National Recovery Administration

Encyclopaedia Britannica's editors oversee subject areas in which they have extensive knowledge, whether from years of experience gained by working on that content or via study for an advanced degree. They write new content and verify and edit content received from contributors.

Mary Williams Dewson being sworn in as a member of the Social Security Board, Washington, D.C., 1937.

Mary Williams Dewson

Norris Dam

Tennessee Valley Authority

marketing advertisement for hair dressing

Table Of Contents

<a href=National Recovery Administration" width="385" />

Open full sized image

Fiorello La Guardia (center) at the formal raising of the NRA flag outside the New York headquarters of the National Recovery Administration, April 1934.

Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. Date: 1933 - 1935 Areas Of Involvement: marketing economic history working conditions Related People: Mary Williams Dewson

National Recovery Administration (NRA), U.S. government agency established by Pres. Franklin D. Roosevelt to stimulate business recovery through fair-practice codes during the Great Depression. The NRA was an essential element in the National Industrial Recovery Act (June 1933), which authorized the president to institute industry-wide codes intended to eliminate unfair trade practices, reduce unemployment, establish minimum wages and maximum hours, and guarantee the right of labour to bargain collectively.

The agency ultimately established 557 basic codes and 208 supplementary codes that affected about 22 million workers. Companies that subscribed to the NRA codes were allowed to display a Blue Eagle emblem, symbolic of cooperation with the NRA. Although the codes were hastily drawn and overly complicated and reflected the interests of big business at the expense of the consumer and small businessman, they nevertheless did improve labour conditions in some industries and also aided the unionization movement. The NRA ended when it was invalidated by the Supreme Court in 1935, but many of its provisions were included in subsequent legislation.

NRA Blue Eagle

Open full sized image

The Blue Eagle, the symbol of the National Recovery Administration, holding Uncle Sam aloft; on the cover of Vanity Fair, September 1934.