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The Positive Role of Big Government in FDRs New Deal

e of the nation. Another marvelous invention from Big Government New Deal programs was the advent of the Government Bank Deposit Insurance, which insured all bank accounts up to $2500. This measure was relatively new, and aided in the restoration of faith in banks, savings and commerce. (VI). Before this undertaking, the government had very little, if anything at all, to do with the personal savings of citizens. Now, their savings were secure. Near the middle of the decade, the New Deal program came under heavy criticism from the public. Many programs, though geared for the long-term gain, were being seen as failures in only their third and fourth years. Though many saw the New Deal as failure in its later years, Roosevelt stuck his policy as evinced in his 1936 Chicago Speech (VII). The goals made at the onset of his administration had been attained, and Roosevelt saw no reason for worry. The ideas of the New Deal and Big Government were succeeding. Without the injection of a larger government into the affairs of national business, many of the events throughout the decade of the Thirties most likely would not have taken place, therefore prolonging the Great Depression. The services and programs provided by Roosevelt's New Deal big government had brought the country out of the dark recesses of unemployment and returned it to the track to economic stability and prosperity. Without the New Deal and a larger government, the Great Depression could've been even greater....

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