Ch 19-2 A New Economic Era

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Ch 19-2 A New Economic Era The Main Idea New products, new industries, and new ways of doing business expanded the economy in the 1920s, although t not everyone shared in the prosperity Content Statement 13/Learning Goal: Explain how an improved standard of living for many, combined with technological innovations in transportation and industry resulted in social and cultural changes and tensions.

Ch 19-2 Vocab Henry Ford Assembly line Productivity Welfare capitalism Suburb Installment buying Credit

Ch 19-2 Vocab Henry Ford: American business leader; he revolutionized factory production through the use of the assembly line and popularized the affordable automobile. Made cars identical and simple. Brought down the cost. Assembly line: a production system in which the item being built moves along a conveyor belt to various workstations. On Ford s assembly line, workers had one of 84 specific jobs. Productivity: a measure of the output per unit of input. Welfare capitalism: a system in which companies provide benefits to employees in an effort to promote worker satisfaction and loyalty. Suburb: smaller towns located outside urban areas. Made possible because of automobiles. Installment buying: paying for an item over time in small payments. Credit: borrowing money

1) The Assembly Line 1.Make cars simple and identical instead of doing highly expensive custom manufacturing. 2.Make the process smooth, using interchangeable parts and moving belts. 3.Determine how workers should move, and at what speed, to be the most productive. These ideas formed the first large-scale moving assembly line, a production system in which the item being built moves along a conveyor belt to workstations that usually require simple skills. 84 different jobs on assembly line. The man who puts on a bolt does not put on a nut By the 1920s Ford made a car every minute, dropping prices so that by 1929 there were about 22 million cars in America. Ford raised his workers wages ($5 a day, much higher than other industries) so they could also buy cars, but he opposed unions, and assembly lines were very boring. Could be dangerous and workers were easily replaceable. Ford workers are not really alive, they are half dead

2)The Effect on Industry The Ford Motor Company dominated auto making for 15 years, but the entire industry grew when competitors like General Motors and Chrysler tried to improve on Ford s formula by offering new designs, starting competition. Other industries learned from Ford s ideas, using assemblyline techniques to make large quantities of goods at lower costs, raising productivity, or output, by 60 percent. The success of businesses led to welfare capitalism, a system in which companies provide benefits to employees to promote worker satisfaction and loyalty. Many companies offered company-paid pensions and recreation programs hoping employees would accept lower pay, which many did.

3) Industry Changes Society Car Effects Demand for steel, rubber, glass, and other car materials soared. Auto repair shops and filling stations sprang up. Motels and restaurants arose to meet travelers needs. Landowners who found petroleum on their property became rich. Cities and Suburbs Detroit, Michigan, grew when Ford based his plants there, and other automakers followed. Other midwestern cities, like Akron, Ohio, boomed by making car necessities like rubber and tires. Suburbs, which started thanks to trolley lines, grew with car travel. Tourism Freedom to travel by car produced a new tourism industry. Before the auto boom, Florida attracted mostly the wealthy, but cars brought tourists by the thousands. Buyers snatched up land, causing prices to rise. Some Florida swamps were drained to put up housing.

4)The New Consumer/New Products During the 1920s, an explosion of new products, experiences, and forms of communication stimulated the economy. New Products New factories turned out electrical appliances like refrigerators and vacuum cleaners, as more homes were wired for electricity. The radio connected the world, and by the late 1920s, 4 homes in 10 had a radio, and families gathered around it nightly. The first passenger airplanes appeared in the 1920s, and though they were more uncomfortable than trains, the thrill excited many Americans. 5.Creating Demand Advertisers became the cheerleaders of the new consumer economy. Persuasive advertising gained a major role in the economy. Advertisers paid for space in publications, and companies sponsored radio shows. Wide exposure for products Advertising money made these shows available to the public, and ads gave the products wide exposure.

6) New Ways To Pay In the early 1900s, most Americans paid for items in full when they bought them, perhaps borrowing money for very large, important, or expensive items like houses, pianos, or sewing machines. Borrowing was not considered respectable until the 1920s, when installment buying, or paying for an item over time in small payments, became popular. They bought on credit, which is, in effect, borrowing money. Consumers quickly took to installment buying to purchase new products on the market. By the end of the decade, 90 percent of durable goods, or long-lasting goods like cars and appliances, were bought on credit. Advertisers encouraged the use of credit, telling consumers they could get what they want now and assuring them that with small payments they would barely miss the money.

7)Weaknesses in the Economy Though the Roaring Twenties brought prosperity to many, other Americans suffered deeply in the postwar period Farmers American farmers who had good times during World War I found demand slowed, and competition from Europe reemerged. The government tried to help in 1921 by passing a tariff making foreign farm products more expensive, but it didn t help much. Natural Disasters Boll weevil infestations ruined cotton crops. The Mississippi River flooded in 1927, killing thousands and leaving many homeless. The Big Blow, the strongest hurricane recorded up to that time, killed 243 people in Florida. Land Speculation In Florida, the wild land boom came to a sudden and disastrous end. Florida sank into an economic depression even as other parts of the nation enjoyed prosperity.