• The Brew Deal How Beer Helped Battle the Great Depression

The Brew Deal How Beer Helped Battle the Great Depression

In stock (20 available)
SKU SHUB330636
$48.48
Free Shipping within the US
Get it by: Jul 17, 2026
Overview

During the final stages of Prohibition, the US government allowed the consumption and sale of “non-intoxicating” beer, which was at or below 3.2% alcohol-by-weight. Beer’s return--permitted with an eye toward job creation during the Great Depression--was one of President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s earliest New Deal policies. In this book, economist Jason E. Taylor takes readers through the rapid resurgence of American breweries and shows how beer helped spark a sharp recovery in the spring of 1933. Taylor begins with stories of how the nation’s 1,400 breweries were decimated by the onset of Prohibition in 1920. He then turns to the frothy debates that led Congress to declare 3.2 beer “non-intoxicating,” and hence allowable under Prohibition. While April 7th is now celebrated as “National Beer Day,” the original April 7th—when legal beer returned after more than 13 years away—brought raucous scenes that make today’s Mardi Gras festivities seem tame by comparison. The Brew Deal shares stories of breweries, people, politics, perseverance, and the various roles that 3.2 beer has played—and continues to play—in the evolving American beer scene.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9783031731327
ISBN-10: 3031731328
Publisher: Springer Nature Switzerland
Publication date: 2024-12-02
Edition description: 2024
Pages: 274
Product dimensions: Height: 8.27 Inches, Length: 5.83 Inches, Weight: 0.7605948039 Pounds, Width: 0.6 Inches
Author: Jason E. Taylor
Language: en
Binding: Paperback

Books Related to Business & Money

Discover more books in the same category

Customer Reviews