Title: 60s-70s
160s-70s
- American Dream
- Baby Boom
- Camelot
- Company man
- Stagflation
- ARPANET
280s 90s
- Corporate raiders
- Evil empire
- Arthur Laffer
- Dot-com bubble
- Black Monday
3From the 50s to 2000 the changing face of the
US economy
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51945 Starting point
- The country that emerged from WW II was very
different from what it had been four years
earlier - Prosperity had replaced depression
- Inflation was now the number one economic problem
- The U.S. accounted for ½ of the worlds
manufacturing output - With just 7 percent of the worlds population
- The U.S. and the Soviet Union were the only
superpowers left standing - New international economic order
61950s decade of prosperity
- Many Americans feared that the end of World War
II and the subsequent drop in military spending
might bring back the hard times of the Great
Depression - But instead, pent-up consumer demand fueled
exceptionally strong economic growth in the
postwar period - The nation's gross national product rose from
about 200,000 million in 1940 to 300,000
million in 1950 and to more than 500,000 million
in 1960 - At the same time, the jump in postwar births,
known as the "baby boom," increased the number of
consumers
7Number of births in the United States, 1934 to
present
8G.I. Bill
- The G.I. Bill was an omnibus bill that provided
college or vocational education for returning
World War II veterans as well as one year of
unemployment compensation. It also provided many
different types of loans for returning veterans
to buy homes and start businesses - By the time the original GI Bill ended in July
1956, 7.8 million World War II veterans had
participated in an education or training program
and 2.4 million veterans had home loans backed by
the Veterans' Administration (VA)
9The 1950s The Eisenhower Years
- One big construction boom
- The automobile industry prospered
- Supplied Americas pent up demand and became the
worlds leading exporter of cars - The advent of television and the Korean War
stimulated the economy - 1946 7000 TV sets
- 1950 50 000 000 TV sets
- The Eisenhower administration
- Ended the Korean War and inflation
- Made no attempt to undo the legacies of the New
Deal - The role of the federal government as a major
economic player became a permanent one
10Changing labor force
11Changing workplace
- Less blue collar jobs more white collar
jobs - 1947-1957 ? factory workers decreased by
4.3, eliminating 1.5 million
blue-collar jobs - Greater participation of women in the workplace
especially in the tertiary sector - New corporate culture The Company man
121950s decade of prosperity
- Keynesianism Employment Act 1946
- Is a definitive attempt by the federal government
to develop macroeconomic policy - The act creates the Council of Economic Advisers,
an appointed advisory board that will advise and
assist the President in formulating economic
policy - Goal - to promote maximum employment, production,
and purchasing power
1350s Rise of the suburbs
14 151960s Years of Change
- The U.S. underwent a kind of golden age of
economic growth - The middle class swelled, as did GDP and
productivity - Youngest president ever elected in 1960 John
Fitzgerald Kennedy - As president, he sought to accelerate economic
growth by increasing government spending and
cutting taxes, and he pressed for medical help
for the elderly, aid for inner cities, and
increased funds for education - Great admirer of FDR
- Camelot
161960s Years of Change
- Lyndon Baines Johnson (1963-1969)
- Wanted to build a Great Society
- Started major social programs
- Medicare
- Medicaid
- Food stamps
- Vietnam War
- What had started as a small military action under
Kennedy mushroomed into a major military
initiative during Johnson's presidency
17- Advertising became major industry
18Rising Car Culture
- Rapid rise in new car registrations
- 1945 25 million cars
- 1960 65 million cars
- The number of 2 car families doubles between 1951
and 1958 - 1956 Interstate Highway Act
- 26 billion USD to build highways
- 65 000 km of new highways was built
19You can do almost everything in your car
201970s The stagflation decade
- Stagflation - an economic condition of both
continuing inflation and stagnant business
activity, together with an increasing
unemployment rate - Increasing dependence on oil imports from OPEC
countries - Oil shocks - OPEC quadrupled oil prices
- The U.S. was hit by the worst recession since the
1930s - Collapse of the Bretton Wood system
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221970s The stagflation decade
- Jimmy Carter became President in 1976
- Rising budget deficits
- The money supply grew rapidly
- Inflation rose almost to double digit levels
- He faced the Iranian revolution in 1979
- Gasoline prices went through the ceiling
- In October, 1979 the Fed stopped the growth of
the money supply - By January, 1980 the country was in recession
- The inflation rate was declining
- The nations productivity growth was at one
percent, one third the postwar rate
23Economic situation in 1980
- The rise of inflation of the 1970s had resulted
in an enormous increase in tax burden - Social security tax and Medicare had also
increased the personal tax burden. - 31 million jobs had been destroyed between 1978
and 1982. - Fully one-third of all private sector jobs that
existed in 1978 had disappeared by 1982.
