Herbert Hoover.
Publié le 10/05/2013
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E Postwar Work
Even after the armistice, the Allies continued their blockade around Germany.
Hoover, in Europe again, worked to have it relaxed.
He was appointed chairman of theAmerican Relief Administration to assist in the economic restoration of Europe, receiving from the U.S.
Congress $100 million to fight famine and plague.
In this officialrole, and afterward as a private citizen, Hoover oversaw the distribution of 46 million tons of food to people in 30 countries.
He controlled shipping, directed railways andcoal mines, and reopened ports and canals closed by war.
When the American Relief Administration was terminated, Hoover organized the European Children's Fund tocare for millions of orphaned children in central and eastern Europe.
F Secretary of Commerce
When Ohio Senator Warren G.
Harding became president in 1921, he appointed Hoover secretary of commerce, a small office that Hoover strengthened until heresigned in 1928.
During his seven years as head of the Department of Commerce, Hoover extended its control over mines and patents.
He promoted the growth oftrade associations and chambers of commerce to make industry more efficient.
Hoover did not believe in either the traditional laissez-faire policy, in which the state hadno involvement in the economy, or in government intervention in the economy.
Instead he preached a doctrine of voluntary cooperation in which private citizens wouldorganize to achieve a goal.
The government would support but not control these organizations.
He did, however, expand government regulation in two areas involvingnew technology, radio broadcasting and commercial aviation.
He made federally collected statistics more available and encouraged manufacturers to standardize partsand supplies.
Hoover saw the Department of Commerce as an important support for the expansion of American business overseas, and in the area of foreign commercethe department expanded its operations tremendously—at the expense, some felt, of the State Department's traditional role.
Hoover did not lose his reputation as a humanitarian.
During the Russian famine of 1922 and 1923 he organized the distribution of millions of dollars' worth of Americanfood, and he directed relief after the Mississippi River flood of 1927.
G Election of 1928
President Calvin Coolidge's withdrawal from the 1928 presidential race left the Republican Party nomination wide open.
Hoover had been making plans to seek thepresidency, and his personal organization began an active hunt for delegates.
When the national convention assembled in Kansas City, Missouri, in June 1928, thedelegates and their bosses recognized the attractiveness of Hoover's name to voters and nominated him for president on the first ballot.
Hoover received 837 votes toonly 74 for his nearest rival, former Illinois Governor Frank O.
Lowden.
The convention adopted a conservative platform and chose United States Senator Charles Curtis of Kansas as the Republican candidate for vice president.
Hoover hadpreviously declared himself in favor of vigorous enforcement of the 18th Amendment (which banned alcoholic drinks) “a great social and economic experiment, noble inmotive and far-reaching in purpose.” ( see Prohibition).
Opposing Hoover was the Democratic nominee, Governor Alfred E.
Smith of New York.
Smith was a product of New York City's Tammany Hall, a political organizationwhose name had become synonymous with corruption.
He was also Roman Catholic, considered a handicap in the preponderantly Protestant nation.
Smith also opposedthe 18th Amendment, which made him unacceptable to numerous rural regions in the South and West.
In contrast, Hoover's name was known everywhere, and he rode on the crest of Republican prosperity, for which Hoover, as secretary of commerce, was the symbol.
InNovember, Hoover won in a landslide, with 444 electoral votes to Smith's 87, and 21,437,277 popular votes to Smith's 15,007,698.
Hoover carried every Northern stateexcept Massachusetts and Rhode Island.
He also broke the traditional hold of the Democratic Party on the South by winning five Southern states: Virginia, NorthCarolina, Florida, Tennessee, and Texas.
IV PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES
A Farm Legislation
Hoover was inaugurated on March 4, 1929, and during the first six months of his administration, the economic prosperity that had characterized the country during the1920s continued.
One industry, however, did not enjoy the fruits of this economic success: agriculture.
An increase in efficiency and in the amount of land being farmedaround the world had driven prices down.
Farmers desperately tried to produce more crops to maintain their standard of living, but further increases in efficiency onlymade prices lower.
In response to the plight of farmers, Hoover called Congress into special session in April 1929 to enact farm relief legislation and to revise the tariff.
His farm program,embodied in the Agricultural Marketing Act of 1929, established the first large-scale government system to aid the farmer in peacetime, but it avoided productioncontrol.
The act set up the Federal Farm Board of eight members to make loans to marketing cooperatives.
The board could also establish corporations to buy farmsurpluses and thus to raise prices.
Within six months, however, the Great Depression sent farm prices to new lows.
Until the summer of 1931, wheat and cotton prices were kept slightly higher than worldlevels.
By 1932, government funds had been spent, and the Farm Board warehouses were full.
Farm prices plunged to a new low.
B Hawley-Smoot Tariff
Congress also passed the Hawley-Smoot Tariff Act, which raised agricultural duties and tariffs, or import taxes, on manufactured goods.
Economists generally protestedagainst the Hawley-Smoot tariff, warning that it would invite retaliation by European powers, but Hoover signed the tariff into law in June 1930.
C Stock Market Crash
Following a short recession after World War I (1914-1918), the United States had enjoyed an economic boom in which both production and consumption increased.During this period many citizens had invested savings and earnings in speculative ventures, particularly the buying of stocks “on margin.” In these cases, the buyer putup as little as 3 percent of a stock's price in cash and borrowed the remainder from the broker.
The growing demand for stocks and the prosperous state of the nationas a whole caused stock prices to rise, which in turn encouraged more stock purchases.
Stock prices reached their height in the so-called “Hoover bull market” during the first six months of the Hoover administration.
Individuals invested billions of dollars inthe stock market, obtaining money by borrowing from banks, mortgaging their homes, and selling solid government securities, such as Liberty Bonds.
Buying stock on margin was a risky bet that the price of that stock would continue to increase.
In August 1929 approximately 300 million shares of stock had beenpurchased on margin.
During normal business periods a share of stock would be purchased mostly for the dividend it paid, but during the bull market, people bought.
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Liens utiles
- Herbert Hoover par Roger Heacock Écrivain, Genève Herbert Hoover, trente et unième Président des États-Unis, est souvent représenté comme victime de l'histoire, impuissant, de par son conservatisme politique, à sortir son pays du marasme économique dans lequel il avait sombré en 1929.
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