President Hoover did not believe that charity from the government would help people become employed. He did invest in the infrastructure of the United States to create more jobs.
Although Hoover served without pay and was wealthy, he did not have enough money to provide funds to the unemployed. Congress might have tapped the federal treasury but declined to do so.
for failing to provide for their families
No, the Tennessee Valley Authority was created during the Great Depression of the 1930s to provide jobs for some of the unemployed.
During the depression, Hitler's party, the Nazis promised that they would provide work for the mass unemployed. There were many people unemployed in the depression and they were desperate for work after all of the problems in the previous years. These were the first world war, hyperinflation and the attempted coups.
The susso was paid to unemployed individuals in Australia during the Great Depression. The amount of payment varied but was generally minimal to provide basic necessities.
No, they are not legally required to do so. The adult is responsible for their own life.
Look up the Medicine Program online, they can provide free support to you. you can go to a free clinic or a church. they have support groups
to provide jobs for the unemployed
It was none other then Adolf Hitler, he made "autobahns" (motorways) all over Germany in order to provide work for those unemployed because of the great depression in his "bread and work" campaign.
Franklin Roosevelt served as the Governor of New York from 1929 to 1932. During his time as governor, he implemented various reforms and initiatives to combat the effects of the Great Depression, such as the creation of relief programs for the unemployed and measures to help struggling farmers. He also worked to modernize and reform the state's government and infrastructure.
Hoover believed in trickle down economics and he didn't provide direct relief to the poor. He also bailed out buisinessess.
Failed to provide direct relief for the neediest persons.
The intent of Roosevelt's New Deal was to provide work for the unemployed people and help farmers retain their farms. The programs were responses to the Great Depression, and focused on what historians call the "3 Rs": relief, recovery, and reform.