Farmers in the Great Depression benefited from the "New Deal". The New Deal focused mainly on them The government tried many ways to help them be used and launched a number of organizations as they are in the past few years. As Raymond Moley sees, the first New Deal is completely different from the usual American lifestyle. This new policy gave more power to the central government, but this is particularly necessary in the field of agricultural economic competition, as farmers are approaching anarchy.
The government began offering relief to farmers through the new policy of President Franklin Roosevelt. Roosevelt believed that the federal government was responsible for helping American people spend bad times like dusty cities. In the first three months since taking office as President, he passed the steady stream of bills to alleviate poverty, reduce unemployment, and accelerate economic recovery. Although these experimental programs did not end the Great Depression, the New Deal helped Americans measure their basic needs and give them the dignity of their work and hope at difficult times .
With the New Deal reform, the federal government began to purchase large amounts of land. National forest will expand the land of farmers and companies using new government funds. Many companies simply sell land rights to the government and retain mineral rights. At the time, this arrangement was consistent for both parties, but in the coming decades it will be the cause of the conflict. In 1933, the US Agriculture Department's Forest Department and the National Park Service added three new projects to the South Australian Appalachian activities, the Agriculture Adjustment Bureau (AAA), the Tennessee Valley Bureau (TVA) and the Civil Protection Corps. (CCC) AAA purchased "limits" farmland and moved farmers to better farms elsewhere. The plan was transferred to the third country settlement department, then transferred to the farm security department, but later died due to lack of funds from the agricultural economic department.