Gabriel Machado

13%
Flag icon
Many Americans’ optimism grew, too: they thought they had entered a new era of prosperity, when more Americans could afford more luxury goods and live, at least materially, better lives than ever before. So securely did they hold this belief that they accepted newly available offers of credit in order to buy what they could not afford from their own pockets. By the end of the decade Americans were living lives well-furnished with debt.
The Great Depression and the New Deal: A Very Short Introduction (Very Short Introductions Book 166)
Rate this book
Clear rating