The stock market crashed in 1929, sinking the U.S. into the Great Depression. Dr. Sean Snaith, director of the University of Central Florida’s Institute for Economic Forecasting, said the problem was then compounded by the Federal Reserve.
"The Great Depression was really a compound mixture of economic, financial and acts of God that just all hit at the same time," he told WFTV.
In addition, drought struck part of the country. In Florida, people were already dealing with their own economic problems; two Category 4 hurricanes slammed the state in 1926 and 1928, respectively.
The citrus industry was pummeled a year later after a Mediterranean fruit fly invasion, which cut citrus production by more than half.
Today, with the coronavirus, agriculture is taking a hit too, but for a different reason. Restaurants are still closed and farmers have lost hundreds of millions of dollars in produce that’s now either being donated to food banks or simply tossed out.
“The recession we’re in now is similar to the Great Depression in terms of its depth. It is the worst recession since the Great Depression, although it’s not going to be nearly as bad," Snaith speculated.
Snaith said that before the coronavirus pandemic, the economy was thriving. And unlike the Great Depression, the big dip into the recession was a result of our own policy decisions to shut down.
"This has primarily been driven by public health measures, and so as we start to ease those, the economy will come back," Snaith told WFTV.
According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, for now, the unemployment rate is around 14.7%. Estimates indicate the unemployment rate was about 25% during the Great Depression.
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