usgovernment spending.com
Thursday January 20, 2022 
developed by Christopher Chantrill
President

Franklin D. Roosevelt

Congress

76th Congress

Alben Barkley

Carl Hatch

William B. Bankhead

Agencies

Works Progress Administration

Legislation

Hatch Act

Neutrality Act of 1939

Parties

Democratic Party History

Republican Party History

Analysis

Economic Recovery in the Great Depression


US Gross Domestic Product 1850-1939

Click to see or download numbers. Click to change chart

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Chart Size: By default, the chart is displayed at medium size. But you can use the dropdown control to change the size.
Color: By default charts are displayed with color data lines and fill. You can change this to grayscale if you want.

<< -10yr   Year Range  +10yr >>

Start Year: You can select any start year you want using the dropdown control in the table heading. At the top and bottom of the dropdown only years ending in “0” are shown. Select a start year to get close, then select the start year you want.
End Year: You can select any end year you want using the dropdown control in the table heading. At the top and bottom of the dropdown only years ending in “0” are shown. Select an end year to get close, then select the end year you want.

Warning: Switching to line chart

"Democratic" includes Democratic-Republican Party; "Republican" includes Whig Party and Federalists



If you’d like to create your own custom chart, you should use the table above to make your selections.

  • Select the year range: Select the start year and the end year you want by selecting the years you want in the two year dropdown boxes.
  • Select chart item: .

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Copy and Paste: Here is the dataset you have just charted. The table also includes nominal or chained GDP for each year charted. If you’d like the data for analysis, just copy the tab-delimited text in the textbox below (click cursor in text box, then press ctrl-A then press ctrl-C) and paste it into your spreadsheet.

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Below is a formatted version of the dataset displayed in the chart. Included is a column of nominal or chained GDP for each year charted.

US Gross Domestic Product
Years 1850 to 1939
Year
18500
18510
18520
18530
18540
18550
18560
18570
18580
18590
18600
18610
18620
18630
18640
18650
18660
18670
18680
18690
18700
18710
18720
18730
18740
18750
18760
18770
18780
18790
18800
18810
18820
18830
18840
18850
18860
18870
18880
18890
18900
18910
18920
18930
18940
18950
18960
18970
18980
18990
190020.7
190122.4
190224.2
190326.1
190425.8
190528.9
190630.9
190734
190830.3
190932.2
191033.4
191134.3
191237.4
191339.1
191436.5
191538.7
191649.6
191759.7
191875.8
191978.3
192088.4
192173.6
192273.4
192385.4
192487
192590.6
192697
192795.5
192897.4
1929103.6
193092.2
193177.4
193259.5
193357.2
193466.8
193574.3
193684.9
193793
193887.4
193993.5

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1929-1939: “A Decade that will live — in stupidity.”

Why Stuck on Stupid?

Seventy years ago the leaders of both US political parties turned away from the policies that had created an economic powerhouse we call the Roaring Twenties. For ten long years Americans suffered through wrenching economic dislocations: deflation, inflation, a four-year economic contraction, endless unemployment, mindless political experiments, and ruthless attacks on businessmen for political gain as their leaders stayed Stuck on Stupid.

Today, after a twenty-five year economic boom, Americans are once more faced with a political elite that wants to monkey with success. It wants to raise tax rates. It wants to restrict trade. It wants to increase government power.

It’s time to look back and remind ourselves how it came to be, starting in 1929, that America got itself Stuck on Stupid. Otherwise it could happen again.

 — Christopher Chantrill

 

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