The crash of the stock market brought many hard times.
Roosevelt's New Deal was a way to fix these times. John .
Stuart Mill and John Maynard Keynes were two economists whose economic .
theories greatly influenced and helped Franklin D. Roosevelt devise a .
plan to rescue the United States from the Great Depression it had .
fallen into. John Stuart Mill was a strong believer of expanded .
government, which the New Deal provided. John Maynard Keynes believed .
in supply and demand, which the New Deal used to stabilize the .
economy. Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal is the plan that brought the .
U.S. out of the Great Depression. It was sometimes thought to be an .
improvised plan, but was actually very thought out. Roosevelt was not .
afraid to involve the central government in addressing the economic .
problem. The basic plan was to stimulate the economy by creating jobs. .
First Roosevelt tried to help the economy with the National Recovery .
Administration. The NRA spread work and reduced unfair competitive .
practices by cooperation in industry. Eventually the NRA was declared .
unconstitutional. Franklin D. Roosevelt then needed a new plan. .
Keeping the same idea of creating jobs he made many other .
organizations devoted to forming jobs and in turn helping the economy. .
One of those organizations was the Civilian Conservation Corps. This .
corps took men off the streets and paid them to plant forests and .
drain swamps. Another of these organizations was the Public Works .
Administration. This organization employed men to build highways and .
public buildings. These were only some of the organizations dedicated .
to creating jobs. Creating jobs was important because it put money in .
the hands of the consumer. This directly affected the supply and .
demand. The more money they had the more they could spend. This would .
slowly start a chain reaction and bring the economy back to the way it .
was before the depression. By the end of the 1930's this plan had .