Laissez-Faire Politics and Economics of the Gilded Age Flashcards

1
Q

Define Laissez-faire as an economic theory

A

It means that the government have little intervention in what businesses do and allow them to grow legally as much as possible

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2
Q

Define Social Darwinism

A

The theory that some people have biological differences which make them more able to adapt to the economy and become wealthy over other people

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3
Q

Which people in society believed in Social Darwinism the most?

A

Big business leaders

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4
Q

What was a disadvantage to big business leaders believing in Social Darwinism? Why?

A

They would be more likely not to help poorer people as they would think they were destined to be in that position.

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5
Q

What is another name for business trusts?

A

Corporations

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6
Q

What were cartels in business?

A

When certain businesses worked together to control the market and pressure the government in to passing certain legislation in the Cartels’ favour

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7
Q

What is interesting about the belief about if the economy of the Gilded Age was Laissez-faire or not?

A

It appeared to be Laissez-faire, but there was a large hold of big companies on politicians which influenced decisions they would make

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8
Q

How did Social Darwinism relate to the Laissez-faire economic theory?

A

It meant that the big businesses and the government would be more likely to keep their hands off helping small businesses as they would believe that they were destined to fail

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9
Q

How did the Laissez-faire economy help post-Civil War expansion?

A

Many wealthy businesses could expand to parts of the South and possibly also do something with the rice and tobacco fields in the South

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10
Q

How did the Laissez-faire idea help Frontier expansion?

A

It encouraged people to set up established economies in these new western areas even faster

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11
Q

Name a person who heavily supported the idea of Social Darwinism

A

William Sumner

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12
Q

Who supported William Sumners ideas?

A

Leading churchmen and also Andrew Carnegie and John Rockefeller

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13
Q

What was Laissez-Faire supposed to ensure?

A

Everyone had the equal right to be wealthy, but also the equal right to fail

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14
Q

What was the reality of laissez-faire with big businesses?

A

Big businesses would just buy up small companies or merge with potential rivals in order to have no competition

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15
Q

Name an Industry which did have some competition in it

A

Textiles Industry

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16
Q

Name a company which bought out all of its competiton and merged with potential rivals

A

Vanderbilt’s Rail Company

17
Q

What did Rockefeller himself specifically say about wanting there to be no competition?

A

He said that he wanted it to only be big businesses in the Oil Industry and that all small businesses would have to die

18
Q

Name a Movement which went against Laissez-Faire economics and when it was established

A

The Granger Movement, Created in 1867

19
Q

What did the Granger Movement support?

A

Agriculture and Farmers

20
Q

What was a limitation of the anti-Laissez faire movements?

A

Lots of the legislation which they proposed did not get passed

21
Q

Give an example of a time when anti-Laissez faire movements failed to win against large businesses and the year this happened

A

In 1886 there was a Supreme Court ruling which ended in the favour of the railroad monopoly

22
Q

What was the scale of the Granger Movement? By What year?

A

By 1885 it had gained 850,000 members

23
Q

What is one likely reason that lots of anti-Laissez faire proposed pieces of legislation did not pass?

A

The monopolies bribed the government not to pass the legislation

24
Q

What were Robber Barons?

A

People who became immenseley wealthy through ruthless business practices in the late 18th century in America