The unemployment rates in the US during the Great Depression of the 1930s:
1930--3.2 percent
1931--15.9 percent
1932--23.6 percent
1933--24.9 percent
1934--21.7 percent
1935--20.1 percent
1936--16.9 percent
1937--14.3 percent
1938--19.0 percent
1939--17.2 percent
Historical figures varry from 25% to 36%. However, these figures do not take into consideration the vast amount unemployed women as women rarely registered themselves as unemployed.
Unemployment was everywhere during the Great Depression. What made the depression so great was that a larger than normal percentage of the population was not employed.
6,100,000 germans were unemployed.
23.7%
The unemployment rate was 25% during the Great Depression.
Franklin Delano Roosevelt was the United States president during the Great Depression.
Most immigrants who came to the United States became normal participants in the society and economy of the United States.
the great depression
The unemployment rate was 25% by 1933.
During the Great Depression, unemployment in the United States reached 25 percent. In some countries it reached 33 percent. The depression began in 1930.
The unemployment rate was 25% during the Great Depression.
During the depression there were a lot of people with unemployment
23.7%
Franklin Delano Roosevelt was the United States president during the Great Depression.
Unemployment in the United States peaked at 25% in 1936.
The depression
bad
Germany & France
The Great Depression.
(Apex) A microhistorian might document one day in a town that experienced particularly high unemployment levels, while a comparative historian might graph several cities' unemployment levels throughout the Great Depression.
Most immigrants who came to the United States became normal participants in the society and economy of the United States.