The Reconstruction Finance Corporation (RFC) was a United States government agency established in 1932 by Congress, under the Herbert Hoover administration. Its primary objective was to provide financial aid to railroads, financial institutions, and business corporations. The RFC extended loans to these entities with the goal of stabilizing the economy during the Great Depression. Its operations were predicated on the belief that providing support to large entities would allow prosperity to trickle down to smaller businesses and individuals. A notable example includes loans to struggling banks to prevent their collapse and thereby safeguard deposits.
The significance of this agency lies in its unprecedented role in direct government intervention in the economy during a time of crisis. It represented a departure from traditional laissez-faire economic policies and served as a precursor to the more extensive New Deal programs initiated by Franklin D. Roosevelt. The effectiveness of the RFC is debated; however, its establishment demonstrated the growing recognition that government intervention was necessary to address the widespread economic hardship. It also offered a template for future government efforts to stabilize critical sectors of the economy during times of recession.