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Inequalities of wealth

Despite the growing prosperity of American society in the 1920s, the boom did not lead to higher profits for all industries. Two key industries where profits declined were agriculture and traditional industries.

Agriculture

Farmers had prospered during World War One. Many had taken out loans to increase their capacity to produce and meet the additional export demand from Europe. Machinery such as tractors also made farming more efficient, so farmers could produce more.

However, prices went down as demand from Europe decreased and a arose. European governments responded to American on produce made by their famers, with a tariff on American goods. Farmers struggled to sell all their produce. As a result, prices fell and farmers鈥 profits dropped dramatically. Roughly 600,000 American farmers lost their farms in 1924, as they struggled to keep up with their debts. By 1928, half of all American farmers were living in poverty.

Traditional industries

The traditional industries declined and many people were made Those workers who managed to keep their jobs received very low wages.

The older industries suffered from and At the same time, new industries rose up to overtake older industries that had once been at the forefront of the economy. Two examples are the coal industry and the textile industry.

Question

How was the coal industry affected?

Question

How was the textile industry affected?

Disadvantaged groups

The quality of life did not improve for all Americans during this period.

African Americans

African Americans continued to face and economic inequality in all areas of the country. In the South, farm workers and struggled to make a decent standard of living. Agriculture was suffering overall. However, African Americans additionally faced racism and injustice, which led to them suffering significantly more than other groups. In urban areas, African Americans were most likely to be employed in menial, low-paying jobs.

In the 1928 election for president, Herbert Hoover鈥檚 campaign proclaimed that there would be a "car in every driveway, and a chicken in every pot". At the time, this standard of living was beyond the reach of the majority of Americans.

Native Americans

Most Native Americans lived in extreme poverty. Despite being the original nations of America, in the 19th century they were dispossessed (the Europeans took land from them) of large amounts of their lands. Mining companies, the and Americans wanting to buy the valuable land fuelled the systematic loss of Native American lands. By the 1920s, they had been largely forced off their traditional lands to areas called This land was often unfertile and desolate. For Native Americans, life expectancy was extremely low and life was overshadowed by poverty.

Other groups

Immigrants were discriminated against and often forced to take low-paying jobs. The elderly and disabled also suffered as there was no national system of support or .