The Great Depression led to a drop of 50% in industrial production and an increase of 300,000 persons in unemployment in Romania. By the early 1930s, the price of a quintal of wheat had fallen below the cost of harvesting it; agricultural goods, unprotected by any customs measures, were left to the discretion of international competition, which contributed to the decrease of their prices by 60–70% compared to those of 1928 and 1929.[3]Landowners went bankrupt and the peasants had little left to eat or pay taxes to the state. By 1932, some 2.5 million farmers had unpaid debts to banks, worth 52 billion lei.[4]
Between October 1929 and July 1931, more than 17 billion lei were withdrawn from Romanian banks. As a result, the banking system collapsed, and several banks, including the Romanian Peasantry Bank and the Bercovici Bank, went bankrupt. The banking crisis, announced as early as 1930, created a panic among depositors, as people began to withdraw their money en masse.[3] The peak of the financial disaster was reached in 1931, when one of the most important banks in Romania, the Marmorosch Blank Bank [ro] of Aristide Blank, declared bankruptcy.[4]
On 28 January 1933, the Grivița strike of 1933 was started at the Grivița Workshops in Bucharest by workers of Căile Ferate Române (CFR). The strike was brought about by the increasingly poor working conditions of railway employees in the context of the Great Depression in Romania.[4][5]