electrical appliances – electric motors 5

New Products to Buy  Electric toasters,  ovens,  sewing machines,  coffee pots,  irons, and  vacuum cleaners,  telephones,  cosmetics Ford and the Automobile  Ford and the “Model T”  1896 perfected first version of lightweight, gas- powered car called quadricycle (sold it to make a better one)  1903 started automobile company  1908 sold 30,000 Model T’s 6

7

F ORD ’ S A SSEMBLY L INE  wanted to “democratize the automobile” produce sell cars at prices ordinary people could afford  assembly line – manufacturing process in which each worker does one specialized task in the construction of the final product  Made assemble line more efficient – like today  Model T made every 24 seconds 8

M ODEL T  1914 (first year of assembly line) Model T’s $490 each (1/2 price from year before)  Ford “any color as long as its black” – black paint dried faster – 1928 Model A color variety  General Motors – low priced Chevrolet – many colors  Ford – vertical consolidation – controlled businesses that make up phases of products development (raw ore, coal mines, wood, rubber, glassworks, railroads, fleet of ships, tools) 9 msarosy/images/model-t.gif

C OMPLEX B USINESSMAN  1914 praised for $5-a-day rate for workers (double other factories)  used violence to fight unions  gave millions of Americans cars – but refused to meet tastes  1936 slipped to 3 rd place in car business  contempt for history  1915 tried to talk Europe out of WWI  1920 blamed Jews for world’s problems in his newspaper – sued for slander – apologized – sold paper 10

11

I NDUSTRIAL G ROWTH  nation’s biggest single industry – automotive  garages, car dealerships, motels, campgrounds, gas stations, restaurants, truck lines  3.7 million people employed directly or indirectly because of automobile in 1929  $2 million spent to build/maintains roads and bridges  Power of monopolies declined even while American business was getting bigger  Publishing, motion picture, machine making, industries boomed 12