Quiz: The Rise and Fall of Totalitarian Regimes — 10 domande

Domande e risposte dettagliate

1. What is a speculative bubble in the context of the 1929 financial crisis?

A sudden and severe decline in stock prices across the market, often triggering a financial crisis.
A market situation where asset prices inflate beyond their intrinsic value due to excessive speculation, eventually leading to a sharp collapse.
A period of overproduction in industries causing prices to fall and profits to decline.
A situation where banks lend excessively, leading to a financial crisis and bank failures.

A market situation where asset prices inflate beyond their intrinsic value due to excessive speculation, eventually leading to a sharp collapse.

Spiegazione

A speculative bubble refers to a market situation where asset prices are driven far above their intrinsic value because of excessive speculation, creating an unsustainable situation that eventually bursts, leading to a sharp market collapse, as happened in 1929.

2. What event marked the beginning of the 1929 stock market crash?

Black Thursday on October 24, 1929
Black Monday on October 28, 1929
The signing of the Treaty of Versailles in 1919
The launch of the New Deal in 1933

Black Thursday on October 24, 1929

Spiegazione

Black Thursday on October 24, 1929, was the day when panic selling caused a major decline in stock prices, marking the start of the crash. It is a well-documented historic event that signifies the beginning of the Wall Street collapse.

3. What was the primary function of Black Thursday and the stock market crash in the context of the 1929 economic crisis?

They acted as a catalyst triggering the Great Depression.
They primarily marked the end of speculative trading without broader consequences.
They were isolated events with no major impact on the economy.
They served as a market correction to stabilize stock prices.

They acted as a catalyst triggering the Great Depression.

Spiegazione

Black Thursday and the stock market crash functioned as the catalyst that triggered the Great Depression by causing widespread panic, bank failures, and economic contraction, rather than simply correcting the market or being isolated events.

4. Which factor contributed to the formation of the speculative bubble in the late 1920s?

Overproduction of goods
High interest rates set by the Federal Reserve
Reduction in consumer credit availability
Decline in stock market participation

Overproduction of goods

Spiegazione

Overproduction meant that more goods were created than could be sold, leading to falling prices and economic instability, which was a key factor fueling the speculative bubble.

5. How does the global spread of the 1929 economic crisis compare to its regional impacts in the UK and France?

The UK experienced a brief recession with minimal social unrest, whereas France faced a prolonged depression with significant social upheaval.
Both countries experienced severe economic contraction and high unemployment, but France's depression lasted longer and involved more social unrest.
The UK was unaffected by the global crisis due to its gold standard policies, while France experienced a deep depression and social unrest.
Both the UK and France experienced similar levels of economic decline and social unrest, with no significant regional differences in duration or intensity.

Both countries experienced severe economic contraction and high unemployment, but France's depression lasted longer and involved more social unrest.

Spiegazione

The correct answer is that both the UK and France experienced severe economic contraction and social unrest, but France's depression lasted longer and involved more social unrest. This reflects the regional variations in how the global crisis impacted European countries, with France experiencing a longer-lasting depression and more social unrest compared to the UK, which had a relatively shorter downturn and less social upheaval.

6. How did the use of leverage or margin loans amplify the stock market crisis?

By allowing investors to buy more stocks with borrowed money, increasing risk
By preventing investors from borrowing to buy stocks
By decreasing the amount of money circulating in the economy
By stabilizing stock prices through government intervention

By allowing investors to buy more stocks with borrowed money, increasing risk

Spiegazione

Leverage enabled investors to buy stocks with borrowed money, which amplified losses when stock prices fell, escalating the crisis.

7. What was a consequence of the stock market crash for the global economy?

It caused interconnected banking failures and a global depression.
It led to immediate industrial recovery across Europe.
It resulted in the end of all international trade.
It caused a temporary increase in stock prices worldwide.

It caused interconnected banking failures and a global depression.

Spiegazione

The crash led to banking failures and a worldwide economic downturn, as financial systems across countries were interconnected and affected.

8. How did the US government initially respond to the crisis?

With limited measures, later followed by Roosevelt's New Deal
By enacting aggressive stimulus packages immediately
Through nationalization of banks in 1929
By maintaining a strict gold standard to stabilize the dollar

With limited measures, later followed by Roosevelt's New Deal

Spiegazione

Initially, the US government response was limited, but later, under Roosevelt, the New Deal was implemented to help stabilize and reform the economy.

9. Which country experienced a notable financial crisis and social unrest as a result of the 1929 crash?

European countries such as France, Germany, and the UK
Japan, with its rapid industrial expansion
South American countries like Brazil and Argentina
Asian countries such as China and India

European countries such as France, Germany, and the UK

Spiegazione

European countries, interconnected financially with the US, experienced severe economic downturns, social unrest, and protests following the global spread of the crisis.

10. Why did the stock prices in the late 1920s become unsustainable?

Because they soared well beyond actual corporate profits due to speculation
Because companies were consistently undervalued by investors
Because the government artificially inflated prices
Because of a nationwide shortage of stocks for trading

Because they soared well beyond actual corporate profits due to speculation

Spiegazione

Stock prices had become inflated beyond the real value of companies due to rampant speculation, creating an unsustainable market bubble.

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Causes of 1929 Crisis

Overproduction, speculation, and excessive margin loans.

Speculative Bubble — definition?

Asset prices inflated beyond intrinsic value.

Black Thursday — significance?

Start of the stock market crash and Great Depression.

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