The Background
The Great Depression was triggered by the American Wall Street stock market crash, on 24 October to 29 October 1929.
The crash happened after an extended period of speculation when millions of people invested or borrowed money to buy stocks, pushing prices to unsustainable levels.
The panic selling of stocks and about $14 billion of stock losses bankrupted thousands of investors, with some stocks having no buyers at any price.
The Wall Street crash led to a worldwide economic depression.
With financial instability and the rapid fall in commodity prices, exports fell, and local industries slowed or failed. The Australian economy collapsed.
Australia had experienced inflation from 1919 to 1920 and a recession in 1923. The government then borrowed large amounts of money from overseas.
Reduced taxation revenues and falling wheat and wool prices made repayments difficult.
James Scullin and Labor won government in October 1929, just before the stock market crash, responding to the crisis with a range of tariff barriers and austerity measures that did not help.
In 1930, unemployment was 10 per cent, reaching a high of 30 per cent in 1933 --one of the highest rates of unemployment in the world.
Sir Otto Niemeyer, Director of the Bank of England, was invited to Australia in mid-1930, and advised cutting wages, government spending and balancing budgets.
Premeriers Fenton and Lyons wanted to follow Niemeyer's plan, but New South Wales Premier Jack Lang rebelled, wanting to default on foreign debts.
Edward Theodore's plan with monetary stimulation was a "middle way". But both Theodore and Lang's inflationary plans were rejected, and a schism developed in the Labor Party.
The Premiers' Plan was developed by four of Australia's leading economists to reduce government spending and repay government debt.
The Commonwealth Government encouraged increased gold production, and many people tried their luck on the former goldfields.
Vic. Unemployed Qold Seekers —— Unemployed Orderly MarchSun (Sydney, NSW : 1910 - 1954), Friday 6 March 1931 |
One of the habitations, constructed by unemployed in the Domain, which the Lord Mayor (Alderman Wälder) inspected yesterday.Sydney Morning Herald (NSW : 1842 - 1954), Wednesday 22 June 1932 |
Humiliation of Poverty and Unemployment
Ordinary people were vulnerable to economic forces beyond their control. And there was much suffering during the Depression years.
The Depression would have a lasting impact on a whole generation. Frugality wasn't a choice but a necessity.
"....military hats which have been
made available by the Federal
Government for the unemployed.
Assembling the dyed military clothing
made available to the unemployed by
the Federal Government at the Military
Ordnance Stores, Leichhardt,...."
made available by the Federal
Government for the unemployed.
Assembling the dyed military clothing
made available to the unemployed by
the Federal Government at the Military
Ordnance Stores, Leichhardt,...."
Evening News (Sydney, NSW : 1869 - 1931) Fri 13 Jun 1930By 1932, more than 60,000 men, women and children depended on government payments called "susso" (short for 'sustenance') to buy food.
Many Aboriignal people also lost their jobs and had to move to government reserves. By 1941, almost half of the Aboriginal population of New South Wales lived on reserves.
Over 40,000 men travelled from home around Australia, looking for work.
Shanty towns, ironically named ''happy valleys", made from scavenged corrugated iron, hessian, wood and cardboard, and illegal camps cropped up.
Many children had to leave school at age thirteen or fourteen to find work and support the family.
The government and charities provided some unemployed with soup kitchens, clothing, and relief work.
Other Aboriginal people continued hunting and collecting traditional foods.Australian birth rates were relatively low during the Great Depression, falling to 2.1 babies per woman in 1934.
Throughout the 1930s, communism gained increased support within the trade union movement in Australia.
Campaigner Frederick Oswald Barnett recorded the poverty facing many in the Melbourne slums of the 1930s. Barnett said that after a tour of the slums, the Victorian Premier, Albert Dunstan, couldn’t sleep for days.
Australia began to recover from the economic depression after 1932. Then, war broke out in 1939, and economic conditions began to worsen again.
People had to use ingenuity, grit and resourcefulness to survive during the depression years.
Many people started trapping wild rabbits, as in many areas, rabbits could breed the entire year. Rabbits not only provided meat, but also pelts, which could be sold.
RENMARK: A truckload of rabbits being delivered at Sonneman's Freezer, Mr. M. Brewer stands left. 1931, SLSA |
Two Aboriginal boys carrying rabbits they have hunted, Koonibba Mission Station, South Australia, 1920s-30s, SLSA |
Men collecting dole tickets from the Coffs Harbour Police Station. 1929-1930. Coffs Collections |
Australian Christian Commonwealth (SA : 1901 - 1940), Friday 6 June 1930 |
Many people started growing fruit and vegetables at home and bottling and preserving produce.
There was social unrest. On 29 January 1931, 50 unemployed people in Darwin who had been refused additional relief work stormed Commonwealth offices and fought with the police.
On 6 March 1931, unemployed men rioted outside the Treasury Building in Perth.
The home of the late Sir Wigram Allen at the Glebe, which will shelter 28 homeless families under the Housing Fund scheme.Sydney Morning Herald (NSW : 1842 - 1954), Wednesday 26 August 1931 |
SALVATION ARMY'S SHELTER FOR UNEMPLOYED. Sydney Morning Herald (NSW : 1842 - 1954), Tuesday 12 May 1931 |
Newcastle Sun (NSW : 1918 - 1954), Saturday 25 April 1931 |
Unemployed workers demonstrate on the veranda of the old police station. They were flying a socialist Red Flag. Doctor Cook took the flag down and took it away. 1931. Library&Archives NT |
Red Cliffs, Victoria, Australia, Feb 1932, Billy Cans, Itinerant Workers, Swags. Jock Burns, Museums Victoria |
Labor Daily (Sydney, NSW : 1924 - 1938), Thursday 15 June 1933 |
Worker (Brisbane, Qld. : 1890 - 1955), Wednesday 7 December 1932 |
Brisbane has her own shanty town, Telegraph (Brisbane, Qld. : 1872 - 1947), Friday 13 January 1933 |
Truth (Brisbane, Qld. : 1900 - 1954), Sunday 4 November 1934 |
Schoolchildren line up for free issue of soup and a slice of bread, 1934, State Library of New South Wales |
West Melbourne. A "Dudley Mansion."1935, SLVIC |
Herald (Melbourne, Vic. : 1861 - 1954), Monday 17 June 1935 |