American Decades
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
Law
Date: 1934
Source: Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Reproduced by the Center for Corporate Law, University of Cincinnati College of Law. Available online at http://www.law.uc.edu/CCL/34Act/index.html; website home page: http://www.law.uc.edu (accessed April 17, 2003).
Introduction
The Stock Market Crash of 1929 and the growing uncertainty of the financial systems of the United States prompted critical examination of those systems. Spurred by the collapse of three thousand banks between 1930 and 1932 and by revelations of unscrupulous dealings by powerful financial leaders, greater regulatory control of key institutions seemed necessary.
Efforts to regulate financial institutions were helped by dramatic hearings of the Senate Banking Committee, which investigated Wall Street...
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1930's Business and the Economy Primary Sources
- "Statement of James C. Garland, of Pineville, Ky."
- "On the Bank Crisis"
- "Code of Fair Competition for the Men's Clothing Industry, as Amended"
- "Statement of H.L. Lurie, Director of the Bureau of Jewish Social Research, New York City, New York"
- Securities Exchange Act of 1934
- "Redistribution of Wealth"
- The National Labor Relations Act
- Progress in Michigan
- Works Progress Administration Reports
- Settlement of a Sit-Down Strike
- "Armed Rebellion on the Right"
- Farmers on Relief and Rehabilitation
- John Maynard Keynes to President Roosevelt, February 1, 1938
- Copyright Page
- Acknowledgments
