The Depression began in the United States in October 1929 and grew steadily worse to its nadir in early 1933. President
Herbert Hoover feared that too much intervention or coercion by the government would destroy individuality and self-reliance, which he considered to be important American values. His
laissez-faire views appeared to be shared by the
Secretary of the Treasury Andrew W. Mellon. To combat the growing economic decline, Hoover organized a number of voluntary measures with businesses, encouraged state and local government responses, and accelerated federal building projects. However, his policies had little or no effect on economic recovery. Toward the end of his term, however, Hoover supported several legislative solutions which he felt might lift the country out of the depression. The final attempt of the Hoover administration to rescue the economy was the passage of the
Emergency Relief and Construction Act (which provided funds for public works programs) and the
Reconstruction Finance Corporation (RFC) (which provided low-interest loans to businesses). Hoover was defeated for re-election by Roosevelt in the
1932 presidential election. Roosevelt was convinced that federal activism was needed to reverse the country's economic decline. In his first hundred days in office, the Congress enacted at Roosevelt's request a series of bills designed to strengthen the banking system, including the
Emergency Banking Act, the
Glass–Steagall Act (which created the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation), and the
1933 Banking Act. The Congress also passed the
Agricultural Adjustment Act to stabilize the nation's agricultural industry.
Enactment '' magazine's
Man of the Year for 1933.
Enactment of the National Industrial Recovery Act climaxed the
first 100 days of Roosevelt's presidency.
Hugh S. Johnson,
Raymond Moley,
Donald Richberg,
Rexford Tugwell,
Jerome Frank, and
Bernard Baruch—key Roosevelt advisors—believed that unrestrained competition had helped cause the Great Depression and that government had a critical role to play through national planning, limited regulation, the fostering of
trade associations, support for "fair" trade practices, and support for "democratization of the workplace" (a standard work week, shorter working hours, and better working conditions). Roosevelt, himself the former head of a trade association, believed that government promotion of "self-organization" by trade associations was the least-intrusive and yet most effective method for achieving national planning and economic improvement. Some work on an industrial relief bill had been done in the weeks following Roosevelt's election, but much of this was in the nature of talk and the exchange of ideas rather than legislative research and drafting. The administration, preoccupied with banking and agriculture legislation, did not begin working on industrial relief legislation until early April. Congress, however, was moving on its own industrial legislation. In the Senate,
Robert F. Wagner,
Edward P. Costigan, and
Robert M. La Follette, Jr. were promoting
public works legislation, and
Hugo Black was pushing short-work-week legislation. Motivated to work on his own industrial relief bill by these efforts, Roosevelt ordered Moley to work with these Senators (and anyone else in government who seemed interested) to craft a bill. Overburdened, Moley delegated this work to Hugh S. Johnson. By May 1933, two draft bills had emerged, a cautious and legalistic one by John Dickinson (
Under Secretary of Commerce) and an ambitious one focusing on trade associations by Hugh Johnson. Many leading businessmen—including
Gerard Swope (head of
General Electric),
Charles M. Schwab (chairman of
Bethlehem Steel Corporation),
E. H. Harriman (chairman of the
Union Pacific Railroad), and
Henry I. Harriman, president of the
U.S. Chamber of Commerce—helped draft the legislation. A two-part bill, the first section promoting cooperative action among business to achieve fair competition and provide for national planning and a second section establishing a national public works program, was submitted to Congress on May 15, 1933. The
House of Representatives easily passed the bill in just seven days. The most contentious issue was the inclusion of Title 1, Section 7(a), which protected
collective bargaining rights for
unions. Section 7(a) was nearly eliminated from the bill, but Senator Wagner, Jerome Frank, and
Leon Keyserling (another Roosevelt aide) worked to retain the section in order to win the support of the American labor movement. According to one study ... The capitalist’s opposition to section 7a in congressional hearings was not convincing enough to persuade an overwhelmingly urban liberal Democratic Congress. As Kenneth Finegold and Theda Skocpol have correctly pointed out, congressional Democrats were eager to consolidate their electoral majorities by supporting and enacting prolabor legislation. With the urban industrial working class becoming a major electoral bloc for urban Democrats, it is not surprising that pressures from industrial workers, both employed and unemployed, played a major role not only in moving congressional Democrats to favour prolabor legislation but also in moving the Democratic party itself left of center.” The bill had a more difficult time in the Senate. The
National Association of Manufacturers and Chamber of Commerce opposed its passage due to the labor provision. Despite the positions of these two important trade associations, most businesses initially supported the NIRA. Senator
Bennett Champ Clark introduced an amendment to weaken Section 7(a), but Wagner and Senator
George W. Norris led the successful opposition to the change. The bulk of the Senate debate, however, turned on the bill's suspension of
antitrust law. Senators
William E. Borah,
Burton K. Wheeler, and Hugo Black opposed any relaxation of the
Sherman Antitrust Act, arguing that this would exacerbate existing severe
economic inequality and concentrate wealth in the hands of the rich (a severe problem which many economists at the time believed was one of the causes of the Great Depression). Wagner defended the bill, arguing that the bill's promotion of codes of fair trade practices would help create progressive standards for wages, hours, and working conditions, and eliminate sweatshops and child labor. The Senate passed the amended legislation 57-to-24 on June 9. A
House–Senate conference committee met throughout the evening of June 9 and all day June 10 to reconcile the two versions of the bill, approving a final version on the afternoon of June 10. The House approved the conference committee's bill on the evening of June 10. After extensive debate, the Senate approved the final bill, 46-to-39, on June 13. President Roosevelt signed the bill into law on June 16, 1933. ==Structure of the Act==