Answer:
Roosevelt had a bunch of job opportunities which addressed the unemployment problems where people couldn't even afford their houses anymore; there were openings for government maintenance like building bridges, things along those lines.
Step-by-step explanation:
It eased suffering through jobs programs such as the Civilian Conservation Corps and Works Progress Administration. These helped bring down unemployment dramatically. They built infrastructure we still use today.
Through a variety of programs, from farm aid and price stabilization to rural electrification, it significantly eased the plight of rural Americans.
With federal deposit insurance, the Securities and the Exchange Commission, Glass-Steagall Act, and Pecora Committee, it made banks safe and cleaned up fraud on Wall Street.
New Deal projects such as the Tennessee Valley Authority and Grand Coulee Dam provided modern infrastructure and put thousands to work. The Public Works Administration built government buildings, roads, bridges, dams, airports, schools, hospitals, and public housing.
Social Security and the Railroad Retirement Act ensured financial means for elderly Americans.
By suspending the gold standard, FDR gave the Federal Reserve the means to fight the Depression’s ruinous deflation.
Congress gave FDR the authority to roll back the globally ruinous effects of the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act of 1930.
FDR increased funding for Herbert Hoover’s Reconstruction Finance Administration, which paid for such major projects as the Lincoln Tunnel and San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge and hundreds of smaller ones.
The New Deal didn’t fully “solve” the Great Depression. But it made the situation dramatically better. It saved our form of self government—-fascism and communism were very popular in 1932. And it saved capitalism. The far left never forgave Franklin Roosevelt for that.
Keynesians argue the New Deal didn’t spend enough to fill the catastrophic hole in demand left by the contraction of 1929–33. The argument is supported by the fact that the Depression wasn’t solved until the wartime spending leading up to World War II.