- Calvin Coolidge became POTUS when President Warren G. Harding died. He was elected as re-elected in 1924. He was a Conservative Republican who firmly believed in small government. He was elected during the decade of great economic expansion and prosperity that preceded the Great Depression. The main components of his economic philosophy were:
- Laissez faire economics: Coolidge considered that government regulation and taxation had to be kept to a minimum.
- Regulatory Non-interventionism: Coolidge appointed government officials who preferred to leave businesses and corporations run their businesses unregulated and run their operation as they saw fit without any kind of government oversight.
- Independence of the Federal Reserve. Coolidge refused to oversee the actions and procedures of the Federal Reserve.
- Pro Big-businesses policies. Coolidge promoted economic policies that favored large corporations and appointed businessmen in key positions of economic oversight within the federal government who favored the same pro-business policies.