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Solutions To The Working Class In The 1930's

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Solutions to the Working Class Problems The distinct division between wealthy and poor was stretched farther apart when taxes change, wages got lower, and the working class was forgotten about in the end. This gap in between wealth happened in the 1920’s-1930’s and the citizens were not quiet about it. Thousands of these working class Americans wrote letters to President Roosevelt hoping he would try to reform laws to improve their conditions. Although President Roosevelt completed many reforms to help the people, there were many more that he could have done. Some of these possible changes could have been raising the minimum wage to an individual degree and creating even more jobs for the unemployed. These changes would have helped the people in the American economy. The largest problem that Roosevelt faced was improving the financial income each family made. In a letter written to Miss Perkins by Winston-Salem, Winston describes “We make 40 hours per week, and we don’t average $10.00 per week for semi-skilled labor.” One way to fix this problem is that Roosevelt could have tried to leave the gold standard …show more content…

Although slavery ended, racial segregation and mistreatment was a common occurrence for any working black man in this period. One way that Roosevelt tried to help the working farmers was that he sent money to tell the farmers to slow their production that should in turn help raise the income of the helpers on the farm. However, that did not happen. The head farmer kept most of the money to himself and left the white and black working men to receive the same wage that could barely feed their families. One way that Roosevelt could have fixed this was to make sure the working class received the money and to stop relying on trickle-down economics because of the constant corruption that occurred during

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