24Reaganomics
- Attempts to solve the economic malaise that was
continuing in the late 1970s were largely
unsuccessful - Reagan proposed a new idea to address the
economic stagflation (lack of growth) - Reagan believed that the root of the problem for
the economy was - Intrusive government regulations of business and
industry - Expensive government social programs that offered
handouts to non-productive citizens - High taxes
- Deficit spending
25Reagans Solution Supply Side Economics
- Tax cuts, rather than government spending, will
create economic growth - Arthur Laffer suggested that at some point rising
tax rates discourage people from participating in
taxable activities such as investing - This is known as the point of diminishing returns
where a policy provides benefits only to a
certain point the effort/expense no longer
produces a sufficient amount of desired outcome
to be worthwhile - If profits from investing are taken away by
taxes, what is the point of investing?
26Reagonomics - Results
- Income tax rates of the top personal tax bracket
dropped from 70 to 28 in 7 years, while social
security and Medicare taxes increased - GDP growth recovered strongly after the 1982
recession and produced five straight quarters of
growth averaging 8.4 - The GDP grew during Reagan's remaining years in
office at an annual rate of 3.4 per year,
slightly lower than the post-World War II average
of 3.6
27Reagonomics - Results
- Despite the tax cuts of 1981, federal tax
revenues nearly doubled in the Reagan years. - Real inflation-adjusted manufacturing output rose
to its highest point of the post-WWII period. - Domestic-based manufacturing employment fell from
20.3 million in 1980 to 19.2 million in 1990, a
decline of 6, probably as a result of
productivity gains. - U.S. exports of manufacturing goods grew by 90
between 1986 and 1992, compared with 25 for the
rest of the OECD countries.
28Reagonomics - Results
- More than 18 million new jobs were created in the
1980s in the U.S.this was more than Japan,
Britain, and Germany combined. - 82 of the jobs created were high-pay, high-skill
managerial and technical positions. 12 were
low-skill service jobs. - While real wages declined from 11.41 per hour in
1978 to 10.02 per hour in 1990, workers total
compensation increased as workers demanded
increased benefits. - Reaganomics did not gut social welfare programs.
In fact, social welfare spending was the largest
cause of the budget deficits of the Reagan
administration.
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31Black Monday
- Black Monday refers to Monday, October 19, 1987,
when stock markets around the world crashed,
shedding a huge value in a very short time - The crash began in Hong Kong, spread west through
international time zones to Europe, hitting the
United States after other markets had already
declined by a significant margin. The Dow Jones
Industrial Average (DJIA) dropped by 508 points
to 1738.74 (22.61) - The Black Monday decline was the largest one-day
percentage decline in stock market history - It caused no great recession
32Clintonomics
- Between 1980-1992 America had undergone twelve
years of conservative policies implemented by
Ronald Reagan and George Herbert Walker Bush - Economic recession in 1991-1992
- Bill Clinton ran on the economic platform of
balancing the budget, lowering inflation,
lowering unemployment, and continuing the
traditionally conservative policies of free trade - In 1992, Bill Clinton was elected president of
the United States of America. During Clintons
presidency (1993 to 2001), the economic policies
he put into place for the U.S. were termed
Clintonomics
33Clintonomics
- Clinton failed to push through an ambitious
proposal to expand health-insurance coverage - Clintons main goal balanced budget
- In 1998, the government posted its first surplus
in 30 years, although a huge remained - Record surplus of the budget in 2000
- Continuing deregulation of the economy
- Strong economic performance in the USA 8 years
of strong economic growth between 1992-2000
34GDP growth in USA between 1992-2000
35Unemployment in USA between 1992-2000
36CPI in USA between 1992-2000
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38Dot-com bubble
39Creation of the Bubble
- The "dot-com bubble was a speculative bubble
covering roughly 19982001 (with a climax on
March 10, 2000 with the NASDAQ peaking at
5132.52) during which stock markets in Western
nations saw their equity value rise rapidly from
growth in the more recent Internet sector and
related fields - The period was marked by the founding (and, in
many cases, spectacular failure) of a group of
new Internet-based companies commonly referred to
as dot-coms - The venture capitalists saw record-setting rises
in stock valuations of dot-com companies, and
therefore moved faster and with less caution than
usual, choosing to mitigate the risk by starting
many contenders and letting the market decide
which would succeed.
40Creation of the Bubble
- The low interest rates in 199899 helped increase
the start-up capital amounts. - Although a number of these new entrepreneurs had
realistic plans and administrative ability, many
more of them lacked these characteristics but
were able to sell their ideas to investors
because of the novelty of the dot-com companies - According to dot-com theory, an Internet
company's survival depended on expanding its
customer base as rapidly as possible, even if it
produced large annual losses
41Aftermath of the Dot-Com Bubble
- The dot-com bubble crash wiped out 5 trillion in
market value of technology companies from March
2000 to October 2002. - Many dot-coms ran out of capital and were
acquired or liquidated - Several companies and executives accused or
convicted of fraud for misuse of shareholders
money - Citigroup and Merrill Lynch fined millions by SEC
for misleading investors - Huge layoffs of technology experts