75th Anniversary of the 'Great Crash'

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2004-10-28

This is Gwen Outen with the VOA Special English Economics Report.

Seventy-five years ago this week,
an event shook the world: the Great Crash of nineteen twenty-nine.

It began October twenty-fourth, nineteen twenty-nine. Fear seized
the New York Stock Exchange. Investors wanted to sell their shares
before the stock lost value. Over the next five days, millions of
shares flooded the market. Many investors lost all their money.

During the nineteen twenties, many Americans had invested in the
stock market. Many got rich. In nineteen twenty-eight, Herbert
Hoover was elected president. He said the future was bright with
hope.

People were being advised to buy stock before prices climbed even
higher. Common sense was in short supply. Stock market rules let
investors buy shares even if they did not have enough money. That is
still true today, but there are stronger controls.

During the summer of nineteen twenty-nine, some economists warned
that there was no real value behind the high prices. President
Hoover urged stock market officials to make trading safer and more
honest. But he did not think the government should interfere in the
market.

When the drop in stock prices finally came, it was slow at first.
It picked up speed as investors sold more and more shares. Several
bankers bought stocks in an effort to prevent a crash.

But the intense activity continued. October twenty-ninth is
remembered as Black Tuesday. That day alone, stocks lost a tenth of
their value.

The crash caused a lot of people to lose their jobs, their farms
and their homes. Many banks and businesses failed. The crash led to
a worldwide depression.

In nineteen thirty-two, Americans elected a new president,
Franklin Roosevelt. He increased federal control over banks and the
stock market. But the Great Depression did not end in America until
nineteen forty-two, during the Second World War.

The stock market has had other bad days in the last seventy-five
years. October nineteenth, nineteen eighty-seven, is called Black
Monday. American stocks lost twenty-three percent of their value,
their biggest percentage loss in a single day.

In less than two years, however, those stocks had regained all
the value they lost. And economists like Lee Kjelleren [SHELL-er-en]
at the Museum of American Financial History in New York say good
quality stocks are still the best investment.

This VOA Special English Economics Report was written by Jerilyn
Watson. This is Gwen Outen.


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